i don't think i would have written a book it aged 25, 26, had it not been for the approach he took along those types of lines. He reminds me a little bit of charley munger sometimes, in terms of taking a very common sense approach. I was only 12 years old and greay nine at the start of the year. And sister was supposed to take care of me in kitchener one week end,. my parentse gone back to their home town, osarn, two hours away. My sister takes off, of course, undelagial otes. I'm alone at the house. What should i do? And my dad says, well, i
Dave Chilton is a Canadian author, investor, and a venture capitalist who has appeared on television in the Canadian version of Dragons’ Den. In 1989, he released his book ”The Wealthy Barber” which went on to sell an astonishing two million copies in Canada. You can follow Dave on Twitter at https://twitter.com/wealthy_barber and buy his book at https://www.amazon.com/THE-WEALTHY-BARBER/dp/B000SAI072 Show Notes:
- How Dave met Jim
- Signs of curiosity
- “The Wealthy Barber” TV show
- Twitter as a global intelligence network
- Capital Camp and Rethinking Private Equity
- Getting good at taking criticism
- Dave’s approach to writing “The Wealthy Barber”
- The decline in business travel
- Starting new businesses at 60
- Helping out authors with book publishing
- “The Chilton Method” web-series
- Power laws in podcasting
- Inviting Jim’s kids to Infinite Loops
- How to react if your passport gets pickpocketed
- Living in the moment
- Building a healthy relationship with your kids
- The natural love for trivia
- Collecting art
- Anecdotal info in the world of big data
- Still using a Blackberry
Books Mentioned:
- The Wealthy Barber; by Dave Chilton
- What Works on Wall Street; by Jim O'Shaughnessy
- Invest Like the Best; by Jim O'Shaughnessy
- Psychology of Money; by Morgan Housel
- The Immortality Key; by Brian Muraresku