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How to Spot the Next Starbucks, Whole Foods, Walmart, or McDonald's BEFORE Its Shares Explode

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Everyone knows the basic golden rule of investing: "Buy Low, Sell High," but how many of us ever really understand the stock market, how to recognize the "next big thing," and how to capitalize off of it once you do? ...the truth is not many or we'd all be millionaires.
It seems like early investors in big companies like Facebook and Google had to have won the lottery of investing and just gotten really lucky, but there's more to it than that. There's a science to the "Next Big Thing" strategy, and Mark Tier understands it. In How to Spot the Next Starbucks, Whole Foods, Walmart, or McDonald's BEFORE Its Shares Explode, Tier shows readers that explosive brands like Starbucks, Whole Foods, McDonald's, and Walmart didn't become successful on accident. Through in-depth and accessible case studies, Tier pulls back the curtain on the early Key Performance Indicators that each of these major companies showed even at their earliest stages. Once you learn how to recognize these makings of success, you too will be able to spot the next Starbucks.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 5, 2017
      Investor Tier delivers an exuberant but disorganized guide to getting rich quick (or not so quick) by identifying the next big company. Perhaps the earliest investors in Walmart or Starbucks just got lucky, but perhaps, Tier suggests, they also made educated, studied guesses about the best investment. Tier goes over the characteristics of rising stars in order to help readers recognize such companies in time to put some serious money down. As he points out, it’s not enough to pick the market leader; the first to market—the innovative startup—is not always the most successful. Using either the Warren Buffett model (which aims for consistent returns) or the Peter Thiel model (which seeks the next big thing), investors are encouraged to ask the same questions they’d have if they were getting into the business themselves. Starting a business, after all, requires knowledge of the same logistics as does choosing the right investment. Though the book’s ideas are solid, it’s hard to imagine that someone who responds to the get-rich-quick title would slog through the crowded, sprawling text.

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  • OverDrive Read
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  • English

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