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Excerpt: The Peebles Principles by R. Donahue Peebles with J.P. Faber

by "Jane Smith" <ygc0525@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 23, 2007 at 01:54 PM

The following is an excerpt from the book The Peebles Principles
by R. Donahue Peebles with J.P. Faber
Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.; April 2007;$24.95US/ 29.99CAN; 
978-0-470-09930-8
Copyright © 2007 R. Donahue Peebles




Prologue

I was not born with a silver spoon in my mouth. I came from what most
people 
would describe as a middle class home, an only child in a one-parent 
household. But by the time I was twenty-seven I was a multimillionaire,
and 
by the time I was forty-five I was worth more than a quarter of a billion 
dollars.

This book is the story of how I created that wealth, beginning with
nothing. 
It is also a book about how to get rich, following the principles I
learned 
over more than two decades of building my personal fortune. It is the 
breakdown of the deals that created that fortune and how I won those
deals. 
It is a handbook of tales and tactics for a twenty-first-century 
entrepreneur.

Perhaps not everybody wants to get rich, but I would say that this 
particular desire is somewhere close to the core of the American dream. I 
know that I wanted to be rich when I was young. I wanted to achieve a 
financial stability that would free me from the worries over money that I 
experienced growing up. I wanted to leave that field of gravity forever.

My dream came true with my first big deal, when I was twenty-seven, which 
turned me into a multimillionaire. I have since consummated deals that
dwarf 
my first win, but I have never had that same feeling.

I remember that day vividly, when I signed a letter of intent with the
city 
of Wa****ngton, DC, to develop an office building on Martin Luther King 
Avenue. The bricks and mortar were still to come, but that do***ent meant
I 
would own half of a multimillion-dollar project and would be receiving a 
mid-six-figure income annually for decades to come.

When I returned to my apartment, at about 8 o'clock, a group of my friends

were there. To celebrate, my girlfriend had gotten a cake from the
Watergate 
Bakery, a white chocolate mousse cake, and a few bottles of champagne. It 
was a moment worthy of celebration, a breakthrough moment, the biggest
event 
of my business career to date. It meant that my financial future was set 
from that moment on. I could quit right there if I wanted to; making a
half 
million a year was more than I'd ever envisioned as a kid, when I was a 
teenager living with my mother and helping her make ends meet.

That night, lying in bed, I thought about it all. I thought back to how I 
was so impressed in high school when I learned that Walt Frazier was
making 
$300,000 a year playing basketball. I'd wished that one day I could do
that, 
and here I was, on my way to making more than that. It was just such a
sense 
of relief. I was done. I didn't have to do another thing except make sure 
the construction company actually built the building. What a great moment.

It was more than just the money, too. In that moment I was vindicated: The

road that I had taken -- to quit college after one year, to forgo the 
pursuit of a medical career in favor of real estate -- had proven to be
the 
correct one. The risks had paid off. As I lay in bed I even calculated how

many years I would have been in medical school, followed by an intern****p 
and residency. At that point I would have been in my first year of 
intern****p, struggling financially. Now, with one deal, I was going to
make 
more money each year than top doctors.

It was a bigger moment for me, perhaps, than someone from another 
background. I did not come from poverty or ignorance, but neither did I
come 
from affluence, the kind that allows children to enjoy a sense of 
indifference about money. My mother and I had been on our own since she
and 
my father divorced when I was five years old. Although my father was 
gainfully employed as a government clerk and auto mechanic, he never 
sup****ted us. My mother did that, through a variety of jobs in the
industry 
that I would end up choosing: real estate. She worked variously as a 
secretary, a broker and a mid level executive at Fannie Mae. We lived
mostly 
in and around Wa****ngton, D.C., with a couple of years in Detroit, and our

fortunes went up and down as her career changed. We did very well in 
Detroit, for example, when she had her own real estate brokerage. Later, 
when we moved back to Wa****ngton, she was a secretary again, and again we 
had to worry about money.

My point is that from the age of 13 on I was aware of our financial 
limitations, about being able to afford the necessities of rent, groceries

and school clothes, and from that age on I wanted to make sure I could
avoid 
those same worries when I became an adult. Fortunately, my mother was a
very 
bright woman. Both she and the other members of my extended family --  
especially my grandfather, a hotel doorman who sent four of his five 
daughters to college -- believed there were no limitations to what I could

achieve in life. They gave me a great sense of self-confidence and
ambition, 
and did the sorts of things, like my mother teaching me to play chess when
I 
was in grammar school, that pay off so handsomely in later years.

This book is not an autobiography, however, except to the extent that such

information helps readers understand that I entered the economic jungle
with 
no resources beyond my native smarts, a decent education and a good family

background. This book is rather about the methodology of creating success 
and wealth and an explication of those methods.

I know I have had my fair share of good fortune, and I am thankful for it.

But I believe the principles that guided me are principles that can help 
anyone to achieve success. I don't believe you need to be born with any 
special advantages, or any special instincts, other than a basic amount of

intelligence and a drive to succeed.

I have written this book to share my principles with those who also aspire

to make something of their lives in this land of op****tunity called
America. 
I do a lot of public speaking, and what I try above all to convey is the 
idea that the number-one challenge of the entrepreneur is belief. If you 
believe in yourself, and believe that anything is possible, then the road
to 
success is wide open.

What follows in this book are the deals that took me from a wage earner to
a 
world shaker, from a single man in a tiny apartment to a happily married
man 
with a loving family and a substantial fortune. I learned something from 
each one of the deals I describe, as I hope you will. While the profession
I 
chose was real estate, I believe that the same principles apply to any 
entrepreneurial endeavor.

Many people will say you have to be lucky to get rich, and I agree. But 
understand that luck, as a dear friend and mentor once told me, is "where 
op****tunity and preparation merge." This is the kind of luck required to
be 
a successful entrepreneur. My hope is that this book will give you the 
principles you need to prepare for the op****tunities that will undoubtedly

cross your path.

Good luck to you all. May the next big deal be yours.

Copyright © 2007 R. Donahue Peebles

Author
R. Donahue Peebles  is Chairman and CEO of The Peebles Cor****ation. He is
a 
recognized leader in real estate development and entrepreneur****p, with a 
****tfolio that includes four-star hotels and luxury residential and 
commercial properties in Wa****ngton, D.C., San Francisco, Las Vegas, and 
Miami Beach. He is also Chairman of the Greater Miami Convention and 
Visitors Bureau. He and his projects have been featured in the New York 
Times, the Wa****ngton Post, Forbes, Inc., USA Today, the Wall Street 
Journal, Black Enterprise, Wa****ngton Business Journal, and South Florida 
CEO magazine, along with many other prestigious local, national, and 
international publications. He has been profiled on CNBC and CNN Financial

Network, and has been a guest on Bloomberg radio and the Tom Joyner
Morning 
Show. He and his company have received many regional and national awards
in 
recognition of their entrepreneurial success, including the 2004 Black 
Enterprise Company of the Year award.


For more information, please visit www.peeblesprinciples.com
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Excerpt: The Peebles Principles by R. Donahue Peebles with J.P.
"Jane Smith" &l  2007-05-23 13:54:47 

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