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5 lessons on how to make money from 'Rich Dad Poor Dad' writer Robert Kiyosaki

etimes.in | Last updated on - Dec 11, 2025, 07:00 IST
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Practical money-making lessons by Robert Kiyosaki

When Robert Kiyosaki released Rich Dad Poor Dad in 1997, he probably didn’t imagine it would become one of the world’s most influential personal-finance books. But here we are, over two decades later - still quoting his “rich vs poor mindset” examples in everyday money conversations.

Before we dive into the lessons, it helps to know where he comes from. Kiyosaki was born in Hawaii to a well-educated father who worked in the education system, this was the “Poor Dad” in his story: smart, hardworking, but stuck in the traditional cycle of job → salary → bills.

The “Rich Dad” was the father of his childhood friend, a businessman who understood money, risk, assets and cash flow long before these became mainstream buzzwords. Kiyosaki grew up absorbing both philosophies, comparing them, and figuring out what truly builds wealth. That tug-of-war is what shaped his thinking.

Today, his core message remains simple: making money is not just about earning more, it’s about thinking differently. Here are five of his most powerful, practical lessons that still hold up, especially in a world where financial freedom often feels like a moving target.

2/7

The rich focus on buying assets, not liabilities

In Rich Dad Poor Dad, Kiyosaki doesn’t mince words:

“An asset puts money in your pocket. A liability takes money out.”

This one sentence flips the way we think about spending. Most of us proudly buy things that feel valuable - new cars, the latest phones, expensive homes but these often drain money through EMIs, maintenance, and lifestyle upgrades.

Kiyosaki argues that the wealthy prioritise assets first:

Businesses that generate income

Investments (stocks, funds, gold, bonds)

Real estate that earns rent

Intellectual property (books, courses, content, patents)

Only after building solid cash-flow systems do they buy luxury items.

For Indians who grew up hearing “buy a house as soon as possible,” this lesson is refreshing, it reminds us not to get trapped in EMIs before building real financial cushioning.

3/7

Your job is not your wealth; your skills are

Kiyosaki often says,

“Work to learn, not to earn.”

In other words, your job can pay bills, but your skills are what will create wealth.

He encourages people to constantly upgrade their skill set in areas like:

Sales and marketing

Communication

Investing

Money management

Entrepreneurship

Why? Because skills compound.

If you know how to sell, you can succeed in any industry.

If you know how to manage money, you’ll thrive even on a modest income.

If you learn investing early, your money works for you while you sleep.

Kiyosaki himself didn’t come from wealth. He served as a U.S. Marine, worked in Xerox to sharpen his sales skills, and then used those learnings to build his businesses. His journey is a reminder that financial growth is less about your starting point and more about what you learn along the way.

4/7

Don’t fear risk, fear ignorance

One of Kiyosaki’s most talked-about points is how the poor and middle class often fear losing money. The rich, in contrast, fear not knowing how money works.

He believes the biggest risk is:

Not taking any risk at all.

His philosophy is not about recklessly jumping into investments, it’s about educating yourself so you can take calculated risks. This could mean:

Learning how the stock market works before investing

Understanding real-estate laws before buying property

Researching business models before starting something

According to Kiyosaki, you don’t become rich by staying in your comfort zone. You become rich by preparing enough to step out of it.

5/7

Make money work for you

Growing up, most of us heard, “Study hard so you can get a good job.” Kiyosaki flips that logic:

“The poor and middle class work for money. The rich make money work for them.”

What he means is simple, your income shouldn’t only come from your physical presence or hours worked. It should come from cash-flowing assets you’ve built over time.

This could be:

Dividends from stocks

Passive income from a side business

Rental income

Content royalties

Automated online income streams

This mindset is why Kiyosaki pushes financial literacy so strongly. Once you understand how money moves, you can design a life where your investments generate income—even on days when you’re not actively working.

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Mindset matters more than money

At the heart of Rich Dad Poor Dad is the idea that wealth starts in the mind.

Two people can earn the same salary, one invests wisely and grows wealthy, the other lives pay-cheque to pay-cheque. The difference isn’t money. It’s mindset.

Kiyosaki believes the rich think in terms of:

Opportunity instead of limitation

Long-term planning instead of instant gratification

Abundance instead of fear

Strategy instead of luck

This shift sounds simple, but it transforms how you handle everything - spending, saving, investing, and career choices.

7/7

Don't give up

Robert Kiyosaki’s ideas are sometimes debated, but one thing is clear: he got an entire generation to think about money differently. His lessons feel especially relevant today, when financial independence is no longer a luxury but a necessity.

You don’t have to be an entrepreneur or investor from day one. You just need to understand the basics, build the right habits, and nurture a mindset that pushes you to grow.

Because at the end of the day, as Kiyosaki writes,

“You are only poor if you give up.”

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Copyright © May 26, 2026, 03.16PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service