Roger Hamilton.
"Wealth is not how much money you have.
Wealth is what you're left with when you lose all your money"
True wealth lies in your power to give and receive at your full potential. Those who grow their wealth are continuously increasing their flow, attracting more and contributing more. Only when you live at your potential can you give at your potential. Growing wealth leads to a greater income and a greater outcome.
Roger Hamilton
www.rogerhamilton.com
Wealth Dynamics by Roger Hamilton.
Almost everyone has done a personality test at one time. Often, you discover things you already knew about yourself - Extroverted or Introverted, Big Picture or Detail Orientated - Interesting yes, but how does it make a difference to your life?
Wealth Dynamics is the only personality test that tells you exactly what strategy you should follow to build wealth.
Of all the vastly different ideas, strategies, businesses and investments that you could pursue, Wealth Dynamics narrows it down for you ... precisely.
Here's why...
In all of history there have only ever been eight ways to create Wealth.
It might appear to most people that there are hundreds of ways, but in actuality there are ONLY eight!
Successful entrepreneurs focus only where they are strong and unsuccessful entrepreneurs try and do it all themselves.
I Ching Trigrams
1. The Creator - Builds innovative products
Examples: Steve Jobs, Walt Disney, Richard Branson
2. The Star - Builds an influential brand
Examples: Oprah, Paul Newman, Bill Clinton
3. The Supporter - Builds high performance teams
Examples: Steve Ballmer, Jack Welch
4. The Deal Maker - Brings deals together
Examples: Donald Trump, Rupert Murdoch
5. The Trader - Buying and selling commodities
Examples: George Soros
6. The Accumulator - Buying and holding assets
Examples: Warren Buffet, Paul Allen
7. The Lord - Controlling cashflow producing assets
Examples: Lakshmi Mital, Ingavar Kamprad
8. The Mechanic - Creating a duplicatable system
Examples: Michael Dell, Ray Krock
Wealth Dynamics is the only personality test that tells you exactly what strategy you should follow to build wealth.
Of all the vastly different ideas, strategies, businesses and investments that you could pursue, Wealth Dynamics narrows it down for you ... precisely.
Here's why...
In all of history there have only ever been eight ways to create Wealth.
It might appear to most people that there are hundreds of ways, but in actuality there are ONLY eight!
Successful entrepreneurs focus only where they are strong and unsuccessful entrepreneurs try and do it all themselves.
I Ching Trigrams
1. The Creator - Builds innovative products
Examples: Steve Jobs, Walt Disney, Richard Branson
2. The Star - Builds an influential brand
Examples: Oprah, Paul Newman, Bill Clinton
3. The Supporter - Builds high performance teams
Examples: Steve Ballmer, Jack Welch
4. The Deal Maker - Brings deals together
Examples: Donald Trump, Rupert Murdoch
5. The Trader - Buying and selling commodities
Examples: George Soros
6. The Accumulator - Buying and holding assets
Examples: Warren Buffet, Paul Allen
7. The Lord - Controlling cashflow producing assets
Examples: Lakshmi Mital, Ingavar Kamprad
8. The Mechanic - Creating a duplicatable system
Examples: Michael Dell, Ray Krock
Wealth Dynamics Square
"If you are doing anything that feels like hard work,
you are already doing the wrong thing"
Watch the Video
Stop Trying So Hard...
Building Wealth isn't about fighting yourself and trying to suppress your natural behaviour. If that were true, the wealthiest people on the planet would have quit when they first became millionaires rather than still playing the game their whole life.
The real trick to building wealth is to maximise your natural strengths and the things you feel are fun. That way you will always have the energy and the drive to stick through the challenges (and EVERY wealth strategy throws up challenges that are designed to weed out the people who are just chasing the money).
source http://wdprofiletest.com/ from the Roger Hamilton website http://rogerhamilton.com
The real trick to building wealth is to maximise your natural strengths and the things you feel are fun. That way you will always have the energy and the drive to stick through the challenges (and EVERY wealth strategy throws up challenges that are designed to weed out the people who are just chasing the money).
source http://wdprofiletest.com/ from the Roger Hamilton website http://rogerhamilton.com
The Lottery Looser.
What would you do if you won the lottery? Quit your job? Go on luxury holidays around the world? Buy a mansion? 42-year-old Roger Griffiths did all of those things, and now he hasn’t got anything left.
Griffiths won £1.8 million playing the National Lottery back in 2005. He quit his job as an IT project manager, moved into a mansion and jetted off around the world, holidaying in New York, Monaco and Dubai.
Having left his job, Griffiths was free to spend his time as he wished. He spent £25,000 reviving his old university band, FMB, and producing a CD. The result was not the one hoped for with the record selling 600 copies only.
Nevertheless, Griffiths did not have much to complain about his lifestyle. “I loved being rich. There were times when I didn’t look at price tags and that was ludicrous, stupid — but I loved it.”
However the life of luxury was before the credit crunch. As banks plummeted and the crisis hit, Griffiths and his wife began to feel the effects. The crunch meant their investments weren’t worth nearly as much, with the salon costing Griffiths around £4,000 a month.
The financial difficulties led fights and unhappiness in his marriage and eventually he and Lara split. She stayed in the house in Wetherby, West Yorkshire, while he moved to a house near Harrogate.
However, the Sun reports that Griffiths has had to move back in with parents while he tries to sell off his two houses.
And now that all of the money has gone, Griffiths has gone back into employment, working as a recruitment consultant. However, the money he earns has gone mostly into repaying debts.
I had it all, but now it’s gone. I’ve been borrowing money from my parents — that’s how bad it is,' the Sun reported him saying.
COMMENTARY
In his book Your Life Your Legacy Roger Hamilton writes “The more money you have, the more opportunities you have to lose it.” Losing the money is not a problem when you don’t have any to lose, but as you find yourself with excess income, many new opportunities open up. It is tempting to spend it or invest it in areas where you have little experience and little ides of the pitfalls ahead: your confidence exceeds your competence and the money disappears.
http://rogerhamilton.com