Posts Tagged ‘success’

You Don’t Have to be Born Brilliant – John McGrath

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

I am not doing a review on this one just yet, as I am currently reading this book WITH a team I am mentoring.

A great way to use this blog for your fullest potential is to get a mastermind group to all read the book at the same time, and all comment on this post so we can all learn at the same time from things we all may have picked up, or some of us may have missed or interpreted differently, but beneficially so.

I may adjust this post as we go, or I may leave it as is, and comment along with the team

John’s a great author, and has DONE IT, and is still doing it, rather than just writing about it. I mean, anyone who is in real estate sales who does not buy John’s books should leave real estate immediately.

Think about it, the guy has read every professional book there is to read, he has applied what he has learned in the field of building a brilliant real estate sales business, arguably the most successful independant agency in Australia, and has summarised what he has learned in a couple of books. Like I said, if you don’t buy and read them, my advice is to leave the industry, as he is spelling out the ‘how to’ for you.

Rich Dad Poor Dad – Robert Kiyosaki

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009






(click on the pic to buy the book cheap)

It’s been a while since I read this one, but I’ll go through it again, I just couldn’t NOT have this classic on the blog in its early days.

It is again, a great story about Robert’s lessons in money management with the two men in his life with very different philosophies that illustrate the difference in thinking between the rich and the employees.

It really illustrates the points and was written before Robert was in the business of being a serial author, when, in my opinion, he did his best work.

The Richest Man in Babylon – George S. Clason

Monday, January 5th, 2009






(Click on the picture here to buy the book cheap)

This review wasn’t written by me, but I liked the book and I lied the nice wording of the review so I added this one in. – Glenn

Beloved by millions, this timeless classic holds the key to all you desire and everything you wish to accomplish. This is the book that reveals the secret to personal wealth.

Countless readers have been helped by the famous “Babylon parables”, hailed as the greatest of all inspirational works on the subject of thrift, financial planning, and personal wealth.

In a language as simple as that found in the Bible, these fascinating and informative stories set you on a sure path to prosperity and it’s accompanying joys.

Acclaimed as a modern day classic, this celebrated best seller offers an understanding of – and a solution to – your personal financial problems that will guide you through a lifetime.

This is the book that holds the secret to acquiring money, keeping money and making money earn more money.

(Click on the picture here to buy the book cheap)




Who Moved My Cheese? – Spencer Johnson M.D.

Saturday, January 3rd, 2009

 

I wanted to write a quick one on this book. This is for any company, team, organisation or salesperson that is going, or expects to undergo, significant change in their business. And let’s face it, for any business that is going to part of it. From minor changes to major upheavals for many reasons.

This is a very simple and easy to read book that is fun, and you should knock it over in a night. It is told as a sustained metaphor about mice and cheese representing people and money and is told in a very clever teaching style.

When I train people in hypnosis, we teach that metaphor and stories is one of the most effective ways to communicate with the ‘unconscious mind.’ This book exemplifies this point.

Great book to read, only criticism is it is a little short, but if what needs to be said can be done in a shorter amount of time, why fluff it up just to appease a publisher.

Great job by Spencer Johnson.

Glenn Twiddle

Think and Grow Rich – Napoleon Hill

Monday, December 29th, 2008

 

It’s an interesting story about the author of ‘Think and Grow Rich’, Napoleon Hill. Now this book is on more millionaires’ recommended reading list than any other with the exception of the bible, so really it is the bible of the money making industry. And the interesting thing is, according to acclaimed trainer Dan Kennedy, that he was almost broke if W. Clement Stone, who was a student of Hill’s, hadn’t bailed him out and gave him a job as his sales trainer towards the end of his career. I’ll discuss the one flaw with this book in a moment.

This book was compiled by Napoleon Hill after studying the most successful people in America in the early 20th Century and analysing what traits and patterns of thinking were common to all, or most, of them. And the results of decades of this study are contained in this book. And here we, the public, can get decades worth of research for less than $20. Man, you got to love books huh?

So why did the man who pretty much ‘got it’ didn’t ‘have it.’ Well this book really should be titled, ‘How to Think to Grow Rich.’ I think the problem was in the implication that all you have to do is ‘think’ in a certain way and you’ll magically grow rich. It’s the unspoken ‘just’ before the title that is implied that is the problem. Without the action, in an environment where you’re likely to make money, you can think all you like and nothing will change. Unless the thinking leads to doing, there will be no getting rich. Don’t get me wrong, Hill had a great income at various times in his life with all the extravagance that goes with it, but he made some mistakes as well.

I think that’s also the problem with ‘The Secret,’ which by the way, is based on the principals in this book. Some of the people on the Secret imply that just the thoughts will make the reality, but James Ray and Joe Vitale are the two that promote the ‘MASSIVE ACTION’ as an integral part of the deal.

That being said, all in all, an absolute MUST for anyone who has a desire for making money. The one downside is that the examples are a little dated, but if you get the updated version that is a moot point.

I stole my copy from my Dad. It was printed in 1960 and it has ‘Newly Revised’ on the old ratty cover. Quite simply – REQUIRED READING. (Oh yeah, and don’t let the chapter on ‘Sexual Transmutation’ scare you off. Interesting premise though.)

Glenn Twiddle