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Sinopsis

"Michael Masterson has personally helped more people achieve financial independence than anyone else I know. He has been a valuable mentor in my own life. Michael's credentials go far beyond the fact that he is an extremely successful businessman. (There are thousands of those.) He has a unique gift for discerning—and explaining in easily accessible terms—what it really takes to succeed. Automatic Wealth for Grads will give any young person a tremendous headstart for achieving their financial and professional goals at a very young age."
—Justin Ford, author of Seeds of Wealth: An Incredible Wealth-Building Plan for Your Children and Editor of Main Street Millionaire

"Only time will tell whether you will have the guts and honor to follow Masterson's masterful plan. Good luck!"
—From the foreword by Mark Skousen, Adjunct Professor, Columbia University, 2004-05 and Benjamin Franklin Chair of Management, Grantham University

Organized around proven wealth-creating principles, this invaluable guide reveals powerful techniques and strategies that have personally worked for Michael Masterson as well as for the many people he's helped become wealthy and successful.

Filled with in-depth insights and practical advice, Automatic Wealth for Grads will show you how to:

  • Choose a great career, get your first job, and rise to the top of your field
  • Continuously increase your income on a fast-track basis, and get the biggest raises of your life
  • Profit from the real estate market—even in today's uncertain market
  • Start or gain equity in a business that will provide an automatic future income stream
  • Invest in the stock market, save money on taxes, make purchases that appreciate, reduce your credit costs, and achieve financial independence while you are still young enough to enjoy your money

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Acerca del autor

MICHAEL MASTERSON has been making money for himself and others for almost four decades. At one time or another, he's owned and run companies that were public/private,onshore/overseas, local/international, service-/product-oriented, retail/wholesale/direct mail, and even profit/not-for-profit. Masterson is the author of the Wall Street Journal bestseller Automatic Wealth: The Six Steps to Financial Independence; Power and Persuasion: How to Command Success in Business and Your Personal Life; and Confessions of a Self-Made Millionaire.

De la contraportada

Automatic Wealth for Grads is like getting your master's in financial independence—but without the midterms and textbooks. Filled with real-life examples and practical advice, this single book will teach you the secrets to getting wealthy sooner than you ever imagined . . . for many, even before the age of thirty.

Most grads discover pretty quickly that making a lot of money is not as easy as depicted in movies or on infomercials. Getting wealthy is a serious business that requires ambition, intelligent choices, and follow-through. The good news is that it doesn't matter whether you majored in English or economics, you can use these "money tested" techniques to make wealth-building not only probable but automatic. And when your cash flow balloons, you'll have more time, energy, and peace of mind to enjoy the things that really matter to you—whether it's traveling to Italy, playing the guitar, or just hanging out with friends and family.

In Automatic Wealth for Grads, self-made multimillionaire Michael Masterson becomes your personal mentor, drawing upon his own experiences and those of experts in the fields of investing, real estate, and business to offer you a complete program for achieving financial independence in record time. Organized around proven wealth-creating principles, he will show you how to quickly master the powerful moneymaking skills that will transform you into a dynamic, automatic wealth-builder, no matter what career path you choose.

The best part is that you don't need a fortune—or anything in the bank—to get started right now, whether it's finding a high-paying job, getting a huge raise, or even investing in real estate.

Special Report

Become a Millionaire Before You Turn 25!

You want to drink champagne instead of beer, sail the Caribbean rather than swim in a pond. You've just finished Automatic Wealth for Grads and you're ready to get rich, starting today! Learn the secrets to automatic wealth from self-made millionaire Michael Masterson—sign up for a free trial subscription to his daily e-newsletter, Early to Rise, www.earlytorise.com and receive a Special Report filled with 28 ideas for generating wealth eight times faster than you ever imagined. Sign up now at http://www.earlytorise.com/ForGrads to get going and retire in your early 20s!

De la solapa interior

Automatic Wealth for Grads is like getting your master's in financial independence?but without the midterms and textbooks. Filled with real-life examples and practical advice, this single book will teach you the secrets to getting wealthy sooner than you ever imagined . . . for many, even before the age of thirty.

Most grads discover pretty quickly that making a lot of money is not as easy as depicted in movies or on infomercials. Getting wealthy is a serious business that requires ambition, intelligent choices, and follow-through. The good news is that it doesn't matter whether you majored in English or economics, you can use these "money tested" techniques to make wealth-building not only probable but automatic. And when your cash flow balloons, you'll have more time, energy, and peace of mind to enjoy the things that really matter to you?whether it's traveling to Italy, playing the guitar, or just hanging out with friends and family.

In Automatic Wealth for Grads, self-made multimillionaire Michael Masterson becomes your personal mentor, drawing upon his own experiences and those of experts in the fields of investing, real estate, and business to offer you a complete program for achieving financial independence in record time. Organized around proven wealth-creating principles, he will show you how to quickly master the powerful moneymaking skills that will transform you into a dynamic, automatic wealth-builder, no matter what career path you choose.

The best part is that you don't need a fortune?or anything in the bank?to get started right now, whether it's finding a high-paying job, getting a huge raise, or even investing in real estate.

Special Report

Become a Millionaire Before You Turn 25!

You want to drink champagne instead of beer, sail the Caribbean rather than swim in a pond. You've just finished Automatic Wealth for Grads and you're ready to get rich, starting today! Learn the secrets to automatic wealth from self-made millionaire Michael Masterson?sign up for a free trial subscription to his daily e-newsletter, Early to Rise, www.earlytorise.com and receive a Special Report filled with 28 ideas for generating wealth eight times faster than you ever imagined. Sign up now at http://www.earlytorise.com/ForGrads to get going and retire in your early 20s!

Fragmento. © Reproducción autorizada. Todos los derechos reservados.

Automatic Wealth for Grads ... and Anyone Else Just Starting Out

By Michael Masterson

John Wiley & Sons

Copyright © 2006 Michael Masterson
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-0-471-78676-4

Chapter One

WEALTH MATTERS: YOU DECIDE HOW MUCH

Making money is not the most important thing in life. And Getting rich shouldn't be your number one goal.

But as a recent college graduate (or young person embarking on a career), wealth building should be on your agenda. Because-like it or not-your financial situation will affect your ability to enjoy every other aspect in your life.

They say the three most important questions a young person must answer are:

1. What shall I do with my life?

2. Where shall I do it?

3. And with whom?

In answering those questions, it makes sense to consider your finances because they will determine the choices you have in developing a career, selecting a place to live, and taking care of yourself and your family.

This book is based on the wealth-building principles outlined in my best-selling book, Automatic Wealth. But the ideas presented here are tailored specifically to you. As a recent graduate (and young person starting out), you have an advantage that I don't have. It is an amazingly powerful advantage that makes it absolutely easy to get rich.

When you have 60 years of life ahead of you, becoming wealthy is not just easy, it can be automatic. And that's the purpose of this book: to give you a blueprint for automatic wealth.

Automatic Wealth. What does that mean?

You understand the meaning of automatic: having the ability to develop independently, that is, without conscious effort. The wealth-building skills that you will learn in this book are easy. If you start practicing them now (I'll show you how), then before you know it you will be doing them without conscious effort. At that stage you will be an automatic wealth maker.

That's what I mean by automatic. Now let's deal with the tougher word: wealth. What does it mean to be wealthy?

Your idea of what it means is probably different from mine. This point, though obvious, was underlined for me recently when we asked the 450,000 readers of my daily e-zine Early to Rise (EarlytoRise.com), to define wealth. Here are a few of the hundreds of answers we received:

Having everything you want

Having more than you need

A million dollars in the bank

Ten million dollars in savings

Making a million bucks a year

Making a hundred thousand dollars a year

Living the life of a rock star

Even experts disagree on what it takes to be wealthy.

To Blanche Lark Christerson, director of the Wealth Planning Group at Deutsche Bank, wealthy is a net worth of $15 million. Christerson figures that for married couples with two young kids, today's "pricey lifestyle" costs about $375,000 a year. If you are single with no dependents, Christerson says $10 million will do. (She's assuming that you'd have 45 years ahead of you and that you'd want to preserve capital and leave it to your heirs or charities. She's calculating a conservative 3.5 percent return on investments.) To certified financial planner Jon Duncan, it's a net worth of $7.5 million. Duncan is making the same assumptions as Christerson in terms of kids and life span, but he thinks it only takes about $200,000 a year to live rich. And because the stock market has historically yielded about 10 percent, he's figuring on your getting a much better return on your savings. (From Jeanne Sahadi, "How Rich Is Rich?", July 24, 2003, accessed at http://www.cnn.com, September, 2005.)

Yes, wealth is a relative concept. But in order to talk about it productively, we must agree on a single definition. For the purposes of this book, then, I'm going to ask you to accept this one:

Wealth is a store of something valuable, something you can use or enjoy later. Financial wealth, therefore, is the net savings you have put aside for spending in the future.

Note the phrase "net savings." That means the money you have saved that doesn't need to be used for any current needs or any current debts. That is to say, your financial wealth is the amount of money you have put aside that is free and clear for future use.

Some financial experts (such as Christerson and Duncan) classify wealth as your net worth. Net worth is the total of all your financial assets minus all your debts. My definition-net savings-is a little more stringent. I'm not letting you count the financial value of your house, your car, or any other key possessions that you wouldn't be willing to get rid of someday.

The reason for this stricter definition is simple: You are always going to need a house and a car, so you can't really count them as part of your wealth. (This is an oversimplification. If you figure your wealth this way, you will be erring on the side of conservativeness. That's a good thing. It means you will always be richer than your numbers say you are.)

If you accept this definition-or even if you would rather count your wealth using the standard net worth formula-you must still recognize one important fact: You need more than a high income to be wealthy. It's amazing how many young people (and lots of older people) don't understand this. Too many folks equate making "mucho dinero" with being rich.

A good example:the cable TV show Entourage. In Entourage, the main character is a fictionalized version of Mark Wahlberg after he became famous as a Hollywood actor. Mark's character and his friends spend all their time and money buying toys and chasing girls, while their accountant sits in his office and screams at them. The entourage is hell-bent on spending every cent of the multimillion-dollar income their buddy is earning. And that makes them feel rich. The truth is, however, that they are just as broke as they were when they were living in Brooklyn. The only difference is that they are spending more.

To be rich, you need lots of money in the bank. A big income can give you a great lifestyle-but if you are spending it as fast as you are making it, when you stop working, or when a financial emergency arises, you'll very quickly find out how un-rich you really are.

Mike Tyson made more than $300 million during his boxing career. But today, he's in debt. Big debt. If Don King, his manager and promoter, had helped Mike learn to save his money (instead of spending it on $3 million rings), Mike would be wealthy. Instead, he's probably one of the poorest men on earth.

If you want to become wealthy-in terms of having lots of money put away for a rainy day ... or money to spend after you stop working for it-then you are going to have to learn how to save and invest a significant portion of your income.

But here's the good news. You are young, so this is a really good time for you to start saving money. If you get yourself into the habit of doing so now, you'll be rich before you know it.

In Chapter 2, I'll tell you exactly why being young gives you such a great advantage when it comes to building wealth. I'll explain why every dollar you save is worth $5 or $10 more than every dollar your parents saved. You'll discover the true power of compound interest and find out how to make it work for you.

But let's get back to this idea of stored value, which-in financial terms-translates into savings.

The purpose of saving money is so that if and when you stop working, you can draw on your savings to pay for your living expenses. For many people, the ideal situation is to have enough money saved that they can live off the interest. If, for example, your lifestyle (including paying your debts) costs you $70,000 a year and you have a million dollars in savings generating 7 percent interest (or $70,000 in income), you are financially independent.

Another, rather crude, way of saying this is that you have "G.L." (Get Lost) money.

G.L. money. Isn't that a good objective? Wouldn't you like to have the ability to not work and yet pay for all your living expenses? Wouldn't it be great to spend your time focusing on the activities that give you the greatest satisfaction in life, without worrying about money?

That's exactly what I'm going to show you how to do: Create a plan to get you from where you are today to a state of financial independence-having G.L. money. (I'm assuming you are broke and saddled with student loans. If you are better off than that, my plan will work that much faster.)

Okay. So how do we figure out how much in savings is enough?

We have to start with how much income you think you will need to live the life you want to live. To help you think about this, I'll tell you a little story about my early years-when I was just a few years older than you and knew even less about wealth and money than you probably do now.

IT'S NOT JUST ABOUT SAVINGS-YOUR INCOME MATTERS

As a young man, I never had any ambitions about making money. I knew nothing about business and didn't care to learn. My goal in life was to write a great novel, marry a beautiful woman (who liked my novel), and travel.

Apart from finishing that novel, I got what I wanted. And along the way, I also got rich. Here's what happened.

It was 1983. I had just been hired as editorial director for a fledgling newsletter-publishing company in South Florida. Because I had to give the occasional speech, I enrolled myself in a Dale Carnegie course on public speaking. Somehow, I ended up in the Carnegie basic success course instead.

How to Win Friends and Influence People is a 14-week program in which you are asked to focus on a certain character-changing task each week and then report on your progress the following week.

I was the worst student in the class. Cynical and suspicious, I despised what I took to be the silly, do-goodish prattle of the teachers. But I'd paid good money to be there, so I begrudgingly went along with the program-and I'm very glad I did.

The assignment for week four was to come up with a single goal that you would pursue for the remaining 10 weeks of the program. The idea was that by concentrating on only one goal, you could make much more progress than you would with a wider scope of objectives.

Sure enough, I had a hell of a time with that lesson. For me, it was by far the most difficult of the 14.

When I first started listing my goals, I could think of only two or three. But as I put more thought into it, the list began to expand ... first to half a dozen ... then to 10 ... and then 20 ... and on and on. Narrowing down the list was torture. Among other things, I wanted to be a great writer, a wise teacher, an admirable dad and husband, a linguist, a wine connoisseur, an athlete, and more. I was paralyzed. I simply couldn't tolerate the idea of giving up any one of those goals.

Finally, driving to the class at which I was to publicly announce my one main goal, I had a breakthrough. I realized that all my hard work and ambition had amounted to nothing, because I had been spreading myself too thin.

Then I had an idea: "Why not make `making money' my number one goal?" I thought. "If I achieve that goal, I'll have all the money I need to pursue my other interests."

At the time, I knew nothing about making money. But I focused on that one goal and made it my priority. And it worked. Big-time.

Before that experience, I was making $35,000 a year. A year later, my yearly income was $150,000 a year. (Later on in this book, I'll tell you how you can boost your income that dramatically.) Needless to say, this was more money than I had ever imagined I'd make. So I wasn't quite sure how to feel about it.

"You should feel very good," Ron (my accountant at the time) told me. He was amused by my innocent excitement. Ron was used to working with high-income earners-most in the million-dollar-plus category. "Welcome to the world of the rich," he said.

"Come on," I said. "A hundred and fifty grand is nothing compared to what most of your clients make."

"It's time you learned something about money," he replied.

I perked up and listened. To this day, I've never forgotten what he said. "First of all, you have to recognize that as far as earning income is concerned, you are already in the top 5 percent. Second, you need to know that $150,000 is enough to live like a billionaire."

"How can you say that?" I asked.

"Think of it this way," he said. "When you have a family income of less than $50,000, it's a struggle."

"Tell me about it," I replied. "I have been struggling ever since I graduated from college."

"Then, when you boost your income to between $50,000 and $150,000, you have everything you need but you have only some of what you want."

Since my transition from below $50,000 to $150,000 had been so quick, I had never had the time to experience living at that level of income. So I asked him what he meant.

"I mean this. You can afford a nice, modern, modest home. And you can pay your bills. You can even go out to dinner at a good restaurant once a week and spend a few weeks a year vacationing. But you can't do any of those things too elaborately, and you can't afford to buy yourself toys."

"Toys? Such as?"

"Such as sports cars, boats, expensive watches, and so on."

"My $35 Casio watch is fine for me," I said. "And I get seasick. But I wouldn't mind a little red sports car."

"Well, guess what?" he said. "Now you can afford that, too."

"Do you really think so?"

"Sure. Buy yourself a little five-year-old convertible for $3,500." (Remember, this was 1983.) "Keep it in your garage. Take it out on weekends."

"I'd love that."

"Now that you are in the $150,000 club, you can have everything you need and everything you want. You just have to be sure that you don't overspend on what you want."

"Like limiting the money I spend on my sports car to $3,500."

"Exactly. The only difference between your lifestyle and the way my wealthiest clients live-and I'm talking about guys who rake in eight-figure incomes every year-is the price of your toys. Other than that, you are living the same."

"That's a great thought," I told Ron. "Very comforting."

"And here's something else you need to know," he said, as he packed up his papers and started to walk out of the room. "You'll get just as much fun out of your $3,500 sports car as any of my other clients get from their Lamborghinis or Maseratis."

Do you know what? Ron was right. I bought a Triumph, a TR-6, for $3,200-it was the best sports car I ever owned.

That conversation with Ron left a deep impression on me. It was definitely a turning point in my financial life. Were it not for the advice he gave me, I might well have gone on to do what most high-income earners in America do: spend my money as fast as (or even faster than) I made it.

Overspending is a major problem for high-income earners for several reasons:

They want to show off their income by purchasing status symbols.

They want to reward themselves by buying expensive toys.

They feel that as long as they can pay for what they buy, there isn't any problem. If they spend every dollar of what they make this year, there'll be plenty more dollars next year.

The trouble with this sort of thinking is obvious: It makes it very difficult for one to save. And if you don't save money, you can't get richer. Wealth is not about how much you make. It's about how much you have to spend in the future. Put in financial terms: Wealth is not your income, but your net savings.

Ron's conversation was immensely helpful to me, because he made me understand, at the beginning of my high-income-earning years, that spending extra money on ever-more-expensive toys wasn't going to give me any more gratification. All it was going to do was put me on the same treadmill with everyone else in my category (the rest of the 5 percent in the $150,000 club), most of whom would never end up wealthy.

So that's an important thing for you to recognize now, too: As you follow the steps laid out in this book and begin to earn a higher and higher income, don't fritter it all away by being lured into buying more expensive toys.

(Continues...)


Excerpted from Automatic Wealth for Grads ... and Anyone Else Just Starting Outby Michael Masterson Copyright © 2006 by Michael Masterson . Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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Masterson, Michael, Skousen, Mark
Publicado por Wiley, 2006
ISBN 10: 0471786764 ISBN 13: 9780471786764
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Librería: Wonder Book, Frederick, MD, Estados Unidos de America

Calificación del vendedor: 5 de 5 estrellas Valoración 5 estrellas, Más información sobre las valoraciones de los vendedores

Condición: Very Good. Very Good condition. Very Good dust jacket. A copy that may have a few cosmetic defects. May also contain light spine creasing or a few markings such as an owner's name, short gifter's inscription or light stamp. Bundled media such as CDs, DVDs, floppy disks or access codes may not be included. Nº de ref. del artículo: S14B-05169

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