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13 timeless principles for wealth and success from Napoleon Hill’s Think and Grow Rich

etimes.in | Last updated on - Dec 21, 2025, 13:35 IST
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1/14

Think and grow rich: The 13 ideas that still decide who wins

At first glance, Think and Grow Rich sounds like one of those dusty self-help books your grandfather might’ve owned. It was published back in 1937, after all. But once you start reading Napoleon Hill, you realise something, this book isn’t really about money. Not in the literal sense, at least.

It’s about how people think. Why some move forward while others stay stuck. Why some bounce back after failure and others quietly give up.

Hill wrote the book after spending years talking to some of the most successful people of his time. What he noticed was simple: success wasn’t random. There were patterns. Habits. Ways of thinking that kept showing up again and again.

And that’s where these 13 principles come in.

2/14

Desire

Everything starts here. Not with a casual “it would be nice if…” but with a deep, stubborn want. The kind that doesn’t leave you alone. Hill believed people who succeed know exactly what they want, and they want it badly enough to stay focused when things get uncomfortable.

3/14

Faith


Desire needs belief to survive. If you don’t believe something is possible for you, you’ll quit before you even begin. Hill talks about faith as self-belief, the habit of reminding yourself that you can do this, even when doubt shows up uninvited.

4/14

Autosuggestion

This is basically self-talk. What you repeat to yourself daily sinks in, whether you realise it or not. If you keep telling yourself you’ll fail, your mind listens. And if you keep reinforcing your goals and confidence, your actions slowly start to match that belief.

5/14

Specialised knowledge

You don’t need to know everything. You just need to know what matters for your goal. Hill believed success comes from learning useful skills and being smart enough to ask for help when you don’t know something.

6/14

Imagination

Every business, invention, or idea began in someone’s head. Imagination isn’t just about daydreaming. It’s about seeing possibilities, finding new solutions, and thinking beyond what already exists.

7/14

Organised planning

Dreams without plans go nowhere. Hill was clear about this. You need a plan, and you need to be willing to change it when it doesn’t work. Failing plans are normal. Giving up isn’t.

8/14

Decision

Successful people decide faster and doubt themselves less. Those who struggle tend to overthink, delay, and constantly change their minds. Hill noticed that confidence often comes after a decision, not before it.

9/14

Persistence


This might be the most important one. Everyone faces setbacks. The difference is who keeps going anyway. Hill believed most people quit just before things start working out.

10/14

Master mind

No one does it alone. Hill strongly believed in surrounding yourself with people who push you forward - mentors, partners, friends who challenge your thinking and expand your perspective.

11/14

​Transmutation

This one sounds odd, but it’s really about energy. Hill believed strong emotions and passion can be redirected into work, creativity, and ambition. When channelled well, that intensity becomes fuel.

12/14

The subconscious mind

Your subconscious absorbs whatever you feed it. Fear, confidence, negativity, belief - it stores it all. Over time, those stored thoughts quietly shape your habits and choices.

13/14

The brain

Hill saw the brain as both a receiver and a sender of ideas. Staying curious, mentally active, and open helps you notice opportunities others might miss.

14/14

The sixth sense

This is intuition. That gut feeling you can’t always explain. Hill believed it develops with experience and awareness. Sometimes logic runs out, and intuition steps in.

Put together, these 13 principles aren’t a magic formula. They don’t promise instant wealth or overnight success. What they offer instead is something more lasting - a way of thinking.

Nearly 100 years later, Think and Grow Rich still hits home for one simple reason: change your thoughts, and you change how you act. And over time, that changes everything.

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