On the other hand, actual millionaires tend to live in middle-income neighborhoods, drive economical cars, wear simple watches, and buy suits off the rack. Written in 1996 by marketing professors William Danko and Thomas Stanley, its main premise is that people who look rich may not actually be rich they overspend - often on symbols of wealth - but actually have modest portfolios and, sometimes, big debts. Check out the lists of the best financial books of all time, and you're bound to find several that include The Millionaire Next Door: Surprising Secrets of America's Wealthy. Want to become a millionaire? Then perhaps you should start by studying the behaviors of people who have done it.
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