Felix Dennis
You'll Never Get Rich Working For Your Boss
I've run across two books this summer
that have instantly become my "go to gifts" for friends and family.
The first was more of a lighthearted, but in my opinion, incredibly
insightful work of fiction called
The Art Of Racing In The Rain. The second book is a title I'm
determined to give to everyone I know who shows signs of possessing
an entrepreneurial spark. That book is Felix Dennis'
How To Get Rich, which features one of the cheesiest titles
imaginable, but which also provides some of the most insightful and
reassuring advice I have run across in regards to starting one's
own business. Since Dennis really has walked the walk when it comes
to making billions in the publishing world, and since my own
personal business interests lie in writing and publishing, the
insights in his book often apply DIRECTLY to questions and concerns
I have had in relation to my own business endeavors. Dennis' main
point throughout is that to be rich, truly rich (not "comfortably
poor" as he puts it) you have to take the risks and pursue your own
endeavors. In the process, he eliminates many of the old (and
ongoing) excuses I've heard coming from my own mouth and the mouths
of my friends for year. Sure, there's a laundry list of reasons why
EVERYTHING can fail, but if you think of things in terms of fun,
like a game, whats the worst, the absolute worst that can happen,
particularly if you have nothing to lose from the get go? Like I
said, the title makes this sound like the work of a shifty flim
flam man, but the advice, the stories, and the thinking, from cover
to cover, struck so many chords with my own work philosphy, that I
was completely won over, and encouraged in the personal projects I
have been working on for the last yar. Do yourself a favor, pick up
this book. Unless you're still looking for excuses for taking a
risk and going for the glory, you'll be glad you did.
