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Translate Into YOUR Dialect Today's Motivational Reading
Are You Doing Business With Monopoly Money?
During the depths of the Great Depression, the Monopoly® game
appeared in the marketplace. For many American children,
Monopoly is the first introduction to using money for business
decisions. Monopoly teaches players to buy and sell property,
collect and pay rents. The game is fun, especially for the
winners. My question is, Are the lessons you learned playing
Monopoly killing your capacity to make real money in your
business?
Monopoly teaches at least three money myths that can keep you
struggling with money in your business.
Monopoly Money Myth One is that the amount of money available is
limited. The game begins with a fixed amount of money. The
game ends with the same amount of money. The only difference
between the beginning and the end of the game is that the money,
which was evenly distributed at the beginning of the game, is
now concentrated in the hands of the winner. The critical point
is that no one MAKES money in Monopoly. Monopoly is a zero sum
game.
Compare the zero sum Monopoly game to what happens to money in
business. In business, you create a product or offer a service
that actually MAKES more money. This is how it works. You
create a product. The product costs you money to produce, market,
and sell. If you sell the product for more than your costs, you
make a profit. This profit is money that did not exist when you
started the game.
In other words, you actually create money. You have not only
added money to your bottom line, you have added more money to
the money supply. This is the critical money difference between
Monopoly and business. Profitable businesses make money. No
one makes money in Monopoly.
Monopoly Myth One teaches players that money is a commodity in
limited supply. Monopoly cannot teach the fundamental truth that
the amount of available money is potentially unlimited because
money is created in transactions. The more transactions occur,
the more money is created.
Monopoly Money Myth Two teaches that the game can have only one
money winner. (The game is called Monopoly for a reason.)
As a model for doing business, Monopoly teaches that making
profits in business means taking money away from other
businesses, to end up with the biggest piece of the existing
money supply. This business model is still very much with us
when we see businesses act like sharks at a feeding frenzy. In
fact, some businesses do win by following the Monopoly money
model.
When business owners understand the real truth that the supply
of available money is potentially unlimited because money is
created in transactions, it takes away the need to be sharks
fighting over a fixed amount of money. Instead, enlightened
business owners can create mutually beneficial joint venture
relationships with other businesses. Joint ventures allow each
business to increase profits and increase the amount of money
available.
The liberating money truth is that you can make more money by
cooperation with other businesses than you will by attempting to
take money out of the pockets of your competitors.
Monopoly Money Myth Three is that making money means hurting
other people. In Monopoly, the only way to get more money is
to take it from other people, leaving them with less money than
they had when they started. The game is over for them when they
run out of money.
Making money at the expense of others is obviously not a problem
for Enron-type businesses that care only about making profits
without regard for how much they hurt other people. Monopoly
originated in the Depression, when vast numbers of people
endured real poverty while a minority of fat cats lived in
luxury. The Monopoly game reflects the realities of that
economic era. In my own coaching experience, I have
encountered many people who believe deep down that making money
means hurting other people. And since they consider themselves
good, honest people, they are deeply conflicted about doing
business. They want to make more money but they don’t want to
hurt other people in the process.
If you are struggling with money in your business, ask yourself
if these three Monopoly Money Myths lie at the root of your
problems. As a game, Monopoly can be fun. As a model for
doing business, Monopoly Money Myths will keep you stuck in a
Depression-era mindset of haves and have-nots because it teaches
that money is a commodity in limited supply.
You can play a much more liberating money game in business than
Monopoly can ever teach you. What happens to business when you
stop playing with Monopoly money? You will discover that money
is unlimited because money is created by transactions,
cooperation is more profitable than cutthroat competition, and
you can make money while serving the best interests of other
people. Best of all, you are much more likely to win the money
game.
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...what I focus on in life is what I get. And if I concentrate on how bad I am or how wrong I am or how inadequate I am, if I concentrate on what I can't do and how there's not enough time in which to do it, isn't that what I get every time? And when I think about how powerful I am, and when I think about what I have left to contribute, and when I think about the difference I can make on this planet, then that's what I get. You see, I recognize that it's not what happens to you; it's what you do about it.
W. Mitchell
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