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The Millionaire Mind Book
What do you do after you've written the No. 1 bestseller The Millionaire Next Door? Survey 1,371 more millionaires and write The Millionaire Mind. Dr. Stanley's extremely timely tome is a mixture of entertaining elements. It resembles Chris Tarrant's hit show "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire", only you have to pose real-life questions, instead of quizzing about trivia. Are you a gambling, divorce-prone, conspicuously consuming "Income-Statement Affluent" Jacuzzi fool soon to be parted from his or her money, or a frugal, loyal, resole your shoes and buy your own groceries type like one of Stanley's "Balance-Sheet Affluent" millionaires? "Cheap dates" millionaires are 4.9 times likelier to play with their grandkids than shop at Brooks Brothers. "If you asked the average American what it takes to be a millionaire", he writes, "they'd probably cite a number of predictable factors: inheritance, luck, stock market investments ... Topping his list would be a high IQ, high SAT scores and grade point average, along with attendance at a top college." No way, says Stanley, backing it up with data he compiled with help from the University of Georgia and Harvard geodemographer Jon Robbin. Robbin may wish he'd majored in socializing at LSU, instead, because the numbers show the average millionaire had a lowly 2.92 GPA, SAT scores between 1,100 and 1,190 and teachers who told them they were mediocre students but personable people. "Discipline 101 and Tenacity 102" made them rich. Stanley got straight Cs in English and writing but he had money-minded drive. He urges you to pattern your life according to Yale professor Robert Sternberg's Successful Intelligence because Stanley's statistics bear out Sternberg's theories on what makes minds succeed--and it ain't IQ.Besides offering insights into millionaires' pinchpenny ways, pleasing quips ("big brain, no bucks") and 46 statistical charts with catchy titles, Stanley's book booms with human-potential pep talk and bristles with anecdotes--for example, about a bus driver who made $3 million, a doctor (reporting that his training gave him zero people skills) who lost $1.5 million and a loser scholar in the bottom 10 percent on six GRE tests who grew up to be Martin Luther King Jr. Read it and you'll feel like a million bucks. --Tim Appelo, Amazon.comRead More
from£15.02 | RRP: * Excludes Voucher Code Discount Also available Used from £10.14
- 0740718584
- 9780740718588
- Thomas J. Stanley
- 1 August 2001
- Andrews McMeel Publishing
- Paperback (Book)
- 416
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