My Resources Part 1 - Robert G Allen
It is my great pleasure to acknowledge my mentors and their books, ideas and classes that built me as the investor and entrepreneur I am today.
There are so many lessons to learn.
By the time you get most of them the active life is almost gone.
So the right thing to do is educate yourself - read this article - and start saving for investments or just save for long term.
Robert G.
Allen is an important mentor.
He is a hero in his own class, bold and entrepreneurial; you can not ignore his books.
Strange enough his book "Creating Wealth: Retire in Ten Years Using Allen' Seven Principles of Wealth!" is the one I like most because explains a log term plan to invest in real estate.
This is what makes sense for me: Buy properties for five years, sell half of them and payoff some of good investments.
Enjoy the cash flow and the almost free ride with good tenants.
Refinancing for cash out is a different tactic.
I like it too.
These are not getting rich quick receipts, which almost everybody is selling lately.
Do they really sell? Robert G.
Allen's books are worth the money spent, but no more than that in my opinion.
The latest book "Multiple streams of internet income" is more a packaging of internet staff with old marketing tips.
If there is some new value added to the internet or to the marketing I have not find it yet.
All that seminars that use Robert Allen name are waist of time and traps for would be investors with get quick rich tips.
His stunt for that "Los Angeles Time" newspaper, early books and "The Multiple Streams of Income" are here to stay the time.
All his books are easy to read.
This is very important for good communications.
My short list of mentors in the order I met/read them is: William J.
O'Neil (1993), Carleton Sheet (1994), Robert G.
Allen (1995), Robert Kiyosaki (1999), Napoleon Hill (2001), Jim Rohn (2002), Ken Evoy (2007).
All these names link to individual pages with references for you at the website listed in the signature box.
There are so many lessons to learn.
By the time you get most of them the active life is almost gone.
So the right thing to do is educate yourself - read this article - and start saving for investments or just save for long term.
Robert G.
Allen is an important mentor.
He is a hero in his own class, bold and entrepreneurial; you can not ignore his books.
Strange enough his book "Creating Wealth: Retire in Ten Years Using Allen' Seven Principles of Wealth!" is the one I like most because explains a log term plan to invest in real estate.
This is what makes sense for me: Buy properties for five years, sell half of them and payoff some of good investments.
Enjoy the cash flow and the almost free ride with good tenants.
Refinancing for cash out is a different tactic.
I like it too.
These are not getting rich quick receipts, which almost everybody is selling lately.
Do they really sell? Robert G.
Allen's books are worth the money spent, but no more than that in my opinion.
The latest book "Multiple streams of internet income" is more a packaging of internet staff with old marketing tips.
If there is some new value added to the internet or to the marketing I have not find it yet.
All that seminars that use Robert Allen name are waist of time and traps for would be investors with get quick rich tips.
His stunt for that "Los Angeles Time" newspaper, early books and "The Multiple Streams of Income" are here to stay the time.
All his books are easy to read.
This is very important for good communications.
My short list of mentors in the order I met/read them is: William J.
O'Neil (1993), Carleton Sheet (1994), Robert G.
Allen (1995), Robert Kiyosaki (1999), Napoleon Hill (2001), Jim Rohn (2002), Ken Evoy (2007).
All these names link to individual pages with references for you at the website listed in the signature box.