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Editorial See other Editorial Articles Title: Want to Be Rich? It’s About Being Rude to People: Matthew Lynn Want to Be Rich? Its About Being Rude to People: Matthew Lynn Email | Print | A A A Commentary by Matthew Lynn Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) -- There are fewer ways to make quick money without much effort these days than there are investors in Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. Investment banking? It will be broken for a generation. Hedge funds? You have more chance of getting the pope to organize your stag night than you have of rustling up fresh funds. Private equity? To put it politely, an industry based entirely on swapping solid-looking equity for funny-sounding debt is looking just a shade past its sell-by date. Heres a tip that should come easily to the legions of former bankers and fund managers: If you want to make a lot of money, just try being rude to people. Hold on, that doesnt make sense, you may say. Surely the way to get on in life is to be as polite as possible. A soft cloud of charm can carry even the lamest executive all the way to the boardroom. Tell everyone you meet they are fantastic, listen to their ridiculous suggestions, buy them a drink as they launch into a tedious anecdote, and they will think you are great. The way to the top is to be courteous, you say. No less an authority than Dale Carnegie in his self-help classic book How to Win Friends and Influence People makes the point emphatically. Rule No. 1 for making people like you: Become genuinely interested in them. Rule No. 2: Smile. Rich and Rude New research has turned that wisdom upside down. The richer people are, the ruder they are, according to Dacher Keltner, a psychology professor at the University of California, Berkeley. Keltner and co-researcher Michael Kraus videotaped 100 undergraduate students who didnt know each other, and studied their body language during one-minute gaps in conversation. The results were clear: Students from a higher socio- economic background were more likely to be rude during the silence. They would doodle, fidget or start grooming themselves. Less-privileged students made far more effort to engage with the other person, making Im interested signals such as laughing or raising eyebrows. In short, the richer people were a lot ruder, while the poor were a lot more polite. The psychologists viewed the results as basic animal behavior. The higher up the food chain you are, the fitter and stronger you are. The wealthier animals are signaling that they dont need anyone. The poorer animals are ingratiating themselves because they need help. No Reliance It is the experience of wealth that leads individuals to become disengaged, Keltner says. There is much truth to that. The richer you are, the less reliant you are on other people. It doesnt matter much what others think of you, since you are unlikely to be asking them for a favor any time soon. And yet while the rich may be rude because they are wealthy, it is just as likely to be the other way around. Just as plausibly, they are wealthy because they are rude. Carnegie and other self-help writers have missed the point the last few decades. Getting ahead in life isnt about making people like you. It is about getting them to serve your interests. Success depends, more than anything, on an inner ruthlessness. As anyone who has spent much time with chief executives will know, they are mostly an unpleasant bunch. They bully, cajole, threaten and fume. There are very few examples of them flattering or charming their way to the top. They are more likely to be shouting and raging at people, demanding the impossible, and casting old friends and colleagues aside the moment they become an inconvenience. The accumulation of wealth requires an ability to crush rivals, stamp on employees, and sweep aside all opposition. Charm doesnt come into it. As your bank or hedge fund slides toward insolvency, just carry on barking at your secretary, snubbing waitresses, and blanking old friends who nod at you in the elevator. Everyone will assume you are still loaded -- and will hold off pulling the plug on you for a few more days at least. (Matthew Lynn is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.) To contact the writer of this column: Matthew Lynn in London at matthewlynn@bloomberg.net. Last Updated: February 17, 2009 19:00 EST
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#1. To: tom007 (#0)
Was being rude what made them rich? Or did they just become rude once they becaue rich because they became snobbish? I would choose the second.
I am willing to bet that, if you control for wealth, lottery winners are less rude than those who made their money, who are in turn less rude than those who inherited it.
Erectus Walks Amongst Us The psychologists viewed the results as basic animal behavior. The higher up the food chain you are, the fitter and stronger you are. The wealthier animals are signaling that they dont need anyone. What a load of crap. The surest way to fuck up a "leader" is to do exactly what they say to do. No more, no less. Then, they will find out how much "they don't need anyone". The poorer animals are ingratiating themselves because they need help. Excuse me, but did they ask for help? Or do you hold them in contempt due to their apparent lack of arrogant assholishness? "Ingratiate themselves"??? Lord, what an interesting crash this is going to be. I'll try my best not to giggle like a little schoolgirl.
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Maybe that is true. I don't know. But what do you base these opinions on?
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