millionares who started from nothing

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not that i give a shit about the rich and famous but i just got done reading a thing about madonna (what i wouldnt give to fuck her brains out) saying she went to nyc with 35 bucks in her pocket, and how that was the bravest thing she ever did blah blah blah.

anyways, it was a cool read...who else made it big from zero? any good reads out there?

money.jpg
 

in your heart, you know i'm right
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millionaire means nothing nowadays. you have to a $1 million liquid just to be considered weathly.
 

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I read the book about 20 years ago about Howard Ruff. I later saw him on Oprah. What is very interesting about this guy is he goes from nothing to being very wealthy. Then goes back dow to zero and becomes wealthy again (this is not an uncommon trait). So up to now nothing super great. The first time he goes down to zero he basically begs the banks to give him a little more time to get things straightened out and without giving the story away it seemed reasonable. Instead the bankers foreclose on him and put the screws to him in banker fashion. He files bk and has nothing. He starts a new company and becomes a millionare again.

Now for the interesting part of the story. Once he makes it again he goes back and meets with the bankers who foreclosed on him. Not to say look what you did and where I am now. Instead he has them figure out how much he owed them and what the interest would be and pays them back in full even though he was no longer legally obligated to do so. He felt morally obligated even though he was not legally obligated.

It's stories like this that people need to hear about and read about.
 

And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
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A Million to One

Chances Are Imitators Can't Match This Student's By-the-Pixel Web Sales Success


Alex Tew holds $1, the cost of advertising a pixel on his homepage. (Daniel Berehulak -- Getty Images)


By Don Oldenburg
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, January 11, 2006; Page C01

Look what Alex Tew did, and you get one of those "Why didn't I think of that?" flashes. It's so simple, so cheap, so mind-bogglingly lucrative that it took the 21-year-old student from small-town Wiltshire, England, not even five months to go from broke to millionaire.
Worried about paying his college tuition last August, Tew chanced upon one of those rare original money-making ideas. How about creating an Internet Web page out of 1 million blank pixels? And then selling those pinhead-size digital picture elements that make up a computer screen for a dollar apiece, or $100 per 10-by-10-pixel block, to advertisers who turn them into colorful tiny billboards and micro logos linked to their own Web sites?

And why not call this new marketing monstrosity "The Million Dollar Homepage" -- since Tew stood to make a million bucks?

At exactly 1:42:28 p.m. EST today, Tew can post a "sold out" sign on the Million Dollar Homepage. (You can see it at http:/<WBR>/<WBR>www.milliondollarhomepage.com/<WBR> . ) The spiky-haired Brit put the last thousand pixels up for auction on eBay 10 days ago with a $1 starting bid for the lot. With 24 hours to go, yesterday's bidding reached $152,300, putting him over the million-dollar mark.
"I'm half-expecting a last-minute flurry of bids. I think it is going to go higher," says Tew, whose initial investment to set up the pixel page was less than $100. "I never imagined things would get to the level that they have."
Not sure initially that a single pixel would sell, Tew felt the idea had potential, so he aimed high. "I asked myself the question, 'How could I become a millionaire?' Twenty minutes later I had the answer," he says. In the beginning, he reasoned, even 1 or 2 percent of a million dollars wouldn't be bad.
The phenomenon he created has been hailed by some as a genre-changing concept in online marketing -- otherwise an advertising badlands of spam, banner ads and pop-ups. Others say it's a brilliant, one-time marketing aberration that will never be replicated.
Whatever it is, the Million Dollar Homepage isn't a pretty site -- even as it nears completion and begins a guaranteed minimum five-year lifespan. Tew calls this head-cocking creation "a big collage of different colored ads." It looks like a bulletin board on designer steroids, an advertising train wreck you can't not look at. Think "Where's Waldo?," only more cluttered and without a Waldo. It's like getting every pop-up ad you ever got in your life, at once. It's the Internet equivalent of suddenly feeling like you want to take a shower.
But its conceptual beauty is that it's not designed at all. How the pieces fit together is totally random. Buyers create little ads and choose open ad space on a 10,000-block grid. It's more than 2,000 advertisements, their dimensions ranging from postage-stamp size to a Tart N' Tiny candy (sorry, we couldn't think of anything else small enough to compare!), displaying words normally red-flagged by spam filters -- EZ Money! Hair loss? Poker! Loans! Get Girls! Freebies! Cancer Cure! Casino!
Some of the ads are illustrations or photos -- images of bikini babes, cartoons, Che Guevara, the British flag, a marijuana leaf, a bull's-eye, the dollar sign. When you drag the cursor over any one of them, a small read-out appears identifying the advertiser -- dating services, online poker, loan companies, bookies, bloggers, ring tone sellers, snoring remedies.
Within the first month the site was getting 200,000 unique visitors daily, and more than 3.2 million in the past two weeks, Tew says. "The more people talked about the site, the more money I made," says Tew. "And the more money I made, the more people talked about the site. It's a self-perpetuating idea."
The idea has inspired a bad case of pixel envy online. More than 1,000 copycat homepages have cropped up hoping to duplicate his success -- from the Zero Dollar Homepage, which gives pixel blocks away and tries to make money from banner ads, to "The Most Expensive Pixels on the Internet" that sells space for $1,000 per pixel.

Twists and oddities also abound: The Million Pixel Gallery tries to sell art and advertising from galleries and museums, the Cover Up Osama Bin Laden site sells pixel blocks to obliterate Osama's face from the screen, and the Million Booby Homepage, well, appears to still be in the training-bra stage of development.
Few if any of the me-Tew'ers are likely to make a million dollars or even come close. Many remain barren sites without a single ad. One of the first was the Million Dollar Web Page created by Anthony Van Noordwyk, an Omaha Internet techie who launched a couple weeks after marveling at Tew's homepage. But while his unique visitors' count is up from four the first day to 2,115 Monday, he has sold just 60 ads.


"Nobody is anywhere close to being as successful as Alex's original," says Van Noordwyk, 35, who counts his sales so far in the tens of thousands. "Now that Alex's Web page is full, maybe some of the more popular pixel ad sites will catch on a bit. I am not holding my breath but I am crossing my fingers."
While a few pixel pages are dedicated to the Internet's biggest money-making venture, most copycat pages draw the line on pornography. "We had to turn them away because other advertisers wouldn't advertise," says Josh Moser, co-creator of the Million Quarter Webpage, which sells pixel blocks for 25 cents per pixel.
"This is probably going to be a fad," says Moser, 31, a Detroit Web site developer whose site went live a month after Tew's and now has 400 advertisers.
Including sales on their new site, PixelGiveaway.com, he and partner Jeremy Mlynarek, 29, have sold more than $85,000 in ads, Moser says.
Gareth "Gaz" Thomas, a 24-year-old biotechnology doctorate student from North Wales, United Kingdom, uses sex appeal to sell one-penny pixels on his SexyPixelHomepage.com site where ads gradually are blocking out a side view of a naked female torso. "How could an idea that was so unique and different spawn so many dull copycats?" says Thomas, who three months ago didn't know the first thing about creating a Web site, but has sold nearly 100 ads. "I made mine sexy so it would grab attention and it works!"
While Tew thinks the copycats are "quite funny, really," he doesn't like the "rip-off sites" that borrow heavily from his. "I like the ones that put a twist on it and improve the idea," he says, mentioning a favorite, TrumpingAlex.com, which features a photo of Tew with a Donald Trump hairstyle superimposed on his head. "But the one thing that everybody seems to be missing is that it's one of those crazy ideas that only works once. I was first to market and therefore I got 99 percent of the attention. Good luck to the imitators."
If his pixel page has any lasting value in online marketing, Tew believes it's that "very small ads have some sort of future."
And his future? He's putting his business management studies on hold. He's had job offers, business opportunities and a few new ideas he wants to explore. Not to mention a million dollars.
"The lesson is that consumers are willing to go to good ideas, things that are unique, things that are novel," says Tew. "Rather than copy each other, spend time thinking up new things. . . . Creativity works."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/10/AR2006011001703_2.html
 

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Bottom line you need persistence and desire, many claim to want it but few really do.
 

Rx. Senior
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The Mark Cuban story about how he started up his first two companies is one of the most inspiring I've read.
He wanted to listen to baseball games over the internet and couldn't find it. So he holed up in his apartment, read book and stuff until he figured it out and then started up Real Networks.
 

WVU

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I am not a liquid millionaire, but I have gone from nothing to set for life by playing blackjack, roulette, and video poker.
 

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I am not a liquid millionaire, but I have gone from nothing to set for life by playing blackjack, roulette, and video poker.


WVU, interesting, we should talk, I think If im serious enough I can nmake serious dough with roulette, I always win at it, but never take it as serious as becoming a millionaire
 

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there have been a bunch of rags to riches stories in the music world. a freind of mine who plays golf with vince gill has some good stories about faith hill fucking half of nashville in order to get good music gigs and hangout with the right recording guys when she was young. and she seems so innocent :aktion033

jewel living in a van on the beach comes to mind too.
 

WVU

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WVU, interesting, we should talk, I think If im serious enough I can nmake serious dough with roulette, I always win at it, but never take it as serious as becoming a millionaire

You will lose money in the long run with any system that you think you know. I made money because I was an extremely ruthless bonus whore. Without bonuses I would not have made a dime
 

Seahawk
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You will lose money in the long run with any system that you think you know. I made money because I was an extremely ruthless bonus whore. Without bonuses I would not have made a dime

roullette bonus? i don't get it.

i'm about 1/2 way to wealthy rofl.
 

She's either funnin' or bunnin' or else I'm runnin
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one time in 10th grade I made $475 in one night at my keg party. I felt like a millionaire.

does that count?
 

Seahawk
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My father came from Vietnam during the war and had nothing. He was sponsored by a white family who just happened to be the president of a bank... so he got it easy. I think he was fibbing with me when he said his dad wanted him to learn the trade so he could get him into the business. My dad left instead feeling that he was taking away from the biological kids and left with just a car and $25.

My dad also took a friend who was a BROKE JOKE, but his friend still. Came to Iowa and had no job. When he got a job he didn't have a place to live yet still cuz $25 ain't getting you shit. He took baths in the river and slept outside of kmart. It was 2 weeks before their 1st paycheck so they stretched that $25 like a mofo.

Still didn't have a place after a month and my dads friend needed the car to go see family back in the other town. My dad gave his car to him and said "go". The dude never came back with the car, ever.

So my dad was a grinder to say the least. Now he's worth over a million and he came from more than nothing, but less than $100. That's some major profit haha.
 
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You will lose money in the long run with any system that you think you know. I made money because I was an extremely ruthless bonus whore. Without bonuses I would not have made a dime

You are still my idol among bonus whores...take some of that money and come see us in Costa Rica, the country that made your life easier...:lol:
 

Self appointed RX World Champion Handicapper
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there have been a bunch of rags to riches stories in the music world. a freind of mine who plays golf with vince gill has some good stories about faith hill fucking half of nashville in order to get good music gigs and hangout with the right recording guys when she was young. and she seems so innocent :aktion033

jewel living in a van on the beach comes to mind too.



somehow i wish i was half of nashville all the sudden..
 

WVU

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You are still my idol among bonus whores...take some of that money and come see us in Costa Rica, the country that made your life easier...:lol:

I am going to do just that. I am thinking December or January. I would love to hang out with you and your crew for a bit. There are some in your neck of the woods who are not fans of my work so I would like to keep a semi low profile
 

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