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2.03k reviews for:
Rich Dad, Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids about Money – That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not!
Robert T. Kiyosaki
2.03k reviews for:
Rich Dad, Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids about Money – That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not!
Robert T. Kiyosaki
informative
fast-paced
informative
inspiring
slow-paced
Highly recommend. Everyone should read this book to kickstart their own thought process about money
informative
fast-paced
A must read book for the novice to understand accounting and finance without learning financial/accounting term. ☺️
The main message of this book is: "you can be rich if you have assets."
The author tells us the story of him coincidentally meeting his friend's dad who would become his rich 'second father'. He learn a great deal from him which he doesn't learn from his own dad. By doing that, he learns the secrets of being wealthy and...becomes wealthy.
I actually like the book because it inspired me. In the current money-driven world, we need money to be able to live. The's no denying that. Becming wealthy is a matt of understanding finance and taking risks. Yes sir. This book inspired me to learn a thing or two more about finances and to ignore financial advice from people who do not walk the talk. My children will also benefit from that.
Down part of this book is the snobistic tone. The author considers himself wealthy and thus part of the rich class. The middle class and the poor are just a bunch of nay sayers. Might be true, but not everybody likes to play the wealth game, which is often polluted with greed. Not everybody likes buying real estate and bonds just like the author does. Besides that, this book was written just before the age of the internet and ignores modern types of assets like blogs and e-books.
Nevertheless, the message is great and the book is a quick read. It may change you.
The author tells us the story of him coincidentally meeting his friend's dad who would become his rich 'second father'. He learn a great deal from him which he doesn't learn from his own dad. By doing that, he learns the secrets of being wealthy and...becomes wealthy.
I actually like the book because it inspired me. In the current money-driven world, we need money to be able to live. The's no denying that. Becming wealthy is a matt of understanding finance and taking risks. Yes sir. This book inspired me to learn a thing or two more about finances and to ignore financial advice from people who do not walk the talk. My children will also benefit from that.
Down part of this book is the snobistic tone. The author considers himself wealthy and thus part of the rich class. The middle class and the poor are just a bunch of nay sayers. Might be true, but not everybody likes to play the wealth game, which is often polluted with greed. Not everybody likes buying real estate and bonds just like the author does. Besides that, this book was written just before the age of the internet and ignores modern types of assets like blogs and e-books.
Nevertheless, the message is great and the book is a quick read. It may change you.
The ratio of pointless “i do this stuff so well” to actually useful advice is overwhelming and tiring
Lama tidak baca buku membuat saya mudah bosan dengan topik buku yang sedikit berat
medium-paced
A thoroughly useless book teeming with platitudes served as a parable.
The language in the book is dated and offensive. The poor are not poor because of their own choices, and such a mindset is inhibitive, even dangerous, for a society to grow. The author constantly denigrates the value of non-financial education. And, the book itself is an advertisement to take the author's seminars, which are known to be a scam.
Is there anything useful amid all this? Just an urgency to invest. There are no practical tips offered, no formulas offered for analysis, no explanation of terminology in the financial market, just.. nothing. Hated the book.
The language in the book is dated and offensive. The poor are not poor because of their own choices, and such a mindset is inhibitive, even dangerous, for a society to grow. The author constantly denigrates the value of non-financial education. And, the book itself is an advertisement to take the author's seminars, which are known to be a scam.
Is there anything useful amid all this? Just an urgency to invest. There are no practical tips offered, no formulas offered for analysis, no explanation of terminology in the financial market, just.. nothing. Hated the book.