Chapter 1. THE RICHEST ROAD

Have a compelling vision?
Leadership skills?
An understanding spouse?
You just might be a visionary founder.

This is the richest road. Founding your own firm can create astounding wealth. Half of the 10 richest Americans did this, including Bill Gates (net worth $59 billion), gambling mogul Sheldon Adelson ($28 billion), Oracle CEO Larry Ellison ($26 billion), and Google wunderkinds Sergey Brin and Larry Page ($18.5 billion each).[6] Close behind are info magnate and now NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg ($11.5 billion), Nike's Phil Knight ($9.8 billion), finance's Stephen Schwarzman ($7.8 billion), discount broker Charles Schwab ($5.5 billion), and many of the richest Americans from nearly every industry and angle.[7] Even better? These folks get wealthy and spawn rich ride-alongs too. (See Chapter 3.)

And this road works with scant restriction by industry, education, or pedigree—PhDs and college dropouts are equally welcome. Be warned: This road's not for the faint-hearted. It requires courage, discipline, Teflon skin, strategic vision, a talented supporting cast, and maybe luck. Those lacking entrepreneurial spirit needn't apply—nor folks who are fear-driven.

No mistake, it's tough. Few new businesses survive more than four years.[8] But starting a business is the American Dream. Succeeding is the realm of supermen and superwomen. The key to success is a novel twist making what you do different—the difference that works.

Are you a person who can't be stopped? Can ...

Get The Ten Roads to Riches: The Ways The Wealthy Got There (And How You Can Too!) now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.