How rich people live. How do rich people live in Russia? Self-awareness in everyday life, business


Almost all people dream of living richly and not denying themselves anything. Having a lot of money, a person gets a large number of opportunities for self-realization, business development, and the implementation of his most daring endeavors.

How to live richly?

Money solves not only practical issues, but also gives self-confidence and creates a sense of security. Possessing big amount money, a person stops worrying about the future and about the many small financial problems that for the general mass of people form the basis of their daily life (paying bills, saving for children’s education and vacations, planning large purchases, etc.).

Rich people have influential friends and move in certain circles, visit social events, often travel around the world, constantly go to expensive restaurants and buy clothes only in branded stores. Rich people invest in luxury real estate, cars, and jewelry.

Where do the rich live?

Rich people live in luxury city apartments located in prestigious areas, or in their own mansions. Typically, they have both. Apartment wealthy man will definitely buy in an elite quarter, in a house with all the amenities and a large area of ​​apartments. The mansion will be built or purchased in a prestigious gated community, where the neighbors will be equally successful people.

Rich people often purchase real estate abroad, the availability of which allows them to make a profitable investment and increase the level of comfort while vacationing in another country.

Where do the rich vacation?

Wealthy tourists prefer to relax in civilized European countries, characterized by comfortable, quiet life and high level of service. The most popular holiday destinations for rich people are the French Riviera and the Caribbean. Vacations in Bali are very popular among wealthy tourists, where you can rent a villa with individual service.

Wealthy people prefer to travel comfortably to their vacation destinations. Availability large quantity money allows them not to think about how much it will cost to rent a private jet, the price of which is unaffordable for ordinary people. A rich person can also easily afford to purchase a yacht or travel on an expensive liner.

According to the editors of the site, rich people live in a special world in which there are no small everyday problems And financial difficulties.
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6. Lifestyle

How the rich live and how they spend their money

Having money in your pocket, you will be both wise and beautiful, and even if you start drinking, people will admire you.

Jewish proverb

Mr. Jones lives in a village not far from the city, in an unremarkable house of four rooms, adjoining an extensive garden, carefully tended thanks to the efforts of his wife. He wears Marks & Spencer shirts (many of them for 5 years) that he forced his wife to buy on sale. Jones heads to work in the morning amidst a dense crowd of season pass passengers while his wife commutes to family car a five-year-old Ford, which Jones promises to replace as soon as he has time.

This morning, while on the train, he looks at his travel notebook and calculates how much income they received from renting out a three-bedroom villa they bought two years ago in the south of France. His wife decorated the house herself, and, in his opinion, she did it masterfully. Villa – beautiful place also for family vacation. He himself can only stay there for two weeks in August, but his wife spends the entire holiday there with the children. The private school has longer holidays than the village school located near their home. It turns out that you have to pay for less training time more money. Someone must be making a good profit from this. But he hopes the education is worth it. He himself left school when he was 16, and did not lose anything from it. And nowadays, it seems, people study until they are very old!

He notes that the villa is particularly profitable during the summer months, and Jones is toying with the idea of ​​advertising it more widely during the off-season. Here he finishes his calculations, takes out mobile phone and dials a number while looking at pages of business records. According to other passengers, he does not look like a rich man. Rather, he can be classified as a mid-level employee. But in reality he is a millionaire businessman.

Mr. Brown lives in a spacious two-story house with six bedrooms - it's a parsonage Victorian era. It stands on the very edge of the village. Behind the house there is a huge garden, which has not become smaller because Brown built a home swimming pool there last year and built an additional garage especially for his new car. (Although it was necessary to obtain permission for this redevelopment.) His wife hired a designer for the interior of the pool, but she did not like the proposed design, and she herself changed the design, placing dwarf trees along the edge of the pool, and hanging some of her (truly countless) along the walls. Chinese plates that she collects. It's an expensive hobby, but with some of his team's executive wives spending £2,000 on a dress, Mr Brown is happy to indulge her less lavish hobby. In the end, she still makes all her purchases in a very ordinary store, which is by no means intended for the rich. This morning she allowed herself to take a day off. The children, of course, wanted to go to the coast, but Mr. Brown cannot sit and idle for more than 5 minutes. Maybe that's why they bought themselves a house in Italy, not far from Pompeii. He believes that the historical places amazing. And he even forgets about business when exploring these extraordinary ruins. It is also beneficial for children - educationally. Mr Brown does not regret sending them to the local village school, but he believes that by instilling in them a taste for European image life, he to some extent “cuts” them.

Mr Brown doesn't travel by train. Why on earth, if you have a brand new, shiny, ultra-modern Mercedes, would you deprive yourself of such convenience as air conditioning? My wife has her own vehicle on four wheels - a Ferrari. After buying this car, gossip spread throughout the village, and Mr. Brown began to notice the envy on the faces of his neighbors as he drove in style along the main street. “Good for him! – they noted with an evil grin. “He must be a millionaire by now.” And it's true - he really is a millionaire.

Mr. Brown uses the Ferrari for short jaunts, such as when he needs to finish a round of golf at the posh club he joined last year. Recently he only had time for a couple of games a year, but good games– he won every time. However, he believes that he should use the car more often - because it will quickly become outdated, and then it will turn out that he wasted his money on it.

Both Mr. Jones and Mr. Brown are self-made millionaires, but they have very different priorities about how to spend their money. Indeed, after reading interviews with millionaires, it becomes clear that their priorities

in terms of expenses, they are as different as their characters and types of business are different. Often the only things they have in common are spacious, beautifully furnished homes (which are always important to them), holidays abroad several times a year and a relentless drive to invest.

A real millionaire must be at least 40 years old, married and have children; and after getting out of bed, spend most of your time to work.

Indeed, the Tulip agency survey shows that, in general, having money to save and invest is the number one priority for both millionaires and multimillionaires, both men and women, and CEOs of companies working in those or other professional field, and among businessmen.

IN real life millionaires are different from the stereotype that exists in the tabloid press. The tabloid millionaire is usually a single man in his 30s who spends most of his time visiting fashionable clubs or gliding through the waves on his own yacht the size of a good whale, surrounded by beauties from the covers of fashion magazines who literally hang on him, in while he is already sick of all this. In real life, a millionaire is usually a young man, over 40, married, has children and spends most of his time at work. And he rests only during vacations or playing golf. Most of them lead a very ordinary lifestyle and scrupulously pay their bills.

Millionaires tend to judge their success by the standard set by public opinion relative to all millionaires.

Millionaires are also very different from each other. Not all millionaires have the same income. In fact, two thirds of all millionaires have less than £2 million in assets, while the top 10% (15,000 of them) have an average of £6.5 million. It would seem that this money can buy happiness. Fifty-five percent of the super-rich (£3 million plus assets) say they are very happy with their lifestyle - compared to 43% of poorer millionaires. Super-rich people are also more satisfied with themselves, considering themselves very successful, compared to 48% (less than half) of “poorer” millionaires. This seems strange because most people think that being a millionaire in our society is already a symbol of success, whether you are moderately rich or very rich. However, millionaires compare themselves to other millionaires and judge their success by certain standards rather than by their average income. This means that comparing those who have less with those who have more is likely to be perceived painfully by the former anyway - in this they are no different from a person who lives in a small apartment and is jealous of someone who has spacious own home.

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What else do the richest people on the planet do besides earn a lot of money? Day.Az will tell about this with reference to Rambler.

Jeff Bezos, Amazon founder, $112 billion


The company's first office was in a garage, and it all started with selling books online. Nowadays you can buy almost everything on Amazon, and the founder of the company is recognized as the richest man in the world. For Jeff Bezos, the main thing is family; he never misses breakfast and spends a lot of time with his wife and children. And in his free time from work and family matters, he lifts spent NASA launch vehicles from the ocean.

Bill Gates, founder of Microsoft, $90 billion

He earned his first billion dollars at the age of 31, his name became a household name, and he continues not only to develop his business, but also to do charity work.


For example, Bill Gates is concerned about environmental problems and unsanitary conditions in poor countries, and not so long ago he presented a unique development - a toilet that works without water. According to Gates, such technologies are the future.

Warren Buffett, investor, $84 billion

At age 77, Warren Buffett beat cancer, and now, at age 88, he continues to lead an active lifestyle, play the ukulele and earn money.

In addition, he is involved in charity work and promised to bequeath 99% of his fortune for these purposes.

Bernard Arnault, head of LVMH, $72 billion

He began working in his father's construction company, whom he convinced to change direction and enter the hotel business.


In 1988, he bought $600 million worth of LVMH shares, then another $500 million, and in 1989 he became chairman of the board. The company continues to develop, and Bernard Arnault manages to help French art. He was also awarded the order Legion of Honor.

Mark Zuckerberg, creator of Facebook, $71 billion

One of richest people The planet is quite unpretentious in everyday life, and only after the birth of his first child did he acquire his own housing, and before that he gave preference to rented housing.


Mark Zuckerberg is involved in charity work, to a greater extent he is interested in medical and educational projects. In all his endeavors, he is supported by his wife Priscilla Chan, with whom he studied at Harvard.

Amancio Ortega, founder of Zara, $70 billion

It doesn't match at all traditional ideas about rich people.


Amancia Ortega, owner of Inditex, which includes Zara, Massimo Dutti, Bershka and others famous brands, leads a modest lifestyle, avoids publicity and even refused an invitation to dinner from the royal family.

Carlos Slim Helu, head of America Movil, $67.1 billion

He was not well liked in Mexico until his wife died in 1999. Carlos Slim Helu never married again, but tries to gather his large family more often.

Gradually, he transfers the business to his children, and he himself pays more attention to charitable projects, for example, restoring the historical part of Mexico City, and also financing medical and educational programs.

Not all billionaires were born into wealthy and wealthy families, but on the contrary, many came literally from poverty. The phrase "rags to riches" may sound like a cliché, but it really does describe life path some famous entrepreneurs.

Thanks to hard work, perseverance and maturity of thought, these people from completely different parts of the planet were able to make their fortune. Here are 12 people who started life poor and became billionaires:

12. John Paul DeJoria once slept in his car

Net worth: $3.4 billion

When John was two years old, his parents divorced, and at the age of 9, he and his older brother began selling Christmas cards and newspapers to support the family. When the mother found herself unable to support her sons, she placed them in foster care. DeJoria was in a street gang as a youth, but decided to change his life after his high school math teacher told him he would "never be good at anything in life."

With a starting capital of $700, DeJoria created John Paul Mitchell Systems and sold shampoo from apartment to apartment. During this period, John found himself on the street for the second time. Since there was no money to rent housing, he had to sleep in an old car. He was later able to create a tequila company, The Patrón Spirits.

11. Ralph Lauren worked nights to buy his clothes.

Net worth: $6.3 billion

Ralph was born in the Bronx into a family of Jewish immigrants. Mother, Frida Kotlyar, was from Grodno, and father, Frank Livshits, was from Pinsk. The family had four children. They all had to live in a one-room apartment, because while the children were small, the father worked alone and they did not have the funds to buy a house. My father had a hard job - painting buildings.

From an early age, Ralph wanted to become rich and famous, which he honestly wrote about in school essays: “I want to become a millionaire.” When he once again received his older brother’s cast-offs, he said to himself: “I need my own clothes!” And he began to work. He worked at night and studied during the day, saving money to buy himself a suit. He knew his parents couldn't afford it.

Ralph Lauren realized early on that he needed to achieve everything on his own. Become famous actor- a very dubious prospect, and to become successful and rich, you just need to want it and work.

At the age of 12, Lauren bought her first suit on her own.

10. Businessman Shahid Khan once washed dishes for $1.2 an hour

Net worth: $7.2 billion

He is now one of the richest men in the world, but when Khan came to the United States from Pakistan, he worked as a dishwasher while attending the University of Illinois. Khan now owns Flex-N-Gate, one of the largest automotive component manufacturers, the Jacksonville Jaguars NFL and Fulham football clubs.

9. Legendary trader George Soros fled Nazi occupation in Hungary

Net worth: $8 billion

Soros was born into a middle-class Jewish family. George's father was a lawyer and publisher. In 1914, he volunteered for the front, was captured by the Russians and was exiled to Siberia, from where he fled back to his native Budapest.

During World War II, thanks to false documents prepared by his father, the Soros family escaped persecution by the Nazis and emigrated to Great Britain in 1947.

At first, George worked as a waiter and porter. After graduation, Soros worked in a gift shop and then got a job in New York. In 1992, his famous bet against the British pound earned him a billion dollars.

8. WhatsApp founder Jan Koum washed the floors in a store

Net worth: $9.2 billion

Kum was born into a Jewish family in Kyiv. In 1992, he emigrated to California with his mother and grandmother, where the family received an apartment from the state. He made his first money in the United States by washing floors at a local grocery store. The family barely made ends meet. When Kum's mother was diagnosed with cancer, they had to survive on her disability benefits.

During his university part-time job, Koum meets the future co-founder of WhatsApp, Brian Acton, who gets him a job at Yahoo. Yang even left university in order to develop in the Internet industry, as his studies distracted him from work.

In 2009, he created the world's largest mobile messaging service, WhatsApp, which was acquired by Facebook for $22 billion in 2014.

7. Russian business tycoon Roman Abramovich was orphaned in early childhood and grew up in poverty.

Net worth: $11.5 billion

Roman in early childhood remained an orphan. His mother died of blood poisoning when he was one year old, and his father died at a construction site when Roman was four. The boy lived with his grandmother in Syktyvkar, Ukhta, and then in Moscow.

Abramovich started out working as a mechanic and toy seller, but from the early 1990s he began selling oil from the city of Noyabrsk. In the mid-1990s, he met Boris Berezovsky, with whom they created several companies. With the help of these companies, shares of the Sibneft oil company created in 1995 were subsequently acquired. In 2000, companies controlled by Abramovich, together with the structures of Oleg Deripaska, created the Russian Aluminum corporation. Besides, in different time Abramovich owned the assets of such companies as Aeroflot, RusPromAvto, Irkutskenergo, Krasnoyarsk Hydroelectric Power Station and others, but in the 2000s he consistently got rid of them.

6. Steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal started from humble beginnings in India

Net worth: $18.5 billion

Mittal was born in Calcutta in the family of businessman Mohan Lal Mittal from the Marwari family. The Marwari family has long been called Indian Jews. Started his business in Indonesia. Over more than 30 years of development, his company Ispat International has appeared in almost all regions of the world. The exception was India, where Mittal's father started his business, but sold it due to problems with the government.

Today, Mittal runs the world's largest steel company and is a multimillionaire, as well as India's most famous businessman. His metallurgical company has operations in 30 countries. It accounts for 10% of global steel production.

5. Leonardo Del Vecchio grew up in an orphanage and then worked in a factory where he lost part of his finger

Net worth: $22.9 billion

Del Vecchio was one of five children in the family who were eventually sent to an orphanage because their mother was unable to support them. My labor activity Leonardo began as a mechanic's apprentice in a factory that produced automobile parts. It was the metalworking knowledge he acquired at that time that served him well when he decided to open his first workshop making eyeglass frames.

Leonardo is now the founder and chairman of the Luxottica Group, a recognized world leader in the design and sale of frames and sunglasses for brands such as Ray-Ban, Oakley and Persol.

4. Tycoon Francois Pinault dropped out of school after being bullied for being poor.

Net worth: $28.5 billion

François Pinault was born into the family of a timber merchant in the French province of Brittany. The boy's education was given with with great difficulty, however, he was interested in entrepreneurship since childhood. At the age of 16, the young man left school because he was teased for being poor. For several years, Pinault did odd jobs in his native region and in Paris, then went to Algeria for three years, from where he returned with start-up capital for the business.

As a businessman, Pinault is known for his "predator" tactics, which involve buying small firms for a nominal price when the market is down. Shortly before the 1973 crisis, Pinault sold his company to British investors for 30 million francs, and after the crisis he bought it back for only 5 million francs.

Pinault invested in the industry of production and sale of luxury goods. The millionaire purchased the brands Yves Saint Laurent, Bottega Veneta, Stella McCartney, Alexander McQueen, Parisian shopping mall Printemps, furniture company Conforama, retail chain Fnac and fashion house Gucci. He also owns auction house Christie's.

3. After his father died, business tycoon Li Ka-shing dropped out of school to help support his family.

Net worth: $35 billion

Fleeing the Japanese invasion and the hardships of war, the Kashin family fled mainland China to Hong Kong in 1940, and two years later the father of the family died of tuberculosis. Lee, who had not even completed the fifth grade, began selling watch straps, and soon got a job in a factory producing plastic flowers. As a teenager, he worked 16 hours a day in hazardous production - stamping and painting artificial roses, and after his shift he attended evening school.

2. Sheldon Adelson slept on the floor of a Boston apartment building.

Net worth: $41 billion

Adelson was born into a poor Jewish family (his mother was from Ukraine, his father was Lithuanian) in the vicinity of Boston; his father was a taxi driver and could not properly feed his family, since he had to give the lion’s share of his not-so-large earnings to the mafia. “I was born into a very poor family and grew up in poverty. We had one bed for the whole family, my parents slept on it, and the children slept on the floor,” Sheldon said.

He made his first money at the age of 12, selling newspapers on the streets. He later worked as a mortgage broker, entrepreneur, investment expert and financial advisor and created about 50 different companies. Adelson lost almost all of his funds during the 2008 economic crisis, but made most of his money in subsequent years. He now runs Las Vegas Sands, the world's largest casino company, and is considered the most prominent political donor in the United States.

1. Oracle's Larry Ellison worked part-time jobs for eight years to support himself.

Net worth: $64.1 billion

At nine months, Larry fell ill with pneumonia, and his unmarried 19-year-old mother (an emigrant originally from Odessa) gave Larry to be raised by her aunt and uncle. After his aunt died, he gave up college and moved to California, where he looked for ways to earn extra money for the next eight years. He founded a development company software Oracle in 1977 and is now one of the largest technology companies in the world.

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Poverty and wealth - two different concepts. How do the rich feel? How does it go? everyday life and rest?

Of course, almost every person wants to live richly. Nowadays, money is needed for everything: for health, self-realization, fulfilling your dreams or ideas.

How do rich people live?

©

Self-awareness in everyday life, business

  • The influence of money on psychological condition person. It has been proven that having a lot of money makes a person feel more secure, confident and comfortable. He has the opportunity not to worry about the future, not to burden himself with thoughts about everyday financial problems.
  • Wealthy people travel a lot, eat deliciously in expensive restaurants, dress well, go to various events and have good connections.
  • Their apartments or mansions are luxurious and located in the most prestigious areas.
  • Often money is invested in foreign real estate - both for rent and or more comfortable rest in a foreign country.

Rest

The rich prefer to vacation in comfortable European countries, where high level service. The islands are also popular: the Caribbean, Maldives, Bali.

They also get there comfortably. This could be a personal plane, yacht, etc.

In general, rich people have their own own world, but this does not mean at all that they are happy in it.

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