Re: Fundamental difference in thinking? - Posted by GL
Posted by GL on March 28, 2009 at 17:31:45:
Reminds me of something Clifford Irving said when he was selling his (fake) Howard Hughes bio.
Someone at the publisher’s asked why Hughes was so insistent on being paid $750,000 with all his money.
Irving replied “You don’t get to be a billionaire by giving things away for nothing”.
I have seen the same thing you describe so many times, it hardly surprises me anymore.
Just a few weeks ago I phoned about a 1976 Avion trailer that was for sale for $550. The seller was recently laid off and was strapped for cash, that was why he was selling. Unfortunately for me someone else snapped it up. The seller, who was down on his luck and hard up for money, could just as easily have asked $3000 and got it. If he fixed the trailer up a bit (he was out of work after all) he could have got $5000 or $6000.
Here’s another one. A friend of mine recalled a job he did some years back. A man he knew had a lot of wooden office desks to get rid of. He offered them to my friend for $10 apiece. My friend suggested they take them to the guy’s home ( a mansion in the most exclusive neighborhood in town) polish them up and sell them for $200.
They tried it, it worked, and the guy was so thrilled he paid my friend $50 each to truck them to his house and polish them up. They all sold at $150 to $200. In most cases he then got $25 or $50 to deliver them to the buyer.
Now this guy was a millionaire many times over. He had all these desks because he just sold an office building and the buyer did not want the furniture. So what was he doing messing around with a bunch of old desks?
My friend also said he heard him haggling over the phone with the Mercedes dealer. He was literally arguing to the death over the last $50 discount.
To repeat, this man was a millionaire. And I predict he will stay one too.
As for the guy who could not save up $50 even with a year’s notice. I predict he will never be a millionaire.