How to Be a Millionaire by Age 25: Matt Mickiewicz

Category : Young Entrepreneurs

Can a small business really create a plan on a postcard?

“Yes! An effective small business plan that covers no more than a postcard is more than possible, it’s practical and effective”

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Matt Mickiewicz

Age now: 27
Title/Companies: Founder, Sitepoint, 99 Designs and Flippa
Made his first million by age: 22

Mickiewicz, who launched his first company in 1998, points out that the Internet enables immediate customer feedback, making it relatively inexpensive to test and launch new ideas.

His advice for young entrepreneurs: “People who say it takes money to make money are using the worst excuse ever. . . Create massive value for others by providing a solution where no other exists.”

How to Be a Millionaire by Age 25 by Kiplinger staff

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How to Be a Millionaire by Age 25: Juliette Brindak

Category : Young Entrepreneurs

Can a small business really create a plan on a postcard?

“Yes! An effective small business plan that covers no more than a postcard is more than possible, it’s practical and effective”

=> Business Plan Australia

Juliette Brindak

Age now: 21
Title/Company: Cofounder/CEO, MissOandFriends.com

Made her first million by age: 19 (Brindak won’t divulge when she earned her first million, but says that her company was valued at $15 million when she was 19)

At 10, Brindak started drawing the “cool girls” cartoon figures who became stars in 2005 of her online community for tween girls.

Today, she is seeking investors and preparing to take the site public as she attends Washington University in St. Louis.

Her advice for young entrepreneurs:: Find a solid support team who believe in your idea. “If someone starts to doubt your company and what you’re doing, you need to get rid of them.”

How to Be a Millionaire by Age 25 by Kiplinger staff

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How to Be a Millionaire by Age 25: Sean Belnick

Category : Young Entrepreneurs

Can a small business really create a plan on a postcard?

“Yes! An effective small business plan that covers no more than a postcard is more than possible, it’s practical and effective”

=> Business Plan Australia

Sean Belnick

Age now: 23
Title/Company: Founder, BizChair.com
Made his first million by age: 16

Belnick’s been selling business furnishings online for nearly a decade now, but the recent B.A. graduate of Emory University’s Goizueta School of Business still saw value in a college education.

His advice for young entrepreneurs: “It is never too early to start. I started when I was 14. There was a lot of great information on the Internet. Just do the research and find a way to do what you want to do.”

How to Be a Millionaire by Age 25 by Kiplinger staff

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How to Be a Millionaire by Age 25: Catherine Cook

Category : Young Entrepreneurs

Can a small business really create a plan on a postcard?

“Yes! An effective small business plan that covers no more than a postcard is more than possible, it’s practical and effective”

=> Business Plan Australia

Catherine Cook

Age now: 20
Title/Company: Founder, myyearbook.com
Made her first million by age: 18

In 2005, Catherine and her brother founded the social-networking site, which functions like a digital yearbook with pictures, friends and virtual currency called “lunch money.”

Today, it boasts 20 million members and is one of the 25 most-trafficked Web sites in the U.S.

Her advice for young entrepreneurs: “Stop just thinking about it, and make it happen.

When you’re young is the best time to start your own business, as you do not have the responsibilities you will have when you’re older. The worst that can happen if you fail now is that you have firsthand experience to make your next venture a success.”

How to Be a Millionaire by Age 25 by Kiplinger staff

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How to Be a Millionaire by Age 25: Michael Dell

Category : Young Entrepreneurs

Michael Dell

Can a small business really create a plan on a postcard?

“Yes! An effective small business plan that covers no more than a postcard is more than possible, it’s practical and effective”

=> Business Plan Australia

Age now: 45
Title/Company: Founder and CEO, Dell Computers
Made his first million by age: 19

Dell launched his computer company in 1984, just before dropping out of the University of Texas. By selling direct, Dell lowered prices and won over customers.

At 24, the company had revenues of $258 million. At last check, his estimated net worth was $13.5 billion.

His advice for young entrepreneurs: “You’ve got to be passionate about it,” he said in an interview with the Academy of Achievement.

“I think people that look for great ideas to make money aren’t nearly as successful as those who say, ‘Okay, what do I really love to do? What am I excited about?’ ”

How to Be a Millionaire by Age 25 by Kiplinger staff

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How to Be a Millionaire by Age 25: Mark Zuckerberg

Category : Young Entrepreneurs

Wish you were as wealthy as this guy?

He’s Mark Zuckerberg, co-founder of Facebook, and his super-geek-to-billionaire story is the basis of the hit movie The Social Network. “Young people are just smarter,” he told a Stanford University audience in 2007.

He started Facebook from his Harvard dorm in 2004 as a sophomore. Now he’s a 26-year-old philanthropist, recently donating $100 million to the Newark, N.J., school district.

Zuckerberg’s youthful fame and fortune makes for a riveting tale. But across America every year, plenty of entrepreneurs make their first million under the age of 25, some in high school. It takes vision, smarts, determination and a little luck.

How to Be a Millionaire by Age 25 by Kiplinger staff

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Web Searches Soar for Mysterious Heiress

Category : Become Millionaire

Huguette Clark may be the wealthiest person you’ve never heard of. She’s certainly one of the most mysterious. The 104-year-old heiress owns sprawling estates in California and Connecticut, as well as one of the largest apartments on New York’s Fifth Avenue. But, according to a very buzzy report from NBC’s “The Today Show,” Ms. Clarke hasn’t been seen at her homes in decades.

Reporters Bill Dedman and Bob Dotson investigated her whereabouts and found that Ms. Clarke now spends her time in a “drab” hospital room. Those ordinary surroundings stand in stark contrast to her fortune, which came largely from her father, Senator William Andrews Clark of Montana. He owned mines, railroads, and banks, and passed it along to Huguette.

Of course, the world is full of once-great estates that have gone to seed. Ms. Clarke’s homes are not to be included. Her $100 million Santa Barbara home (named “Bellosguardo”) where she hasn’t visited in decades, has been kept up beautifully. As for her Connecticut mansion, it’s as immaculate as it is untouched. Believe it or not, Ms. Clarke has never even visited it.

She apparently elected to move to the unnamed hospital to be more comfortable. Other details are scant. Web searches, on the other hand, are anything but. The story on Ms. Clarke sparked a tremendous amount of online interest. Lookups on “huguette clark pictures” and “huguette clark mansions” both surged over 1,000%. Related queries for “huguette clark heirs” also soared.

Relatives and former acquaintances explain that Ms. Clarke changed drastically after her mother passed away. She withdrew from society and chose never to come back. That absence won’t stop the searches, though. As is often the case online, the less information there is, the more people want to know.

by Mike Krumboltz

7 Millionaire Myths

Category : Become Millionaire

We all have are preconceptions about millionaires: they’re tax evaders who just inherited their money from rich Aunt Flo, and they hang around the golf course all day with their snobby, elitist friends. So what’s the average millionaire really like? Here are seven millionaire myths, and the real facts about the ones who seem to have it all.

1. Millionaires Don’t Pay Their Taxes

Fact: It is estimated that millionaires, those in the top 1% of earners, pay about 40 percent of all taxes. Current tax regulation shifts may change these numbers to make this even larger than that — so think twice before accusing the millionaires in America of not paying taxes.

2. Millionaires Just Inherited Their Money

According to Thomas J. Stanley’s book, “The Millionaire Next Door: The Surprising Secrets of America’s Wealthy,” only 20% of millionaires inherited their riches. The other 80% are what you’d call nouveau riche: first-generation millionaires who earned their cash on their own. Many millionaires simply worked, saved, and lived within their means to generate their wealth — think accountants and managers: regular people going to work every day. Most millionaires didn’t get their riches overnight when a rich relative died — they worked for the money.

3. Millionaires Feel Rich

From the outside looking in, you would think that millionaires feel rich and secure, but that’s not so. Most millionaires worry about retirement, their kids’ college fund and the mortgage just like the rest of us. Those worries are greatest among new millionaires, the people who just recently acquired their wealth.

4. Millionaires Have High-Paying Jobs

It certainly doesn’t hurt to be gainfully employed, but half of all millionaires are self-employed or own a business. It does help to have a college degree, as about 80 percent are college graduates, though only 18% have master’s degrees.

5. Millionaires All Drive Fancy Cars

You can get that idea of the rich guy in a fancy German car out of your head when you think of a millionaire: They actually drive a Ford, with the carmaker topping the millionaire preferred car list at 9.4 percent. Cadillacs run second on the millionaires’ favorite car list, and Lincolns third according to onmoneymaking.com.

Car payments are an investment with little return, which is why someone looking to grow wealth avoids high-priced vehicles in favor of a more economical set of wheels.

6. Millionaires Hang Around the Golf Course All Day

Those millionaires are all retired, with nothing else to do but hang around the golf course, right? Wrong. Only 20 percent of millionaires are retirees, with a full 80 percent still going to work. It’s not as glamorous or fun, but millionaires go to work just like you do; it’s how the money gets in the bank.

7. Millionaires Are Elitists

We’ve already established that most millionaires earned their money and not inherited it, still go to work, drive a Ford, and worry about their kids’ college expenses. Sounds a lot like the rest of America, right? Millionaires come in all shapes and sizes — some may be elitists, but most are just regular Joes who successfully managed their money.

The Bottom Line

Maybe you see a pattern here: Today’s millionaires are people who live within their means, budget and spend wisely, and focus on financial independence first. These are habits that take discipline, but ones we can all adopt to begin growing wealth. If these facts prove anything, it’s that every one of us can strive to become a millionaire — you can start by driving your old car with pride.

by Claire Bradley, provided by Investopedia

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