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T. Harv Eker

Canadian Author, Businessman and Motivational Speaker
Date of Birth : 10 Jun, 1954
Place of Birth : Toronto, Canada
Profession : Author, Motivational Speaker
Nationality : Canadian
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T. Harv Eker is an author, businessman and motivational speaker known for his theories on wealth and motivation. He is the author of the book Secrets of the Millionaire Mind published by HarperCollins.

Early life

Eker was born in Toronto, Ontario, and lived there through his childhood. As a young adult, Eker moved to the United States and started a series of over a dozen different companies before having success with an early retail fitness store. After reportedly making millions through a chain of fitness stores and subsequently losing his fortune through mismanagement, Eker started analyzing the relationships rich people have with their money and wealth,  leading him to develop the theories he advances in his writing and speaking today.

Theories

Eker’s writing and speaking often focus on his concept of the "Millionaire Mind," a collection of "mental attitudes that facilitate wealth." This theory proposes that we each possess a "financial blueprint," or an "internal script that dictates how we relate to money,"  and that by changing this blueprint people can change their ability to accumulate wealth. Other theories attributed to Eker include the concept that people unwilling to make major sacrifices in order to succeed "play the role" of the victim  and deny that they have control of their own situations. Another concept is that guilt prevents seeking wealth and that "thinking about wealth as a means to help others" relieves this guilt and enables wealth accumulation. In his book, Eker lists 17 ways in which the financial blueprints of the rich differ from those of the poor and the middle-class. One theme identified in this list is that the rich discard limiting beliefs while the unsuccessful succumb to them.  Eker argues that: Rich people believe, "I create my life", while poor people believe, "Life happens to me"; rich people focus on opportunities while poor people focus on obstacles; and rich people admire other rich and successful people whereas poor people resent rich and successful people.

Businessman

Eker founded the seminar company, Peak Potentials Training. According to a Peak Potentials press release, the company was later acquired by Success Resources, an event production company, in 2011. Eker has produced seminars since at least 2001. A 2005 The Wall Street Journal article cites Eker as an example of changes in non-fiction publishing. The WSJ article examined his use of his seminars, contacts, and personal following as a "platform" from which to promote sales of his own book.

Author

Eker is the author of Secrets of the Millionaire Mind which appeared on the New York Times bestseller list and was on the Wall Street Journal’s business-book list.[ He has also written a self-published book titled SpeedWealth. 

Controversy

A 2010 report in the Vancouver Sun claimed that Eker was named in a "prospective class-action lawsuit" involving two individuals who purchased residential properties from people they met while attending one of his seminars.  Another Vancouver Sun report from 2007 cites a claim that Eker's company Peak Potentials Training Inc. used "high-pressure sales tactics" during "Millionaire Mind Intensive" course at the Wall Centre in October 2005. The plaintiffs alleged that Eker and his company violated the Canadian Consumer Act through wide variability in the pricing of seminar attendance.

Quotes

Total 25 Quotes
Successful people have fear, successful people have doubts, and successful people have worries. They just don't let these feelings stop them.
If you want to move to a new level in your life, you must break through your comfort zone and practice doing things that are not comfortable.
Happy people build their inner world; unhappy people blame their outer world.
Where attention goes, energy flows and results show.
Rich people believe "You can have your cake and eat it too." Middle-class people believe "Cake is too rich, so I'll only have a little piece." Poor people don't believe they deserve cake, so they order a doughnut, focus on the hole, and wonder why they have "nothing.
If you are willing to do only what's easy, life will be hard. But if you are willing to do what's hard, life will be easy.
Rich people take advice from people who are richer than they are. Poor people take advice from their friends, who are just as broke as they are.
If you want to change the fruits, you will first have to change the roots. If you want to change the visible, you must first change the invisible.
Whenever you feel uncomfortable, instead of retreating back into your old comfort zone, pat yourself on the back and say, "I must be growing," and continue moving forward.
Complaining is the absolute worst possible thing you could do for your health or your wealth. The worst!