I was catching up with my readings last night and i stumble on this article. Its not the first time i read about warren buffet and his secrets to success, to be exact i already read a few but what i like about these articles is its simplicity, direct and common sense at some point, So i'm sharing the article with you
~Enjoy
With an estimated fortune of $62 billion, Warren Buffett is the richest man in the entire world. In 1962, when he began buying stock in Berkshire Hathaway, a share cost $7.50. Today, Warren Buffett, 78, is Berkshire's chairman and CEO, and one share of the company's class A stock worth close to $119,000. He credits his astonishing success to several key strategies, which he has shared with writer Alice Schroeder. She spend hundreds of hours interviewing the Sage of Omaha for the new authorized biography The Snowball. Here are some of Warren Buffett's money-making secrets -- and how they could work for you.
~Enjoy
With an estimated fortune of $62 billion, Warren Buffett is the richest man in the entire world. In 1962, when he began buying stock in Berkshire Hathaway, a share cost $7.50. Today, Warren Buffett, 78, is Berkshire's chairman and CEO, and one share of the company's class A stock worth close to $119,000. He credits his astonishing success to several key strategies, which he has shared with writer Alice Schroeder. She spend hundreds of hours interviewing the Sage of Omaha for the new authorized biography The Snowball. Here are some of Warren Buffett's money-making secrets -- and how they could work for you.
1. Reinvest Your
Profits: When you first make money in the stock
market, you may be tempted to spend it. Don't. Instead, reinvest the profits.
Warren Buffett learned this early on. In high school, he and a pal bought a
pinball machine to pun in a barbershop. With the money they earned, they bought
more machines until they had eight in different shops. When the friends sold
the venture, Warren Buffett used the proceeds to buy stocks and to start
another small business. By age 26, he'd amassed $174,000 -- or $1.4 million in
today's money. Even a small sum can turn into great wealth.
2. Be Willing To Be
Different: Don't base your decisions upon what
everyone is saying or doing. When Warren Buffett began managing money in 1956
with $100,000 cobbled together from a handful of investors, he was dubbed an
oddball. He worked in Omaha, not Wall Street, and he refused to tell his
parents where he was putting their money. People predicted that he'd fail, but
when he closed his partnership 14 years later, it was worth more than $100
million. Instead of following the crowd, he looked for undervalued investments
and ended up vastly beating the market average every single year. To Warren
Buffett, the average is just that -- what everybody else is doing. to be above
average, you need to measure yourself by what he calls the Inner Scorecard,
judging yourself by your own standards and not the world's.
3. Never Suck Your
Thumb: Gather in advance any information you need
to make a decision, and ask a friend or relative to make sure that you stick to
a deadline. Warren Buffett prides himself on swiftly making up his mind and
acting on it. He calls any unnecessary sitting and thinking "thumb
sucking." When people offer him a business or an investment, he says,
"I won't talk unless they bring me a price." He gives them an answer
on the spot.
4. Spell Out The Deal
Before You Start: Your bargaining leverage is always greatest
before you begin a job -- that's when you have something to offer that the
other party wants. Warren Buffett learned this lesson the hard way as a kid,
when his grandfather Ernest hired him and a friend to dig out the family
grocery store after a blizzard. The boys spent five hours shoveling until they
could barely straighten their frozen hands. Afterward, his grandfather gave the
pair less than 90 cents to split. Warren Buffett was horrified that he
performed such backbreaking work only to earn pennies an hour. Always nail down
the specifics of a deal in advance -- even with your friends and relatives.
5. Watch Small Expenses: Warren Buffett invests in
businesses run by managers who obsess over the tiniest costs. He one acquired a
company whose owner counted the sheets in rolls of 500-sheet toilet paper to
see if he was being cheated (he was). He also admired a friend who painted only
on the side of his office building that faced the road. Exercising vigilance
over every expense can make your profits -- and your paycheck -- go much
further.
6. Limit What You
Borrow: Living on credit cards and loans won't make you rich. Warren
Buffett has never borrowed a significant amount -- not to invest, not for a
mortgage. He has gotten many heart-rendering letters from people who thought
their borrowing was manageable but became overwhelmed by debt. His advice:
Negotiate with creditors to pay what you can. Then, when you're debt-free, work
on saving some money that you can use to invest.
7. Be Persistent: With tenacity and ingenuity, you
can win against a more established competitor. Warren Buffett acquired the
Nebraska Furniture Mart in 1983 because he liked the way its founder, Rose
Blumkin, did business. A Russian immigrant, she built the mart from a pawnshop
into the largest furniture store in North America. Her strategy was to
undersell the big shots, and she was a merciless negotiator. To Warren Buffett,
Rose embodied the unwavering courage that makes a winner out of an underdog.
8. Know When To Quit: Once, when Warren Buffett was a
teen, he went to the racetrack. He bet on a race and lost. To recoup his funds,
he bet on another race. He lost again, leaving him with close to nothing. He
felt sick -- he had squandered nearly a week's earnings. Warren Buffett never
repeated that mistake. Know when to walk away from a loss, and don't let
anxiety fool you into trying again.
9. Assess The Risk: In 1995, the employer of Warren
Buffett's son, Howie, was accused by the FBI of price-fixing. Warren Buffett
advised Howie to imagine the worst-and-bast-case scenarios if he stayed with
the company. His son quickly realized that the risks of staying far outweighed
any potential gains, and he quit the next day. Asking yourself "and then
what?" can help you see all of the possible consequences when you're
struggling to make a decision -- and can guide you to the smartest choice.
10. Know What Success Really Means: Despite his
wealth, Warren Buffett does not measure success by dollars. In 2006, he pledged
to give away almost his entire fortune to charities, primarily the Bill and
Melinda Gates Foundation. He's adamant about not funding monuments to himself
-- no Warren Buffett buildings or halls. "I know people who have a lot of
money," he says, "and they get testimonial dinners and hospital wings
named after them. But the truth is that nobody in the world loves them. When
you get to my age, you'll measure your success in life by how many of the
people you want to have love you actually do love you. That's the ultimate test
of how you've lived your life."
Cheers!
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