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10 Ways Rich People Think Differently

Oldgamer

Diamond Member
If you ask Thomas Corley, being rich has very little to do with luck and everything to do with habits.

Corley, who spent five years monitoring and analyzing the daily activities and habits of people both wealthy and living in poverty (233 wealthy and 128 poor, specifically), isolated what he calls "rich habits" — and many of them are simply patterns of thought.

"I found in my research that wealthy people are by and large optimists," he says. "They practice gratitude and look at happiness like a habit."

Corley, who presents and explains many of his findings in his book "Rich Habits: The Daily Success Habits Of Wealthy Individuals" and on his website, defines "rich people" as those with an annual income of $160,000 or more and a liquid net worth of $3.2 million or more, and "poor people" as those with an annual income of $35,000 or less and a liquid net worth of $5,000 or less.

Here are 10 ways Corley found that rich people think differently, based on statements with which they identify.

1. Rich people believe their habits have a major impact on their lives.

"Daily habits are critical to financial success in life."

Rich people who agree: 52%
Poor people who agree: 3%

Wealthy people think that bad habits create detrimental luck and that good habits create "opportunity luck," meaning they create the opportunities for people to make their own luck. "When I looked at luck," Corley remembers, "a lot of rich people said they were lucky and a lot of poor people said they were unlucky."

2. Rich people believe in the American dream.

"The American dream is no longer possible."

Rich people who agree: 2%
Poor people who agree: 87%

"The American Dream is the idea of unlimited potential, that you can make it on your own," says Corley. In his study, the vast majority of rich people believed that wealth is a big part of the American dream (94%), and that the dream is still possible.

3. Rich people value relationships for professional and personal growth.

"Relationships are critical to financial success."

Rich people who agree: 88%
Poor people who agree: 17%

Not only do rich people feel that their relationships are critical to their success, but they put a lot of effort into maintaining them, making a habit of calling up contacts to congratulate them on life events, wish them a happy birthday, or reaching out just to say hello. "When I applied the hello calls and the life event calls to my own life," recalls Corley, "I ended up making another $60,000 as a result."

4. Rich people love meeting new people.

"I love meeting new people."

Rich people who agree: 68%
Poor people who agree: 11%

Hand in hand with valuing relationships comes making new ones. Rich people both love meeting new people and believe that being liked is important to financial success (in fact, it's a whopping 95% that believe in the power of likability, compared to 9% of poor people).

5. Rich people think that saving is hugely important.

"Saving money is critical to financial success."

Rich people who agree: 88%
Poor people who agree: 52%

"Being wealthy is not just making a lot of money," explains Corley. "It's saving a lot, and accumulating wealth. Many of the people I studied aren't wealthy because they made a lot, but because they saved a lot." He's trying to instill what he calls the 80/20 rule in his own children: Save 20% of your income while living on 80%.

6. Rich people feel that they determine their path in life.

"I believe in fate."

Rich people who agree: 10%
Poor people who agree: 90%

Poor people are significantly more likely to believe that genetics are important to becoming wealthy, and significantly less likely to believe that they're the cause of their own financial status in life. "Most of the wealthy people I talked to were businesspeople who weren't always wealthy," Corley explains, "but they had this attitude that they could do anything."

7. Rich people value creativity over intelligence.

"Creativity is critical to financial success."

Rich people who agree: 75%
Poor people who agree: 11%

While rich people are more likely to believe that creativity influences success, poor people are more likely to think that being "intellectually gifted" is critical. They're also more likely to believe that wealth is usually accidental. "If you look at my stats, you'll find that a lot of wealthy people were C students," says Corley. "There's more to wealth than just being smart."

8. Rich people enjoy their jobs.

"I like (or liked) what I do for a living."

Rich people who agree: 85%
Poor people who agree: 2%

"Many of the wealthy in my study loved their job — it's not an accident," says Corley. In fact, 86% of the wealthy worked an average of 50 hours or more per week (compared to 43% of the poor), and 81% say they do more than their job requires (versus 17%). Corley says it's related to the idea of creativity being important to financial success: "These people found a creative pursuit that could turn into monetary value. When you engage in a creative pursuit that can make money, the rewards are often obscene."

9. Rich people believe that their health influences their success.

"Good health is critical to financial success."

Rich people who agree: 85%
Poor people who agree: 13%

"One of the individuals in my study told me 'I can't make money in a hospital bed,'" Corley remembers. "Wealthy people think that being healthy means fewer sick days, which translates into more productivity and more money."

10. Rich people are willing to take risks.

"I've taken a risk in search of wealth."

Rich people who agree: 63%
Poor people who agree: 6%

"A lot of the wealthy people in the study were business owners who started their own businesses," Corley explains. "They became successes because they were master self-educators who learned from the school of hard knocks." In fact, 27% of the wealthy people in Corley's study admit they've failed at least once in life or in business, compared with 2% of the poor. "Failure is like scar tissue on the brain," Corley says. "The lessons last forever."

Link to news article

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I have a friend who is well in his 70s now. He dropped out of school at an early age. At some point he founded a business and once that became very successful and he ended up building and owning most of the older large condo's and tall buildings in certain parts of Florida. I can say that yes, he is very much like what is described above, but also incredibly eccentric. I wouldn't say he is very smart as in the way we think of smart but he was brought up a certain way and had these type of habits early on.
 
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tl;dr

Rich People Think:



  1. Daily habits are critical to financial success in life.
  2. The American dream is possible.
  3. Relationships are critical to financial success.
  4. I love meeting new people.
  5. Saving money is critical to financial success.
  6. Do not believe in fate.
  7. Creativity is critical to financial success.
  8. I like (or liked) what I do for a living.
  9. Good health is critical to financial success.
  10. I've taken a risk in search of wealth.
 
2. Rich people believe in the American dream.
4. Rich people love meeting new people.

Post hoc fallacy. Rich people believe in the American dream because they like to believe that that's how they got rich. In some cases it's probably true, in others, not. Poor people don't because it implicates them in their own misfortune.

Also, it's not surprising that rich people like to meet people when they can tell them all about how awesome they are, and poor people don't like to meet people because they feel inadequate.
[/QUOTE]
 
12. Recycling. Rich people don't spend their money needlessly. They recycle. You'd be amazed how much money you save adds up when you reuse things like condoms and toilet paper.
 
I think most (notice that I did not said ALL) rich people are just lucky. Being right time and place matters.
 
I thought 600K was the new griping point.

And Sand Eagle was just griping about his Little Caesars breadsticks going up a dollar.
 
1 If I don't eat today, I'll have $2.36 extra to play with

2 If I work really hard, I may get to $10 per hour next year

3 3/4 of the people I know are poorer than me, and they smell funny

4 Fuck! Cops!

5 I'm not sure the $2.36 I saved by not eating today was worth it

6 Mop the floor boy, and when you're finished, you need to get on the toilets

7 Creativity isn't rewarded in low end jobs. It gets you fired

8 @#$! Gotta clean the toilets again :^(

9 Maybe I can get on disability, and not clean toilets anymore

10 I sold crack for 6 months, and got 10 years in jail

Yup, shocking study. The results were totally unexpected.
 
The idea that Habits are what separate the Rich from the Poor is akin to thinking that Horseshoes, Rabbits feet, or Crystals separate the Lucky from the Unlucky.
 
1 If I don't eat today, I'll have $2.36 extra to play with

2 If I work really hard, I may get to $10 per hour next year

3 3/4 of the people I know are poorer than me, and they smell funny

4 Fuck! Cops!

5 I'm not sure the $2.36 I saved by not eating today was worth it

6 Mop the floor boy, and when you're finished, you need to get on the toilets

7 Creativity isn't rewarded in low end jobs. It gets you fired

8 @#$! Gotta clean the toilets again :^(

9 Maybe I can get on disability, and not clean toilets anymore

10 I sold crack for 6 months, and got 10 years in jail

Yup, shocking study. The results were totally unexpected.

:thumbsup::thumbsup:
 
Same as everyone else ...

1) wake up
2) shit shower shave
3) ftw
4) crash
5) repeat

*step 3 may have more effect - depending on wealth
** also may depend on your interpretation of ftw
 
Eh, good points... But you'll find that in any decent money/success book out there.

Honestly, most can be "rich" (retire without worrying about money) if they follow the basic guidelines that most people agree on:

1. Use a money tracking service, either through your bank or a site like mint.com
2. Save 1/4 what you make, regardless what you make.
3. If you have no major debt, and plan on staying in one spot for five years or more, you should invest in a home.
4. Treat your CCs like they are debit cards fused to the money in your checking account, never spend more than you have.
5. If you have debt then you should pay off the loan with the highest interest first, then work down to the lowest. The interest will eat you alive otherwise.
6.Treat every dollar as a potential investment.
7. Get a retirement fund set up as soon as you can, never do anything to it but put money in. Even a few hundred dollars a month can make all the difference when you retire.
8. Invest early, and invest often.
9. Get into work early, and leave late
10. Make more friends than enemies, you never know who may be a good contact or ask you to take part in a great opportunity.
11. Never stop learning.
13. Make a list of your habits, and from that make a "Stop-Doing" list; then stop doing those things.
14. Find something you're good at, then focus on being the best at it. Don't worry about what others are good at.
15. Keep saving.
 
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An interesting read, even if it doesn't paint the rosiest picture of the average poor person. Want to be wealthy? Establish good habits, take charge of your own fate, learn new things, meet new friends, and save your money. Do the opposite of those things, and you'll be poor and depressed.
 
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