Secrets of the Millionaire Mind
Published on - November 29th, 2006 (Modified on - January 14th, 2007) (by J.D. Roth)
Initially, T. Harv Eker’s Secrets of the Millionaire Mind: Mastering the Inner Game of Wealth seems cast from the same mold as Loral Langemeier’s The Millionaire Maker (my review): full of vague promises, unsupported claims, and thinly-veiled sales pitches for products and seminars. It’s true that Eker is guilty of some of these faults. But ultimately I could not help but like the book once I stopped thinking of it as a personal finance guide and began to consider it as a motivational tool.
I’m sure that many people would dismiss Secrets of the Millionaire Mind as useless. There’s not a lot of concrete information here about how to improve the details of your financial life. (Though the scant advice presented is sound). Instead, this book encourages readers to adopt mental attitudes that facilitate wealth. It’s about changing your psychological approach to money, success, and happiness.
Eker believes that we each possess a “financial blueprint”, an internal script that dictates how we relate to money. This blueprint is created through lifelong exposure to money messages from friends, current events, entertainment programs, and, especially, our family. Unfortunately, our blueprints usually contain errors that prevent us from achieving our dreams.
Eker lists seventeen ways in which the financial blueprints of the rich differ from those of the poor and the middle-class.
- Rich people believe: “I create my life.” Poor people believe: “Life happens to me.” (This is HUGE. Every successful person I know is control of her life. Unhappy people are constantly complaining to me how this, that, or the other thing prevents them from doing something.)
- Rich people play the money game to win. Poor people play the money game to not lose.
- Rich people are committed to being rich. Poor people want to be rich.
- Rich people think big. Poor people think small.
- Rich people focus on opportunities. Poor people focus on obstacles.
- Rich people admire other rich and successful people. Poor people resent rich and successful people. (This is important, too — it seems to hold true among my friends.)
- Rich people associate with positive, successful people. Poor people associate with negative or unsuccessful people. (Another important one.)
- Rich people are willing to promote themselves and their value. Poor people think negatively about selling and promotion.
- Rich people are bigger than their problems. Poor people are smaller than their problems.
- Rich people are excellent receivers. Poor people are poor receivers.
- Rich people choose to get paid based on results. Poor people choose to get paid based on time.
- Rich people think “both”. Poor people think “either/or”.
- Rich people focus on their net worth. Poor people focus on their working income.
- Rich people manage their money well. Poor people mismanage their money well.
- Rich people have their money work hard for them. Poor people work hard for their money.
- Rich people act in spite of fear. Poor people let fear stop them. (This is big for me right now. I’ve accomplished most of the goals I set for myself, and need to set some new ones. But I have this nagging fear, because I’m moving into the unknown. Eker says that successful people act in spite of this fear. They move beyond worry, they “fake it til they make it”, learning as they go. Unsuccessful people do nothing at all.)
- Rich people constantly learn and grow. Poor people think they already know.
Out of context, some of this advice seems glib. In the book, however, Eker explains each point, demonstrating how successful people discard limiting beliefs while the unsuccessful succumb to them.
For example, here is an audio excerpt of the passage from the book that finally won me over. In it, Eker talks about how rich people believe they are in control of their lives while poor people let life happen to them. (This excerpt is 9:15 long, and is a 12.73mb mp3.)
Though Eker’s book is ostensibly about wealth, it’s actually about happiness and success. This is one of those books from which it’s important to extract the core lessons and to apply them to your life in ways that are appropriate. Don’t take everything at face value. Take the information and use it in ways that work for you. For me, for my place in life, Secrets of the Millionaire Mind was perfect. Eker’s seventeen lessons were exactly what I needed to hear right now.
This is an excellent book to borrow from a library. I listened to the audio version of this book (via Audible), and highly recommend it in this form. Eker reads it himself in an almost too-enthusiastic style. Yet when you surrender to his eagerness, it works.
You can find more information on Secrets of the Millionaire Mind at:
- The publisher web site where there is also an author page.
- An interview with T. Harv Eker.
- The official T. Harv Eker site.
- A review of the book.
I’m surprised that there’s not more information about this book available online, especially on other personal finance sites. I expected some sort of reaction, even if it was a negative one. Nobody seems to have read it.
This article is about Books, Psychology, Self-Improvement
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i just wanna know if i can find this book in morocco plzz help me coz i’m in need of it
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I am happy that this man have explained the deeper reason from not having enough money. And this has to do with everything in our lifes. Health, work, relations and economy.
Everything has to do with the unconsious mind and it’s lovely to hear inner world create your outer world in hes book.
Go 4 it.
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Well !! there is only limited resources on the planet and 90% are owned by 10% who by the very power of owning these won’t let them go out of their hands and rather try and get the rest from the balance 90% have nots.
So I feel, till the time a have not (poor) doesnt have some extraordinary skill to create wealth he will remail poor till many generations and the rich will keep accumulating more resources from the rest poor 10%.
As simple as that
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The cynics and nay sayers commenting here, are exhibiting the attitudes, values and beliefs that will prevent them from ever becoming wealthy/rich/comfortable… Nearly all seem jealous and spiteful, which is unfortunate.
When people start to think like the rich, they start genuine striving for that which they desire (usally achievemnet of goals, sometimes the aquisition of money) and often, wealth is a side effect.
The Poor frequently share similar attitudes to other poor people, the rich share attitudes and values, too but are different to those of the poor.
The book is trying to highlight these ovious differences as simply and plainly as possible so that those who with to become wealthy, can be more likely to suceed (at goals, dreams and desires).
Great book.
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this may be a generational approach to thinking about wealth, savings, spending..
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That is way i think, feel,dreaam.but no forget God because he is creator mankind &all that exist
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[...] That’s probably not the first time you’ve heard this. If you want to create financial abundance, you’ve got to start managing your money. I started doing so in 2006 after reading T. Harv Eker’s Secrets of the Millionaire Mind [J.D.'s review]. [...]
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This summary/assessment is helpful . . . and insightful. To not take risk, after exposing your opinions, is contrary to your actions. The fact is that you can plan around success, or plan around failure. There really isn’t a compromise. To plan around success does not mean that one ignores the possibility of failure, but instead, it means that failure scenarios are relegated to contingency, as opposed to purpose. My siblings and parents have suffered long and hard behind planning around failure scenarios. One might call them self-fulfilling prophecies. I believe in the rather simple, but solid adage: “Fail to plan, plan to fail.” Your assessment of the book has compelled me to read it. Thank you.
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I had a read through the book after reading your review and I found it helpful as a general tool. And even if you don’t agree, it does give food for thought to check if I am playing the victim or not.
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THE POOR MAN RENAINS POOR IF AND ONILY IF ONE THINKS POORLY
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I like the differences between Rich and Pool mindset. I have recently been listening to Marshall Sylver and he pointed out many of the same ideas on his CD. As long as you are hearing or reading it and can believe it and focus on what needs to be done and actually go out and do it, you will start towards success.
Nothing comes quickly and you need to be in for the marathon, not just the sprint
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Wow, just too much stuff. All of these comments and so many conflicting opinions. So I’m just going to keep it simple. Read the Book “AGAIN”. I was born poor, very poor and I have to be grateful for books written by people like T.Harv Eker, because today I’m living a life beyond my wildest dreams and this is just the beginning. And these books have given me a Millionaire Mind, PLUS!
I wish everybody great success..
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It’s amazing how fast people are to comment that there is no way that a lot of people could be better off if they managed their lives better…
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i learned a lot from the commentors here, i would say, its somehow may help an aspiring one to be motivated but not a guarantee to become rich.
if you belong to low class people and want to get rich, it is important to have some motivation through reading millionaires stories, in that way, i believed, he/she will realize the importance of having the right attidude first. and through reading the whole stories, it will add them a hope and make them realized that millionaires went throught a ot of hardworks before they acquired their wealth. it’s hard yes, but everything is possible with the right attitude and most importantly positive mind.
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