What Poor People Dont Know About Making Money | Motivational Speeches

Motivational Speeches - Un podcast de Motivationly

Catégories:

>>>Click Here to Join Our Self Development Campaign Now<<< Why do you want to be rich? Getting clear on this question will prevent you from spinning your wheels to make more money. Here's a list of my reasons. Sometimes, teaching people how to get rich gets me a bad rap. “You just want to make money,” I’ve been told. Or “money isn’t everything.” These gems, while not particularly eloquent, do have a point. Actually, I’d prefer that these people ask me why I teach people to be rich. It’s important to ask yourself, too: Why do you want to be rich? Take a second and think about it. Do you want to have a luxurious lifestyle? Do you want to travel? To eat at nice restaurants? Maybe you want to start your own business. I believe it’s really important to consciously think about why you want to be rich. If you don’t, it’s easy to get caught up in a race to get more and more money without ever knowing why. Trust me–take an hour to write it down and compare your long-term goals to what you’re actually doing on a day-to-day basis. It’s easy to say and harder to do, so I’ve taken my own advice below. And hopefully, I can use these things to explain why I teach people to be rich. It’s not just money–far from it. Why I wanted to become rich In one sentence: I never wanted to have to make a bad decision because of money (e.g., staying at a job I don’t love because of car payments). Long-term goals of earning wealth (in order): Give my parents a retirement where they don’t have to work if they don’t want to Comfortable, sometimes gaudy lifestyle (I love pens) Make career decisions because I want to, not because of money Stay in touch with my friends by seeing them in person often There it is: an online, accountable list of goals for why I teach and learn how to be rich. What if you made a list like this and checked it every 6 months to see if you were moving towards your goals?

Visit the podcast's native language site