Lauren Greenfield: Generation Wealth


Book Description

A highly anticipated monograph from the internationally acclaimed documentary photographer and filmmaker Lauren Greenfield: Generation Wealth is both a retrospective and an investigation into the subject of wealth over the last twenty-five years. Greenfield has traveled the world - from Los Angeles to Moscow, Dubai to China - bearing witness to the global boom-and-bust economy and documenting its complicated consequences. Provoking serious reflection, this book is not about the rich, but about the desire to be wealthy, at any cost.




Generation of Wealth


Book Description

During the 1960s, an upstart Minnesota company, Control Data, made an enormous impact on the computer industry with the help of a handful of engineers and executives led by William Norris and Seymour Cray. The rise of Control Data from a company selling stock at $1 a share to a multi-national firm manufacturing the world's fastest computers is an extraordinary story in itself. But author Donald M. Hall also examines how the success of Control Data primed the pump of local investment and facilitated the flowering of a medical device industry that still flourishes in the state. He follows the careers of Norris and Cray, but also of Earl Bakken and Manny Villanova; he describes the changing world of computer sales, but also the ups and downs experienced by ordinary investors as firms producing innovative products sought out new investors willing to fund further research. It's a brisk and fascinating read, a portrait of a heady time, with lessons for today's investors.




First Generation Wealth


Book Description

Three Principles for Long-Lasting Wealth and Enduring Family Legacy First-generation wealth creators have a priceless opportunity to lay the groundwork for lasting family wealth and avoiding what is known in the field as the Shirtsleeves to Shirtsleeves phenomenon. In this book, preeminent wealth management experts and seasoned entrepreneurs Robert Balentine and Adrian Cronje of the storied wealth management firm Balentine LLC help readers think through in a very personal way what it takes to build a meaningful legacy and best support future generations. They offer their first-hand perspective on not only the financial, but also the emotional and psychological challenges that entrepreneurs commonly face and share their Three Guiding Principles for Long-Lasting Wealth and an Enduring Family Legacy: - Don't Mistake Wealth For Legacy - Distinguish between Your Business and The Business of Your Family - See The World Through The Next Generation's Eyes First-Generation Wealth shares stories that illuminate these guiding principles and also provide tactical steps entrepreneurs at any stage of their wealth and life journey can take to incorporate them into their long-term strategies.




Generation of Wealth


Book Description

Clear, reassuring, generation-spanning wisdom to investors from one of America's best known brokers. Now, at the age of 81, Julius Westheimer boils down his lifetime of experience into his first book and shares with us his wisest and most sought-after investment advice for generating wealth safely and soundly.




Wealth Doesn't Last 3 Generations


Book Description

With 175 family businesses on the Fortune 500 list, from DuPont and Motorola to IBM, there is no doubt that family-run enterprises play an important role in global economic development. Their role is no less significant in China where, in keeping with the country's rapid economic growth, family businesses are emerging in increasing numbers.Unique characteristics, such as succession, management, staffing, family affairs, strategy planning and governance structure, set family businesses apart from other business types. As a result, they face particular challenges in survival and sustainability.In this book, three modern Chinese family businesses, including food and beverage company Yeo Hiap Seng, are studied to analyze the problems that family enterprises face. Other case studies include long-standing family businesses in Europe, America and Asia, such as Ford, Kikkoman and Samsung. This book also discusses the changing characteristics of Chinese family businesses, the pitfalls that such enterprises are likely to face, and how they can overcome these pitfalls and achieve sustainable development.




Generational Wealth


Book Description

Updated with additional chapters, the third edition of Generational Wealth: Beginner's Business & Investing Guide is one of the most exciting and comprehensive business and investing guides ever published. Full of practical examples for gaining wealth, it is definitely a required reading for all aspiring investors and entrepreneurs. In an easy-to-read format, the book successfully covers economics, real estate investing, stock market investing, bonds, entrepreneurship, mergers & acquisitions, contracts, and more. True to its title, Generational Wealth is a business and investing guide for beginners and also includes a plethora of content for the professional investor and business executive. The third edition is a definite upgrade to the already-fantastic second edition, which was titled Generational Wealth: Business & Investing Guide to Building an Empire. Read the only book that is comparable to getting an MBA from Harvard and Wharton business schools. "This is a great investor guide by LaFoy Orlando Thomas III, Esq. The book goes over LaFoy's investment philosophy, which is very similar to my own, and I think it was a great read." - Retireby40.org "Whether you are an aspiring investor, executive, or entrepreneur you will find the information essential to success. Using this book as a guide, even a novice should be successful at business or investing. So much additional useful information is included in the pages that readers will have plenty of guidance in all areas related to investing and establishing and running a business." - AccumulatingMoney.com




Kids, Wealth, and Consequences


Book Description

Leaving children with a substantial amount of money can be a boon or a burden. High-net-worth parents need to give their children an education to navigate today’s complex world. The question becomes how to raise children with a sense of reality and balance, imparting a strong work ethic, and making them good stewards of their wealth. Kids, Wealth, and Consequences enlightens high-net-worth parents about the unique issues they need to explore. The book addresses the ”hard” financial issues, such as investing and estate planning, as well as the “soft” emotional issues relating to values, family, and communication. Morris and Pearl detail strategies and techniques to help parents raise children who appreciate and know how to manage the wealth they inherit. Richard Morris spent many years working for his family's multimillion dollar business, and learned firsthand the challenges of business ownership and family wealth. Jayne Pearl is an experienced journalist who writes about families, family businesses, and money.




Wisdom Before Wealth


Book Description

Did your parents or grandparents prepare you for wealth? Are your children/grandchildren prepared for wealth? Do they know how to create and manage wealth? Will they handle an inheritance with wisdom? In this book Randall Sanada, a 45 year financial services veteran presents a warm and educational guidebook to his grandchildren and to yours. This book will equip your future heirs with the wisdom to create and manage meaningful wealth.The building block style of teaching will provide basics to the beginner and will at the same time deliver profound insight to even the most experienced financial professionals on formulas for achieving financial independence, enhanced investment returns, and ultimately true financial freedom through the joy of generosity.




Wealth in Families


Book Description




What Would the Rockefellers Do?


Book Description

Would you rather earn interest than pay it, and eliminate the necessity of paying fees to banks and jumping through hoops to get loans? Are you frustrated with being over-taxed and/or being dependent on a volatile stock market? Do you suspect that the ultra-wealthy play by a different set of rules than you do, and that their secrets have been kept just out of your reach? What would it mean to you and your family if you knew these rules to play by them too?