
Douglas R. Andrew
Author of Missed Fortune 101: A Starter Kit to Becoming a Millionaire
About the Author
Douglas R. Andrew is a successful financial strategist, lecturer, and consultant in practice for over thirty years. He is the New York Times bestselling author of The Last Chance Millionaire and the coauthor of Millionaire by Thirty.
Works by Douglas R. Andrew
Missed Fortune: Dispel the Money Myth-Conceptions--Isn't It Time You Became Wealthy? (2002) 57 copies
Millionaire by Thirty: The Quickest Path to Early Financial Independence (2008) 44 copies, 2 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- financial advisor
- Organizations
- Paramount Financial Services, Inc.
- Agent
- Jillian Manus
- Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Adult nonfiction; personal finance/investing. This book read like an infomercial, treating the reader like a chump (good thing I got it from the library instead of actually buying it). I would not recommend it--the Rich Dad, Poor Dad series is way better at empowering readers to take control of their financial health.
I wonder if anybody became a millionaire following the advice in this book. A friend of mine invited me to attend this writer’s lecture, and the scheme sounds pretty good. He speaks with the passion of a true believer. I was tempted to go along with his claims.
He says you should mortgage you house to the hilt, pull as much cash as you can out of your house, and invest it in life insurance policies. The interest on your debt is tax detectable, while the dividends on your insurance are tax show more free. So you get rich on the difference. It sounds good, but I could not find any insurance policies where the dividends were tax-free. I asked him about that, and he said only he knew where those policies were, and I would have to pay him to find out.
So I would have to go as deep into debt as I could, and then hand him the money. What could possible go wrong?
Of course, this was before the housing market collapsed. I suspect anyone who followed his advice ended up in a world of hurt. show less
He says you should mortgage you house to the hilt, pull as much cash as you can out of your house, and invest it in life insurance policies. The interest on your debt is tax detectable, while the dividends on your insurance are tax show more free. So you get rich on the difference. It sounds good, but I could not find any insurance policies where the dividends were tax-free. I asked him about that, and he said only he knew where those policies were, and I would have to pay him to find out.
So I would have to go as deep into debt as I could, and then hand him the money. What could possible go wrong?
Of course, this was before the housing market collapsed. I suspect anyone who followed his advice ended up in a world of hurt. show less
Millionaire by Thirty: The Quickest Path to Early Financial Independence (Business Plus) by Douglas R. Andrew
This book wasn't good at all. I'm 90% sure if I followed through with what It said I'd get trapped in debt.
Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 7
- Members
- 300
- Popularity
- #78,267
- Rating
- 2.8
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 30
- Languages
- 1













