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Rich Dad's Cashflow Quadrant: Rich Dad's Guide to Financial Freedom Paperback – May 1, 2000
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Enhance your purchase
- Print length272 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBusiness Plus
- Publication dateMay 1, 2000
- Dimensions6.13 x 0.88 x 9 inches
- ISBN-100446677477
- ISBN-13978-0446677479
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Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Sharon L. Lechter is a wife and mother of three, CPA, consultant to the toy and publishing industries and business owner. As co-oauthor of RICH DAD, POOR DAD and THE CASHFLOW QUADRANT, she now focuses her efforts in helping to create educational tools for anyone interested in bettering their own financial education."
Product details
- Publisher : Business Plus; 12th Printing edition (May 1, 2000)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 272 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0446677477
- ISBN-13 : 978-0446677479
- Item Weight : 11.6 ounces
- Dimensions : 6.13 x 0.88 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #303,402 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #900 in Budgeting & Money Management (Books)
- #3,619 in Economics (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Robert Kiyosaki, author of Rich Dad Poor Dad - the international runaway bestseller that has held a top spot on the New York Times bestsellers list for over six years - is an investor, entrepreneur and educator whose perspectives on money and investing fly in the face of conventional wisdom. He has, virtually single-handedly, challenged and changed the way tens of millions, around the world, think about money.In communicating his point of view on why 'old' advice - get a good job, save money, get out of debt, invest for the long term, and diversify - is 'bad' (both obsolete and flawed) advice, Robert has earned a reputation for straight talk, irreverence and courage.Rich Dad Poor Dad ranks as the longest-running bestseller on all four of the lists that report to Publisher's Weekly - The New York Times, Business Week, The Wall Street Journal and USA Today - and was named "USA Today's #1 Money Book" two years in a row. It is the third longest-running 'how-to' best seller of all time.Translated into 51 languages and available in 109 countries, the Rich Dad series has sold over 27 million copies worldwide and has dominated best sellers lists across Asia, Australia, South America, Mexico and Europe. In 2005, Robert was inducted into Amazon.com Hall of Fame as one of that bookseller's Top 25 Authors. There are currently 26 books in the Rich Dad series.In 2006 Robert teamed up with Donald Trump to co-author Why We Want You To Be Rich - Two Men - One Message. It debuted at #1 on The New York Times bestsellers list.Robert writes a bi-weekly column - 'Why the Rich Are Getting Richer' - for Yahoo! Finance and a monthly column titled 'Rich Returns' for Entrepreneur magazine.Prior to writing Rich Dad Poor Dad, Robert created the educational board game CASHFLOW 101 to teach individuals the financial and investment strategies that his rich dad spent years teaching him. It was those same strategies that allowed Robert to retire at age 47.Today there are more that 2,100 CASHFLOW Clubs - game groups independent of the Rich Dad Company - in cities throughout the world.Born and raised in Hawaii, Robert Kiyosaki is a fourth-generation Japanese-American. After graduating from college in New York, Robert joined the Marine Corps and served in Vietnam as an officer and helicopter gunship pilot. Following the war, Robert went to work in sales for Xerox Corporation and, in 1977, started a company that brought the first nylon and Velcro 'surfer wallets' to market. He founded an international education company in 1985 that taught business and investing to tens of thousands of students throughout the world. In 1994 Robert sold his business and, through his investments, was able to retire at the age of 47. During his short-lived retirement he wrote Rich Dad Poor Dad.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 9, 2016
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Kiyosaki also gives some critical tips and a book list to continue learning how to read the marketplace.
First off, I've been studying money books for almost two years. Most of them were for the middle class which told you to play it safe and diversify. Answers were little and fear was great. Basically, if you had a lot of time, you could at least retire adequately from those books.
So then I found RK last May and what a change! This was exactly what I was looking for: not people who couldn't walk the talk but people who had done it and done it well. Understand that RK and his wife lost most of their money and had to live with a friend (it's in their second or third book) but there's no shame in this per se as some people feel. This guy is basically telling you about his mistakes, at the risk of being attacked, and letting you avoid them.
I've played CASHFLOW 101 about 30 times and moved on to 202 and have played it about a dozen times now. THe group I am with is positive and training their minds to see the invisible. One guy has already started to do r/e deals in Calif and while he is still looking around in a tough market like the Bay Area, he's moving along.
RK's books are really about opening your mind to the possibilities as cliche' as it sounds. Once you decide to specialize in a particular investment vehicle (i.e. real estate, MLMS, stocks, etc), you will need to get the information from other sources.
In CQ, RK covers the different boxes we all live in and how you can get out of the bad ones to the good ones. He also spends more time in helping you exercise your basic financial acumen.
The important things RK's books do is give you smidgens of various fin. vehicles and, more importantly, teaches you to believe that the possibilities are out there.
Let me stress that again: the possibilities ARE out there. The problem is: most Americans have trained their mind to believe there are very few and they cannot get them so they repeat this vicious circle. That's the biggest problem I've noticed since training my mind and learning.
You've got to believe and you have to start seeing the possibilities: or, seeing the invisible as RK calls it. Once you start doing that, you're on your way.
Top reviews from other countries

Rich Dad, Poor Dad is also excellent but I have always found this a more powerful book. Read both.


I would say that this is an even better book and I’ve been learning far more information than his best-selling book Rich Dad Poor Dad.
Definitely get this book, it’s helping me shift my thinking considerably by walking me through the different quadrants and some hilariously accurate descriptions of where I am right now.
This book is helping me shift my thinking from the S quadrant into the B and the I quadrants. I would definitely recommend this for anyone trying to do the same.

This book proudly stands on the title’s tagline - “Guide to Financial Freedom”.
Please read it only after completing “Rich Dad Poor Dad”, because there are a lot of references from there.
Now here’s the catch. Don’t expect that the book is going to give you list of businesses to get into so that you reach financial freedom. Although, it talks a lot about real estate and other relevant examples, it’s more about the mindset that you need to grasp. Robert always emphasises on financial “LITERACY”, and freedom is a by-product of the degree of literacy you achieve by educating yourself.
Happy Reading.


Reviewed in India 🇮🇳 on November 23, 2019
This book proudly stands on the title’s tagline - “Guide to Financial Freedom”.
Please read it only after completing “Rich Dad Poor Dad”, because there are a lot of references from there.
Now here’s the catch. Don’t expect that the book is going to give you list of businesses to get into so that you reach financial freedom. Although, it talks a lot about real estate and other relevant examples, it’s more about the mindset that you need to grasp. Robert always emphasises on financial “LITERACY”, and freedom is a by-product of the degree of literacy you achieve by educating yourself.
Happy Reading.





Tevin Gongo