I was randomly browsing Amazon when I saw a listing for this book. It had 60-some reviews and every single one was five stars. My curiosity was piqued, but my scam-o-meter was going off as well. I'd seen that kind of Amazon review gaming before (particularly from a four-hour author who shall remain largely obvious by this hint) and knew to tread carefully.
But the authenticity and excitement of the reviews was enough for me to put my skepticism aside, Google a bit a bit about the book, check out the sample chapters... then immediately buy a copy for my Kindle.
I devoured the whole thing in about a day and a half in my free time. I didn't want to put it down.
The truth is, the Fastlane mindset is nothing new to me. For roughly the past three years, I've developed the Fastlane train of thought myself, and am currently acting on it (quite successfully, I might add).
But it took me three years of reading, researching, searching, poring through biographies of successful people, and on and on, in order to develop that mindset and understand how the most successful people think and act.
Really, I've spent the last three years re-programming my brain for success.
And MJ's book is the most concise, intelligent, authentic, genuine one-stop resource center for that "re-programming" I've ever encountered.
I don't want to say "I wish I had MJ's book three years ago" because then I wouldn't have gone on the journey I did, which led me to the place I'm in now, which I'm quite happy with... but I will say it wouldn't have hurt to have his book when I first started, as a roadmap.
Yes, the book is marketed toward making millions, but like How To Get Rich by Felix Dennis (another good one), if you "read between the lines" this is really a book about success - about actually getting done the amazing things you want to get done, leading a life that others admire and that makes you sleep well at night (and wake up even better in the morning). When friends ask me about the way I live and do business and my general philosophy on adding value to the world (and yes, I've had one or two ask before), I'm just going to hand them a copy of this book (after thoroughly vetting that they're really ready for it).
I want more than anything to add huge value to the world (and profit appropriately from the value I add - which will then allow me to add MORE value, and on and on), and The Millionaire Fastlane is the first book I've read that jives with that philosophy 100%. In other words, it's one of the first "here's how to make money" books that doesn't make me feel slimey afterward. Thanks, MJ, for bringing your philosophy to the world.