There
is a spiritual snobbery some people take
on about money.
To say you don't like money would be to not
like
nearly anything — because money supplies
nearly everything.
Man was born to grow rich by using God-given
abilities: intelligence, thoroughness, right
reasoning, promptness, tenacity, patience,
labor.
(When Moses came down from the mountain,
he did not bring the commandment "Thou shalt not make money.")
By using your abilities and making money, you give yourself power, leisure,
solitude, and liberty.
To read this book about making $100K (and more) is not to learn about
greed or to become a soulless, covetous money monger. It's about choices,
discipline, values, relationships, and self-esteem.
(By the way, it's okay to be greedy with new ideas for growth. That's
what this book is about. One resulting benefit is money.)
It is true that money carries an assortment of distinct and powerful
emotions for people, both good and bad. But that does not negate its
role as a basic, important, and understandable system of communication.
For better or worse, money is the resource, now and in the future, that
ties society together.
You can choose to spend it, save it, or share
it — but first you
have to get it.
Aside from those born with an inheritance
already in the bank, the rest of us have
to be born with desire. Desire to learn.
Desire to work.
Desire to sweat. Desire to have someone say
about you someday, "Look,
now there's a successful person."
Being a successful person can mean lots of
different things, of course, but here I mean
financial, emotional, and intellectual — balanced
success.
Salary, or income, is an extremely confidential
subject in this country. It is not socially
acceptable to brag (or even tell) people
how much
you make. A Procter & Gamble alum told me, "You
could get fired if you told someone how much
you make at the company."
The $100K Club is all about that private
subject. I have written about what people
do write home to Mom about: moving to a window
corner office,
getting a premium company car, their own
key to the washroom, a wooden desk instead
of a metal one, the title of vice president,
et cetera.
And what they should write home about — making
$100K plus.
But first, can you think back to your first awareness of money?
One man answered that question, "As
a kid I lived in California and my dad and
I would drive through Beverly Hills. He would
point toward
wealthy people's homes and tell me, 'Thieves
live there.' That's how I viewed people with
money."
A female business owner answered, "As
I was growing up, my aunt used to say to
me, 'It's just as easy to fall in love with
a rich person
as a poor one, so be careful who you choose
to go out with.... But always carry a quarter
in your bra so you have money to make a telephone
call
if you need to get away from someone.' "
A man who has been included in the Forbes
list of the world's wealthiest people said, "As
a child I saw a television special about
the Rothschilds and decided I wanted to be
like them. It feels very appropriate."
A wealthy friend surprised me by saying, "When I was six years
old, I asked my folks for an Oh Henry! candy bar for Christmas. They
said they couldn't afford it. Right then I vowed to be able to afford
as many as I wanted when I grew up." (He
said this to me as we stopped at a convenience
store for gas and he purchased six Oh Henry!
bars. He didn't eat any, he just bought them.)
So pause here a moment and try to think back to your early awareness
about money. Why? Because we all have experiences that form our unconscious
attitude about the almighty dollar. Sentiments that as adults can cause
problems in accomplishing monetary goals.
We all have attitudes formed in our childhood about relationships with
most everything in life: the opposite sex, food, beauty, religion, money.
You name it and a view was formed by individual upbringing. Regardless
of the subject, it's an outlook you can change with your own free will.
You need to take a proactive look at yourself
and your past as it relates to money. Psychologists
popularly label this "fear of success versus
fear of failure." I prefer to just recognize
that we all have relationships regarding
money that stem from various experiences,
both good and bad.
It's our choice to bemoan the fact that our
rearing causes fear of success (or failure).
Or it's our choice to recognize that possibility
and decide
now, as a thinking person, to change any
prohibitive attitudes.
You might say, "Well, that will require therapy!" If you choose
to go that route, you will spend money to get someone to help you alter
your thinking. Or you can do like many who do well do and sort out the
reasoning yourself. It requires only two things: recognition, then change.
As the Nike advertisements say, "Just
do it."
Some might say, "Well, I can't change those deeply embedded experiences."
True, you can't change the experiences, but you can change your perspective
about them. You, and only you, can decide to take on new views that
support your goals, give you and your family new training, and conquer
any self-imposed limitations rooting around in your psyche. (Just one
example of a self-limiting attitude is the currently used business buzzword
FUD. It's an acronym for "Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt." It
relates to any daring decision you need to make. FUD is something you
can reverse. Perhaps substitute "First Undo Derogatory" when
you use FUD as a step to changing.)
A company has to change to progress and stay
competitive. That might mean altering attitudes
toward its past. When businesses do it, they
call it changing the "corporate culture." If
an organization of hundreds, even thousands,
can transform a corporate mentality, then
an individual surely can.
J. R. Simplot founded his potato-based agricultural empire in the 1920s.
(His company supplies McDonald's with 50 percent of its french fries.)
Now he is emerging as one of the biggest players in the semiconductor
technology world. He follows only Bill Gates and Paul Allen in a mind-boggling
ballooning of his financial worth.
According to Fortune, "The man makes a fortune in the era of Manifest
Destiny and then makes another in the age of the Internet. It seems
impossible." Imagine the transformation
he's gone through: As he puts it, he started
his company before the typewriter, much less
the
computer!
CHANGE ANY LIMITING ATTITUDES YOU MIGHT
HAVE TOWARD MAKING THE BIG MONEY
People can change. Of course, when they say and think they can't, then
they can't. If they think they can, they can. (You already know that
to be true; I'm just reminding you about self-imposed mental blocks.)
If, in your self-reflection, you discover
negative blocks about making lots of money — get
over it! Switch that thought now. If you
don't, in five, ten, twenty years you will
kick yourself in the underalls for
not overturning it.
The business world has undergone revolutionary
change and there really aren't the limitations
there might have been at one time. You have
to
realize that and not stay stuck in the "this can't be done by me" mind-set.
My professional and personal experience of
having worked with many $100K members is
that making money, beyond the level needed
to
satisfy basic needs, is, interestingly, about
self-respect.
If, by the way, you think that in order to
make $100K you have to be a thief, be neurotic,
be a workaholic, or sell yourself out — well,
you are dead wrong.
There are many good, well-liked people who make big money and are still
good and well-liked. Country Music Association performer of the year
Reba McEntire is a down-home entertainer who's adored, admired, and
respected by her fans and peers alike. She unashamedly says she works
all-out to earn all the money she possibly can.
Parishioners and fellow clergy in San Diego
call Father Joe Carroll the "hustler priest." Not
because he gets paid so much, but because
he raised a record $11.7 million for a homeless
shelter. Few
would say he lacks ethics, despite the huge
money he's involved with.
The list of 100K people who lead balanced lives and are honest, sane,
hardworking, and deserving of their wages is longer than the list of
those who aren't. The bad ones get the publicity and notoriety, thus
giving a sordid reputation to wealth. That is good because it reminds
clean players to stay clean while weeding out the losers.
Wealth, in and of itself, is not bad. What it can cause you to do can
be bad or good. I prefer to think my readers use it for good. Some won't,
though, and I apologize to mankind for that. But the mission in The
$100K Club is to help the majority who desire and deserve to earn much
more than they are currently earning.
To make $100K you have to decide to do some fairly simple things well
and consistently. This book is about those specific things. But it isn't
just about making big money; it's about becoming a person who deserves
big money and takes the responsibility for getting it.
Your very being consists of your imagination of yourself. Your monetary
goals revolve around what you'll cause yourself to do, both in big and
small ways.
That lesson was reinforced for me recently when I left town for a three-day
speaking trip.
As I buckled the airplane seat belt, I reached
for my briefcase to get out some work. The
spot where I keep my wallet was empty. I
had left
it on my office desk. I didn't have a single
credit card to use on the airplane telephone
to call for money. I didn't have any currency,
not
even pocket change. Nothing. Despite what
my W-2 tax form reads, at that moment I had
zero money. I thought through my dilemma
and knew
I could get money once at my destination,
but I had to get there first — and
I couldn't even pay for a taxi to the hotel!
(I checked in the brochure: no free shuttle
service to the hotel.)
I always carry with me in my briefcase a copy of one of the books I've
written. It makes for fun conversation on an airplane when I can subtly
show (er, show off) the book to my seatmate. The desperate thought crossed
my mind, I have to sell this book on this plane to get some money to
pay for the taxi. (It seemed like a better option than begging for a
handout or pawning my watch.)
Since I'd been upgraded to first class, there was only one seatmate.
I bemoaned the fact that if I had stayed in coach and gotten a center
seat, I'd have had two people to try to sell the book to, thus increasing
my odds.
So I started mentally planning. First, size
up the situation — namely, the buying
potential of this one seatmate. He was dressed
in khakis, was sockless, and wore a monogrammed
crew shirt. My first thought:
Oh great, a trust-fund baby! But I patiently
listened and carefully observed. He started
talking to a pretty woman sitting across
the aisle.
Turned out she worked for him. Good. At least
he was in business. But I couldn't look too
eager or brash. So I waited.
The airplane flight pattern that day coincidentally
took us directly over the isolated Colorado
mountain valley where my husband and I live
in a log cabin. I casually looked out the
window and commented, "See
that open spot? That's where I live." (You
have to admit, it's an original opening line.)
"Really?" was his less than impressed response.
He turned back to the pretty woman.
As he took a sip of his orange juice, I initiated
some more conversation: "I couldn't
help but overhear you talking. Are you in
the beverage distribution business?"
"We're a beer distributor," he said.
"Oh, I see. You were using business terms I hear with one of my
clients, Pepsi-Cola. That's why I asked." (Notice
how I slipped in the information that I was
in a business where I have big-name clients
like Pepsi-Cola?)
Fortunately, some level of curiosity caused
him to ask, "What kind
of business are you in?"
"I'm a consultant and an author of business books," I answered.
But I still wasn't sure what his job was and whether he would have any
interest in buying my book. So I offered, "I notice you and she"
— I pointed to the woman across the aisle —"are talking.
Would you like to sit together? I can move if you need to discuss business." I
was taking a risk of losing my book buyer,
but again, I couldn't look too eager about
engaging in conversation with him.
"No, we'll be together the rest of the trip." He added so
she could hear, "She's the top manager in my company." Then
kiddingly, "I see enough of her."
Great! I thought. He practices what I preach about professional effectiveness:
building subordinates' self-esteem, using humor, being pleasantly assertive.
My stuff would be like preaching to the choir, as they say.
So I casually commented in a quiet voice, "What you just did —
praising her — is part of what I write
about in my books."
The compliment intrigued him enough to ask, "Would
I have heard of any of your books?"
"Perhaps. Lions
Don't Need to Roar or How
to Think Like a CEO, " I told him.
"Sure I have. I saw an article on that Lions book. Is it available
at most bookstores?" he asked with some
genuine interest.
"Yes, anywhere in the country." Then — without a frantic
tone — I added, "If you are interested,
I happen to have a copy with me. If you want
to buy it, I'd be glad to autograph it for
you."
"Great. How much is it?" he asked, reaching
for his wallet.
When I put his twenty-dollar bill in my briefcase, I fondled it for
a few seconds. After not having any money, it sure felt good between
my fingers. Then I selected a specifically secure pocket in the briefcase
to guarantee no mishap of losing it. I was rich!
I felt like an honored member of the $100K Club with that twenty dollars!
It was a feeling of pure happiness.
I hope you frequently experience that happiness on a much grander scale.
With that wish, I make this announcement:
THE $100K CLUB IS OPEN TO NEW MEMBERS!
The requirements? As I mentioned before, there are several simple things
you need to do well and consistently. Here's one of those simple things:
You must be willing to add to your self-worth every day.
While adding to your self-worth typically means making money, in the
financial sense it can also mean investing money, learning a timely
job skill, developing a new personality trait, solving a time-consuming
energy-draining problem, controlling time, managing an attitude, improving
appearances, even building muscle.
Adding to your self-worth will make you more valuable monetarily, professionally,
mentally, physically, emotionally. That's successful living. That's
a $100K Club member.
Regardless of the exact dollar figure that
lights up their eyes —
six figures, seven, even eight figures — a
lot more will try than succeed. If you want
to be the one who succeeds, this book is
for you.
I've spent the last twenty years around people
whose financial earnings put them into $100K
and far beyond. I've studied, watched, interviewed,
and consulted for them. What I've learned,
from those who have made
it, is yours for the taking. As I stated
earlier, one of the simple requirements is
to — every day — add to your
self-worth.
I have a friend with a trademark greeting:
When asked "How's it
going?" he answers, "Spectacular... but getting better." People
always know he will say it and they ask all
the time just to hear his enthusiasm again.
Of course, he has to walk the walk. Like the day I called him and he
informed me that the company he'd worked for the last twenty of his
sixty-one years had been sold and he and everyone in the office would
be terminated. At that exact moment he was missing an important meeting
that could have meant a new job, but because the bank next door had
been robbed and his front-office door was bolted by the police and the
parking lot was blocked off, he couldn't leave.
"I'm rather excited, though, even at my age. I
have two house payments, two car payments, and one
motor-home payment. But I refuse to allow
myself a pouting party. You know me: If I
don't learn something new every day, I'm sliding back
ward.... By the way, do you know what et.
seq. means?"
"No, I don't," I answered. "Why do you
ask?"
"Well, it keeps coming up in the real estate law classes I'm teaching
and I don't know what it means, so today I'm going to find out," he
told me.[*]
[* He wrote me a note the next
day and explained that in Latin et. seq.
means "in sequence or
logically following." Another example
of walking the walk by following through
with that day's objective.]
Another acquaintance of mine is a female
business leader who says it's her personal
mission to add to her worth every day. She's
forty-one
years old but looks thirty-two because she
takes good care of herself so that her body
will hold up for all the work she puts it
through.
She says, "I have to 'win' every day.
That means I'm either in a race or in a battle."
She watches ESPN every evening. It doesn't
matter the sport; she just likes to study
the competition. She says, "Win, win,
win, that's what I want. I analyze individual
players, the depth of the team, the
defense, who's on the bench. Everything I'm
interested in is based around winning and
losing, because that's what I deal with every
day in the
marketplace.
"Every day I read a story or part of a book about
[athletic] coaches. I learn so much from them. I'm
reading something by Don Shula now, but
Vince Lombardi was my favorite. I feel I
missed something in my life not knowing him....Last
night I read an article about a marathon runner
who pushes his brother, who has cerebral
palsy, in a three-wheeler during training runs. It
brought tears to my eyes. When you ignite the human
spirit like that, you have so much energy to burn."
Then you have the energy to make significant money!
All $100K Club members add to their self-worth every day before they
make the big money. The habit isn't formed once you reach some financial
goal; it's to get you to that financial goal and to keep you at and
beyond that level.
Fortunately, there are myriad ways for you to add value to yourself
on a daily basis so that you are worthy of earning six figures. That
is also what this book is about: being worthy of big money as a reflection
of your mental creativity, intelligence, and drive.
In the 1980s making money was the goal in itself: having more showpieces,
cars, clothes, or someone on your arm. Not today.
In the 1990s and beyond, instead of having more things, do more things.
Be the master of your own fate. Be the superhero you (and your family)
look up to in your life.
An old study concluded that men view money as adding to their power
and women view money as adding to their freedom. Today the thinking
has to be: Combine power and freedom in the limited time available.
People who are successful do what's required seven days a week. It's
not just work, it's fulfilling their own dream.
You don't need to do it like anyone else. But if you're like most who
have made it already, you want to know what others have experienced.
Then you can pick your own route.
To help you do that, the chapters in this book are laid out as follows:
Chapter 2 is about following your heart and soul to make a six-figure
income. The fact is that you will be spending a great deal of your life
working at it, so you had better enjoy yourself. If you chase the bucks
too hard but lose yourself in the process, not only will you be unhappy
but you might get fired. We want to make sure that doesn't happen.
We all know that corporate executives can
make six-, seven-, eight-figure salaries — but
what other kinds of jobs do too? Yes, some
artists, rodeo cowboys, manufacturers' reps,
pilots, and long-distance truckers
do also. But in all fields, a lot more people
enter a field than excel in it. The third
chapter explains what makes the difference
between
the two.
If a corporate job is your chosen route,
then you want to get yourself in the right
position to get those high-paying jobs. Chapter
4 will
reveal how to set yourself apart from the
competition. And — very
important — what can be done to get
over the hurdle when you're stuck at a certain
money level.
Chapter 5 provides fresh thinking on how
to job hunt at the $100K level. The people
who do the screening of résumés
and the interviewing will tell you exactly
what they do and don't like.
If you develop a niche and are able to work out of your home, how do
you compete with the big boys with deep pockets, use the government
as a partner, stay motivated, and reenter the corporate world if necessary?
Telecommuters will want to pay particular attention to Chapter 6.
Chapter 7 is about trade-offs and the decision whether the sacrifices
are worth it to you. It's an upbeat, real-world view of what big money
does and doesn't mean.
And finally, Chapter 8 is a 20-point checklist designed for you to rate
yourself, both for where you are now and for in the future, on your
chance of success in joining the $100K Club.
There is a lot of conventional wisdom about making money that isn't
very wise. There are many myths about what making big dollars means.
A lot is misunderstood. The $100K Club changes that.
As National Finals Rodeo bull-rising champion
(and $100K Club member) Tuff Hedeman says, "In
order to ride bulls, you really have to focus
and concentrate on what it takes to make
a good ride."
That's what we are going to concentrate on:
making "a good ride"
with the bulls in business. The good thing is that you don't have the
physical pain or the eight-second time limit to contend with — like
Tuff Hedeman does in his work!
If you've been working toward this goal casually, then take this advice
and go all-out for it.
When you have a tough day (which we all do) and it's a bit depressing,
discouraging, or disappointing, take one hour off and do one of the
following:
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