Posts Tagged ‘Cash Flow Quadrant’

Review of Rich Dad’s Guide to Investing Book

September 27th, 2009

This is the third book in the Rich Dad’s series Robert Kiyosaki wrote after the hugely popular Rich Dad Poor Dad. Robert casual style of narration makes it both enjoyable and easy to digest the close to 400 pages book. I took about six weeks to complete the book.

This book focuses a great deal on the B-I side of the quadrant as well as the B-I Triangle. To become rich, we have to be both an investor and a business owner. To be a really great investor is to become an ultimate investor. A person who invests from the inside of the company, who takes the company public and sell the shares to outside investor. Robert also explained all the components of his B-I triangle, which Rich Dad taught him, to build a strong business dedicating one chapter for each component. If any of the component of the business is weak, the business will be in trouble and fail.

Although Robert gives very clear explanation to every concept, you still find his explanation open-ended, requiring you to figure out what is best for your own financial future. I have learnt many lessons from this book and summarized here below:

The various investor controls needed Different level of investor e.g. accredited, sophisticated. Increase finanancial intelligence. The need to have 3 financial plans. One to be secure, one to be comfortable, one to be rich. Understand financial statements. The 90/10 rule of money. The tax benefits enjoyed by a business owner compared to an employee and self-employed. The difference between saving and investing. See the flip side of the coin for any investment. Living in the information age versus industrail age. What it takes and how fast to be a billionaire in the information age. and much more… I like to recommend this book to those of you who wants to be a better business owner and investor. It would be better if you had read the first two books “Rich Dad Poor Dad” and “Rich Dad’s cash flow quadrant” as it builds on the fundamentals of the two earlier books.

By: Raymond Heng