Rich Dad Poor Dad

Robert T. Kiyoski and Sharon Lechtar

In the book Rich Dad Poor Dad, the author has focused on the importance of financial knowledge and its use in practice for financial freedom. Following are 25 different mindsets of Rich Dad and Poor Dad.

Poor Dad Mindset

Rich Dad Mindset

  1. Fear to lose money
  2. Financial struggle
  3. Prioritize paying the bills first
  4. Spend what he earns
  5. Says “I cannot afford this”
  6. Objective of life: Study well, get a good job for continual income
  7. Follows rat race
  8. Spends more on liability (car, clothes, accessories, luxury items, etc)
  9. Works for money
  10. Buy luxury first
  11. Works for other, no time for self-learning or investmen
  12. Has financial knowledge but lack of action
  13. Buys liabilities but hesitate to take risk for same money
  14. Settle for a high paid job
  15. Pay others first (tax beyond me)
  16. Protects personal wallet and save what is left
  17. Don’t know / cannot differentiate between asset and liability
  18. Pays more tax (Earn -Tax -Spend)
  19. Earns degrees to reduce risk
  20. Earn more, spend more
  21. Spends on liability, not on education that teaches financial growth
  22. More listening, more talking
  23. Worries about bills and other spending
  24. Find ways for Active Income
  25. Leave bills when he dies
  1.  Lose money to earn money
  2. Mind over finance

  3. Prioritize self-investments

  4. Save and invest what he earns

  5. Says “How can I afford this?”

  6. Objective of life: To become someone who gives job to others

  7. Gets out of the rat race

  8. Spends more on assets (real estate, stocks, etc) rather than liability

  9. Let money work for him

  10. Buy luxury later

  11. Works for other but also works for own business

  12. Has financial knowledge and uses it to an action

  13. Take risk, buy asset and reinvest. Even though he fails, takes a risk again

  14. Never work for money, work to learn

  15. Pay self-first (assets beyond tax)

  16. If he needs something, he first gives something

  17. Easily differentiates asset and liability, and prioritized assets

  18. Pays less tax (Earn – Spend / Invest – Pay Tax)

  19. Earns information to reduce risk

  20. Earn more, spend less

  21. Is not afraid to spend on education that pays back

  22. Listening is more important than talking (Two ears, one mouth is purposefully given)

  23. Thinks and take an action to learn accounting, investing and understand market

  24. Find ways for Passive Income

  25. Leave assets when he dies

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *