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| The 4-Hour Workweek: Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich | 
enlarge | Author: Timothy Ferriss Publisher: Crown Category: Book
List Price: $19.95 Buy New: $11.00 You Save: $8.95 (45%)
New (63) Used (29) Collectible (3) from $10.40
Avg. Customer Rating: 784 reviews Sales Rank: 378
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 320 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 5.7 x 1.2
ISBN: 0307353133 Dewey Decimal Number: 650.1 EAN: 9780307353139 ASIN: 0307353133
Publication Date: April 24, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
I like the spirit of this book! November 25, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book has a lot of positive advice that can be used. As with any other lifestyle books, it's not easy to take on everything the author says verbatim. It is easy, though, to take some of the aspects of this and apply it to life.
This book has a ton of inspiration! It definitely keeps a workaholic like myself, aware of just what I'm spending my work time on. It's help me to realize that some of the work I do can be outsourced. I've implemented that part of the book with satisfactory results.
Sharing his love for travel, I do agree that the traditional two weeks per year is unacceptable for vacation. With all the technology available today, it is possible to have "working gettaways". I've also implemented this part with satisfactory results.
Be mindful that Ferriss does seem to oversimplify a little. For instance, it's not as easy to start a profitable, automatic income generating, online business as he makes it out to be in "Income Autopilot". And getting your foreign virtual assistant to do most everything for you, is also not that easy.
While I don't ascribe to the 9-5 lifestyle, I do love my work. As such, I can't see me dwindling my workweek down to four hours. What this has done for me, and why I do recommend this book, is it has aided me in finding creative ways to get the most out of life, while still putting in all the hours required to run my business.
Good idea! November 23, 2008 Lots of good ideas for those at certain "higher" levels in the corporate setting or self-employed. Still a good read - wish all employers would read it and see how much busy work America does - for others but possibly only a few usable ideas.
Great book! November 23, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book helps me change my life. After read it I always have time for playing games and watching movies, in spite of many homework every week. It help me keep a fresh mind in every statement, and always work with my best.
Revolutionary Approach to Work and Life, Focus on What You Do Best, and Eliminate, Automate, or Outsource the Rest! November 23, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Timothy Ferris shows people how to create their dream lives right now, rather than someday when they are "retired." Tim uses outsourcing, geographic arbitrage, and performance/productivity principles to transform his life from 80 hour workweeks to 4 hour workweeks, while making as much per month as he used to make in one year.
The four big ideas to take and use from this book are: eliminate unnecessary and unimportant work from your life; automate anything that can be automated; use technological tools to work anywhere; and outsource work to others who can do the same task better, faster, and cheaper than you.
I like how he applies the 80-20 rule not just to tasks, but to people and customers. Learning how to say "no" to the trivial allows you to say "yes" to the vital.
You can transform services and information into products that automate themselves. If there is basic information that you always tell people, just write it, record it, or video it one time. It's as simple as making a website to pull your niche customers in, rather than making calls all day to push something on your market segment.
Life is good when you earn in dollars and pay in pesos. If your work is related to computers or technology, you can just as easily type on your laptop on a beach as in a desk. I used this technique during a full-time school year to visit over 40 cities.
Outsourcing your work is not about "taking advantage" of poor people. It's allowing each person to do what they do best. If you have a legal problem, do you apply to a law school and spend 4 years to get a license? Or do you just hire a lawyer? If you have to mow a lawn, do you go out and buy a new lawn mower? It's the same principle for most things in life.
Are you treading water or swimming ahead? When you fall of a boat, you have to tread water or else you will drown. But, if all you do is tread water and stay in place, you will eventually drown. You have to swim ahead and move forward to get to your destination.
In life, take three weeks to three months to learn how to tread the water, and then systemize, delegate, or outsource that task so you can focus on swimming ahead. There is no glory, no honor, and no reason to waste your most precious resource--your time--in anything that does not make you grow in life.
Time is the great equalizer. We all have the same amount of time. It is what we do with our time that makes our lives so different. Are you spending your time treading water or swimming ahead?
Join the new rich! November 22, 2008 3 out of 6 found this review helpful
Hey, I won a martial arts trophy not with skill but through trickery and manipulation of the rules. Am I ashamed of what I did? Not a bit -- in my book, I brag about how clever I was. I figured out how to beat the system and did it without breaking a sweat. All those Wall Street millionaires figured out how to do it too. You can join them and set yourself free! I'll show you how. It's real easy and won't take you more than 4 hours a week.
Since its publication in April 2007 at the height of the financial bubble, more than 80% of the almost 800 reviews have given this book at least 4 stars. It's Nov. 2008 and amazingly this meretricious claptrap is still getting the same ratings. And people wonder how we got into the mess we are in today.
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