Many people have million-dollar ideas. They’re confident that their new product or service or innovation will make them rich and that all their dreams will come true. The problem is: Most people don’t know how to turn their million-dollar idea into millions of dollars. According to many social scientists, the most important thing in life is a person’s social and professional network. In other words, the people around us—our associates, our team, our friends. The people we surround ourselves with—and the people we go to for advice and guidance—can mean the difference between success and failure. And as he taught in Rich Dad Poor Dad, if the people around you have a poor person’s mindset, it’s likely that you’ll be, or stay, poor. Your team, in life and in business, will determine if your million-dollar idea will give you a million-dollar payday. In More Important Than Money, Robert teams up with his most trusted Advisors who contribute not only chapters on the strengths and talents they bring to the team, but offer candid and insightful individual Profiles and excerpts from each of the 14 Rich Dad Advisor Series books. Readers will meet all of Robert’s Rich Dad Advisors and learn why they are among his most valuable assets.
Robert Toru Kiyosaki is an American businessman and author, known for the Rich Dad Poor Dad series of personal finance books. He is the founder of the Rich Dad Company, a private financial education company that provides personal finance and business education to people through books and videos, and Rich Global LLC, which filed for bankruptcy in 2012. Since 2010, Kiyosaki was the subject of a class action suit filed by people who attended his seminars, and the subject of investigative documentaries by the CBC, WTAE-TV and CBS News. In January 2024, Kiyosaki revealed that he was more than $1 billion dollars in debt.
basically excerpts from Kiyosaki's business associates writings. He convinced some to write, and most of those whom he hired or contacted with, have their own books. This is a small compliation, of which this read takes a chapter and regurgitates verbatim.
Good insights if you haven't ready any of the rich dad advisor books. It was a lot of repetative items since I've read the books from Blair Singer, Garret Sutton, Tom Wheelright, etc. Skip it if you've read those books already.
More than half of it are excerpts from different other books. While each book excerpt was interesting to read, I would've preferred if it wasn't introduced in this book making it a lot bulkier for no reason.
While I liked the actual content (minus all the excerpts) and understood what Kiyosaki was aiming for (introducing his team, more than just mentioning them and setting an example of his own theories), the actual content itself, didn't need 400 pages. Unless you are, unlike me, satisfied with one book that introduces several financial principles, instead of reading multiple books explaining said principles in more detail, then this book is definitely a must for you.
I love this book as it is not just teach me how to be Financially Literated, but it also teach me the reason why Robert Kiyosaki and wife keep earning money in their whole system of earning money. There is a team, there is affection, there is perspectives, there is learning, there is so much a whole new lessons that once we break down are totally significant to be understood than just earning money.
Interesante libro en donde Robert presenta a todo su equipo y pone como referencia el triángulo D-I, el cual está compuesto por todos los elementos esenciales para que una empresa pueda prosperar. Este marco de referencia es un punto de partida para los emprendedores y resalta la importancia de la parte legal, las comunicaciones, la misión, así como el flujo de efectivo, los sistemas, el equipo, el liderazgo y el producto ofrecido.
I think it is an interesting book, I have never read this kind of books before. It is a very constructive and funtional book due to the tips and advices for the author and his friends. You can take some notes of how you can construct your own business and you can learn how grow up your financial status. I think it is a good book, but a prefer to read a novel's books, I don't know if would read something similar
This book is a sampling of info about the members of Robert Kiyosaki’s team, their strengths and weaknesses, and a sample chapter from each of their books. No in-depth info on anything, more like a whole book of filler. I thought it was going to be about how to build and/or lead a great team, but no.
Excelente libro como siempre Kiyosaki revelando conocimiento consiso sobre el tema financiero con un lenguaje simple donde no se necesita ser experto en la materia para saber de qué se está hablando, excelente libro y gran herramienta para los que emprende proyectos o desean emprender uno los puntos claves y expuestos en este libro son un gran típs.
Mostly a collection of excerpts for other rich dad books, but there's some value in having it all in one place to see where the gaps in your knowledge are so you can pick the next few books to read and decide which to skip.
This book reeks of capitalism. The entrepreneurial ideas only make sense with a capitalist mindset, and the book has failed to frame these ideas in a more expansive way.
When I first picked up the book in the bookstore, the cover was like "This is definitely what I need" because the cover was "Business is a team sport" and I really need books on this at the time and the book was written by Robert Kiyosaki. However, after finished the first half of the book, I couldn't hold it more because it was all commercial, nothing about team sport of business, if I don't want to say nothing useful about the book. This doesn't worth your money so don't buy it