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Reviews for Seven Years to Seven Figures: The Fast-Track Plan to Becoming a Millionaire

 Seven Years to Seven Figures magazine reviews

The average rating for Seven Years to Seven Figures: The Fast-Track Plan to Becoming a Millionaire based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2019-04-09 00:00:00
2006was given a rating of 5 stars Ingegerd Silvis
I can now see how to get to 7 figures in 7 years My goal was to become millionaire by the age of 30. I'm now 31 but I'm not a millionaire, yet. Though reading the book, I can see where I went wrong. Even though I was making a high income, I didn't know how to invest it. I kind of spent all of the money I made. But now after reading this book, I know better. So I'm setting a new goal for my self. I'm going to be a millionaire before I'm 38 years old. And this time I'll make it happen, God willing! :-)
Review # 2 was written on 2020-04-17 00:00:00
2006was given a rating of 2 stars AMEEN Ahmad
I am not sure who / how this got recommended to me, I have to say this fell well short of anything I would recommend myself. This book was not particularly well written, with a lot of redundant passages, and the content I found is dated, not particularly inspiring and not very helpful. The author got his writing assistant to interview some of his buddies to figure out how they got rich and what they've come up with is 8 "profiles" for us to learn from. I had to pinch myself when I read one of the inspirational characters was Bruce Buffer. Oh really, Bruce Buffer? Yes, that guy who has apparently been an official announcer for the World Series of Beer Pong. Some of the chapters made me cringe: there is a description of what amount of money can afford which lifestyle. If you were rich you could spend your money on a new Mercedes, a mansion, a golf membership, multiple vacations in the most faraway places in First Class and 100 fine dinners a year in fancy restaurants. What age is this seriously? Of course I'm not the target audience, and the book feels dated because it is dated: it was written in the mid-2000s with apparently the baby boomer demographic in mind. So if you were in your 50s around 2005 and were interested in how people got rich using copywriting / newsletters then that book was for you. There are a couple of good points but they are few and far between. To conclude, one of the core messages of the book is that laziness is what prevents us from being successful, however the way this book was approached and written does feel very lazy to me: let's get someone else to talk to my friends, let's piece the interviews together Frankenstein-style and hope this actually validates the marketing title, don't forget to plug in a couple of my products / newsletters and voilĂ ! Not the most inspiring...


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