#3: Avoid time wasters
When I finished my five-year study on the habits of 233 self-made millionaires, I made a breakthrough discovery. Nearly every one of the millionaires attributed their success in life to habits they learned primarily from their parents or some mentor in life. The secret to success is our daily habits. I thought this was a secret that needed to be shared with everyone so I began writing books about these habits. To date, I’ve identified more than 300 of what I call Rich Habits — and here are a few of them.
1. They Create Multiple Streams of Income
Self-made millionaires do not rely on only a
single source of income. They develop multiple streams. Three seemed to
be the magic number in my study. Sixty-five percent had three or more streams of income
that they created over time. Diversifying your sources of income allows
you to weather the economic downturns that always occur in life. These
downturns are not as severe to the rich as they are to the poor. The
poor put “one pole in one pond” and when their single income stream is
negatively impacted in some way, they suffer financially.
Conversely, the rich have “several poles in several ponds” and are able to draw income from other sources
when one source is temporarily impaired. Some of the additional streams
might include: real estate rentals (each rental unit = a stream of
income), REITs (each one = a stream of income), tenants-in-common real
estate investments (each one = a stream of income), triple net leases,
stock market investments, annuities (each one = a stream of income),
seasonal real estate rentals (beach rentals, ski rentals, lakefront
rentals), private equity investments, part ownership in side businesses
(each one = a stream of income), financing investments, ancillary
products or services and royalties (patents, books, oil, timber etc.).
2. They Dream-Set Before They Goal-Set
Dream-Setting is the act of clearly defining a dream. Sixty-four percent of the millionaires in my study were pursuing one single dream. Here’s the two-step process to Dream-Setting:
- Step One – In 500 words or less, write down what you’d like your ideal life to be 10, 15 or 20 years out. Include specific details of your ideal future life: the income you earn, the house you live in, the boat you own, the car you drive, the money you’ve accumulated, etc.
- Step Two – Using this script of your ideal future life, make a bullet-point list of each one of those details that represent your ideal life. These would be the income you earn, the house you live in, the boat your own, etc. These details represent your wishes or dreams.
Only after you’ve defined your wishes or dreams does the Goal-Setting process begin. Fifty-five percent of the millionaires in my study set goals around their dreams.
This Goal-Setting process requires you to build goals around each one
of your wishes or dreams. In order to build goals around each wish or
dream, you need to ask yourself two questions:
- Question #1: What would I need to do, what activities would I need to engage in, in order for each wish or dream to come true?
- Question #2: Am I capable of performing those activities? Do I have the necessary skills and knowledge?
If the answer to Question #2 is yes, then
those activities represent your goals. Goals are only goals when they
involve physical action and you have the capability to perform the
action required.
Let’s summarize this process:
- Paint a picture with 500 words or less of your ideal life.
- Define each wish or dream that must be realized in order to have that ideal life.
- Establish specific goals around each one of your wishes or dreams.
- Take action. Pursue and achieve each of the specific goals that will make each wish or dream come true.
You then repeat this process for every other
wish or dream. When you realize each one of your wishes or dreams, your
ideal future life will then become your actual life.
3. They Avoid Time-Wasters
When most people think of risk, they think of
it in terms of some financial investment they make: investing money in a
new business; investing money in stocks, mutual funds, bonds etc.;
playing the lottery, gambling or lending money to someone. But financial
risk is not the greatest risk most take. You can always earn more
money. Money can be recouped. But there is another risk almost everyone
takes for granted. This is a risk that, when made, can never be
recouped. It’s gone forever. What is it? The greatest risk we all take
is time. When we invest our time in anything, it’s lost forever. It
never gets renewed or returned to us. Yet, because we are all given what
seems to be an abundance of time, it has very little value to us. So we
spend an enormous amount of our time engaged in wasteful activities
such as sitting in front of a TV, on Facebook, watching YouTube videos,
sitting at a bar, lying in bed or engaged in some other time-wasting,
non-productive activity. And when we waste time, it’s gone. It will
never return. We don’t consider how precious time is until we are older
and we realize our time is running out.
Time needs to be invested wisely in pursuing
goals, dreams or some major purpose in life. Any investment we make of
our time should pay dividends down the road in the form of happiness
events, financial security, creating a legacy or in helping improve the
lives of others. When you see time as the greatest risk of all, it
forces you to become more aware of exactly how you invest your time.
Invest it wisely, because you will never get it back. Sixty-seven
percent of the self-made millionaires in my study watched less than one
hour of TV each day and 63% spent less than one hour a day on the
Internet (recreation-related). This freed up time for them to pursue their dreams, goals, read, learn, exercise, volunteer and network.
4. They Found at Least One Success Mentor in Life
The average net liquid wealth of the 233 rich
people in my research was $4.3 million. If you do the math, finding the
right mentor in life is like someone depositing $4.3 million into your
bank account. Ninety-three percent of the self-made millionaires in
my study who had a mentor in life attributed their wealth to their
mentors. Sixty-eight percent said that the mentoring they received from
others was the critical factor in achieving success.
Success Mentors do more than simply influence
your life in some positive way. They regularly and actively contribute
to your success by teaching you what to do and what not to do. They
share with you their mistakes and valuable life lessons that they
learned either from their own mentors or from the school of hard knocks.
Finding a success mentor in life is one of the least painful ways to
become rich. It can put you on the fast track to success. In my
research, I discovered five types of Success Mentors:
- Parents – Parents are often the only shot any of us have at having a mentor in life. This is why parenting is so important. Parents need to be success mentors to their children. They need to teach their children good daily success habits. If they don’t, it is likely their children will struggle in life.
- Teachers – Good teachers = good mentors. Teachers can reinforce the mentoring children receive at home from their parents, or step in to provide the success mentoring absent at home.
- Career Mentors – For those not fortunate enough to have had parents or teachers who provided success mentoring, finding a mentor at work can lead to success in life. Find someone at work who you admire, trust and respect and ask them to be your mentor. This person will be at least two or three levels above you in the pecking order at work.
- Book Mentors – Books can take the place of actual mentors. Sometimes the best source for mentors are found in books, particularly books about successful people. Fifty-eight percent of the self-made millionaires in my study read biographies of other successful people.
- The School of Hard Knocks – When you learn success habits through the school of hard knocks, you essentially become your own mentor. You teach yourself what works and what doesn’t work. You learn from your mistakes and failures. This is the hard path to success because those mistakes and failures carry significant costs in both time and money. But this is also the most powerful type of mentoring you can get because the lessons you learn are infused with intense emotion, and thus never forgotten.
5. They Never Quit on a Dream
Self-made millionaires are persistent. They never quit on their dream. They would rather go down with the ship than quit. Twenty-seven percent of the self-made millionaires in my study failed at least once in business.
And then they picked themselves up and went on to try again. They
persisted. Persistence requires doing certain things every day that move
you forward in achieving your goals or life dream. Persistence makes
you unstoppable. No obstacle, mistake or momentary failure can stop you
from moving forward if you keep at it. These millionaires learned to
pivot and change course, growing in the process. Persistence allowed
them to learn what didn’t work and continuously experiment until they
found what did work. Persistence is the single greatest contributor to
manifesting good luck. Those who persist eventually get lucky. Some
unintended consequence emerges, something unexpected and unanticipated
happens to those who persist. Sometimes, those closest to you will urge
you on and encourage you. But more often, those closest to you — those
directly impacted by the obstacles, mistakes and failures that are part
of the success journey — will try to stop you from persisting. It takes
superhuman effort to continue to pursue success when there are so many
forces fighting you. That’s what makes successful people so special —
and also so rare. If you want to be successful in life, you must persist
in the face of unrelenting adversity. Successful people are successful
because they never quit on their dream.
There are many other Rich Habits, but I think these are some of the most powerful.
Habits, I learned from my research, dictate
your circumstances in life. They unconsciously program us for success,
failure or mediocrity in life. They can determine our social status –
rich, poor or middle-class. Habits, I also learned, can be changed.
The key to habit change is awareness and tracking. You need to become
aware of the habits you currently have and would like to change and then
you must track your new habits until they take hold. It takes an
average of 66 days to replace an old habit with a new one. When you eliminate old bad habits and adopt new good habits, your life will begin to change for the better. It takes time, but it’s worth the effort.
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