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The 9 Steps to Financial Freedom: Practical and Spiritual Steps So You Can Stop Worrying written by Suze Orman Studio : Three Rivers Press by Three Rivers Press Release Date : 2006-08-15 Publisher : Three Rivers Press Released : 2006-08-15 Availability : Usually ships in 1-2 business days Number of Items : 1 EAN : 9780307345844 Avg. Customer Rating: (based on 210 reviews)
List Price : $14.95 Our Price : $7.75
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Product Description |
Over 3 Million Copies Sold
A Personal Finance Classic that Changed Forever How We Think, Feel, and Act about Money
Ten years ago, Suze Orman, America’s most celebrated finance expert, transformed the way we all view personal finance with her groundbreaking The 9 Steps to Financial Freedom. This New York Times bestselling blockbuster broke from the ranks of traditional money management books by looking at finances from an entirely new perspective, advising people to approach money from an emotional standpoint in order to achieve their financial dreams. By emphasizing the psychological and spiritual power money has in our lives, while still including information on all aspects of our financial daily activities, Orman has helped millions break through the barriers that hold them back. She is now our country’s leading personal finance expert, and here is the book that started it all.
Orman is back in a brand-new, fully updated edition to The 9 Steps to Financial Freedom, her personal finance classic that offers thoughtful, easy-to-follow steps toward a life of financial freedom. Here is the most up-to-the-minute information on a wide range of financial topics that plague us today: credit card debt, bankruptcy, paying for education, wills versus trusts, the best retirement account, life insurance, and more. Combining real-life recommendations with Suze’s own brand of inspiration and motivation, this is the only guide you’ll need to provide for yourself and your family.
As Orman shows, managing money is so much more than a matter of balancing your checkbook or picking the right investments. It’s about redefining financial freedom and realizing that you are worth far more than your money. Let America’s leading personal finance expert show you how. |
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Americancivilwar.com |
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When Suze Orman was 13 she watched her father dive into the flames of his burning take-out chicken shack in order to rescue his cash register. In that moment Orman learned that money was more important than life itself. And so it became her quest to be rich. But years later, when Orman became a wealthy broker with a huge investment firm, she was profoundly unhappy. What went wrong? She had not yet achieved financial freedom. In her nine-step program, Orman covers the ingredients to financial success--confronting our beliefs and fears, learning the nuts and bolts (and insiders secrets!) of savvy management, and finding the spiritual trust that leads to abundance. |
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Americancivilwar.com Audio Review |
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Suze Orman's reading of the audio version of her bestselling book The 9 Steps to Financial Freedom is nothing if not intense. Coming at you with the force of a summer hurricane heading for Cape Fear, Orman recounts one horror story after another to help us avoid financial disaster. But, if her insistent, somewhat graceless voice takes some getting used to, it's well worth the adjustment. After awhile, you'll be glad she's doing the talking, blending years of experience as a certified financial planner with credible authority and, more important, a passionate belief in our individual abilities to handle our own finances. There's no question that Suze Orman cares about how we manage our money. To show her commitment to our financial well-being, Orman packs this abridgment with an unusual combination of practical advice and psychological exercises. During our three hours with her, we receive arguably the best education available on mutual funds, estate planning, income taxes--even life insurance. But we also learn how to "face our fear" of money by exploring our past for the source of the fear. Later, she tells us that giving money to charity actually helps us release this fear. And, in perhaps her most startling step ("trust yourselves more than others"), Orman suggests we follow our inner voice while making investment decisions, a voice she believes comes from God. Whatever you may thing of that revelation, it's impossible to be put off by Orman's candid, idiosyncratic approach to money management. This is one self-help tape that lives up to the genre. Listeners who stick with Orman till the end will be truly inspired to take money matters into their own hands--and they'll likely get started immediately. (Running time: 10 hours and 43 minutes, two cassettes) --Ann Senechal |
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2% good advice wrapped up in 98% of absolute rubbish |
I wanted to like this, and there is some good 101 style advice in there about lump sum versus slower investing and trusts versus wills but this is basic info - the rest is baby boomer rubbish about "attracting money" with your beliefs, treating money as a "cherished friend" etc. She says it makes you "powerless" to help people out financially, that you should not help your kids pay bills, and that the only "powerful" way to give away money is to give it to your parents because you owe them for having you, and to give your money to a charity or church. So baby boomers if your gen x kids are swimming in debt from student loans hand more money to charities and places of worship and don't "lose power" by helping your kids. There is nothing in here for people under 40 and/or those struggling to start out in life under a mountain of student loan debt. Pass this one by.
I strongly recommend "Pat The Money" as the antidote to this book. |
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Great Financial Advice!! |
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Having just gone thru a divorce, Suze Orman gives you the financial down-to-earth motivation you need to move on. Her heart-felt honest advice gives you that feeling that you CAN and WILL be able to handle your money no matter how it is affecting your life. |
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Good reading! Learned a lot that will save me $$$$$$! |
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This book is simple to understand- well put! This is a must read for everyone--makes you look at your money in a whole new light. |
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Suze's mistake |
As I have read many of Suze's books, I have tried to look for the common sense approach. While I have found this in many of her books, I have also seen a very broad blanket statement being told through out her books. That statement is to not trust Financial Advisors. While it is true that there are some financial advisors that are not honest. This is true of any profession. But this does not mean that every advisor is out to just make a commission.
I have been an advisor for quite some years now. I have my Series 7, 65, 63 and Series 6. I am licensed in Life, Health. I also have the designation of CFP. I specialize in estate planning and wealth accumulation strategies. One of the biggest issues that I have with my profession is when some one "whips out the Suze Orman Fan Club Card". She makes blanket statements that many people do not understand. It makes my job 10 times as hard to help my clients. When they do repeat a statement that Suze has said, I many times have to go back and re-educate them as to the meaning of what she said.
Now is Suze just spouting non-sense? Of course not. Some of her advise is very good for the very common, starting from the bottom person. But it does not provide good sense for everyone.
If you are going to work with an advisor, do your home work. Ask them what they are licensed in. Ask them to explain to you why this is the best option and how it's going to benefit you. Ask about what their commissions are. They legally have to tell you. Do the research on each one and if they don't pass the "sniff test", kick them to the curb.
But please, do not believe everything that Suze writes. Not all of it is true and much of it is taken out of context. Your best bet is to educate yourself with someone who has been licensed (Suze is not licensed in securities) and has written books.
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An Excellent Book For Anyone to Read |
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The book has some very valuable information for everyone. From beginning to save with a 401K or any savings plan, to Wills and other necessary documents one should and must have drawn up, its very informative. Suze refers to situations in her experience which can show us why we do or do not prepare for retirement as we should and how emotions from the past cause us to deal with money. I recommend this book for everyone to read. |
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