Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Secret to raise your child to be billionaire

Darpan News Desk IANS, 03 Jun, 2017 12:56 AM
  • Secret to raise your child to be billionaire

Being a parent, you have the most important role in your kid's life. Here are the things that you can do when raising your children that will set them up for success in later life.

 

Edgar "Injap" Sia II is one of the richest people in the Philippines and was the youngest dollar billionaire in Forbes Asia's list of wealthiest in 2016.

 

Aged 26, Injap founded Mang Inasal, a barbecue fast food restaurant chain in the Philippines. He's now sold it for billions, Smart Parenting explains.

 

In his new book, Life Principles, Injap reveals his top tips that might help parents raise future billionaires.

 

1. Be a role model for your child

 

"As a second-generation descendant of immigrants, my parents struggled, but they instilled in my siblings and me the value of hard work and integrity. We saw how their dedication helped build their business brick by brick, and I saw how their day-to-day dealings shaped the way it grew," says Injap.

 

"My entrepreneurial spirit was nourished by watching my parents do everything on their own."

 

 

2. Give your children responsibilities

 

By working at his parents' grocery store from the age of eight, the family realised Injap was a natural when it came to business.

 

One of his jobs was sealing bags of sweets and sugar: "We used a candle to seal the repacked bags one by one," he writes.

 

"Upon my suggestion, we started to use an electric sealer for the plastic bags - it was a small change (and it was perhaps less fun than working with a candle), but that little tweak improved our work."

 

3. The first steps to wealth are hard work and effort - not money

 

"My parents didn't start out rich," Injap explains. "When they were beginning to raise a family, and for many years afterward, they had to work very hard for whatever they had."

 

With a humble upbringing, Injap learned the value of hard work and was inspired by his parents, who started their grocery store from scratch.

 

"That was many years of learning, watching how my parents ran their business so precisely. I think they subconsciously gave me a lot of insights."

 

And he took this work ethic to later life, working incredibly hard to start Mang Inasal: "We had little sleep all throughout the startup years. We had zero long vacations for many years."

 

4. Teach your children values that will keep them stable and grounded through life

 

Becoming a billionaire at the age of 33 could have gone to Injap's head, but it didn't, because of how he was raised.

 

"Having that sum of money in front of you, at 33, can make or break you," he says.

 

"It's an acid test of your personality, your character, your sense of self. I thank the values that our parents have instilled in us, their children, that made me able to stay whole and grounded."

MORE Life ARTICLES

5 Ways to Thrive in the Midst of Challenge and Despair

5 Ways to Thrive in the Midst of Challenge and Despair
Using her seven keys to thriving, Dr. Stoneham, executive coach and author of The Thriver’s Edge: Seven Keys to Transform the Way You Live, Love, and Lead, offers five ways to thrive and have some control in your life while in the midst of challenge, overwhelm or despair.

5 Ways to Thrive in the Midst of Challenge and Despair

Jalwa: Dozens Of Families Evicted Every Year In Jordan Under Practice Rooted In Tribal Tradition

Jalwa: Dozens Of Families Evicted Every Year In Jordan Under Practice Rooted In Tribal Tradition
IRBID, Jordan — It was four in the morning when Asma Dawaghreh fled her home with her sick husband and six children. With nothing but the loose change in her pockets, she packed her family into a car and left under the cover of darkness.

Jalwa: Dozens Of Families Evicted Every Year In Jordan Under Practice Rooted In Tribal Tradition

Boy With Double-hand Transplant's Next Goal: Play Football

Boy With Double-hand Transplant's Next Goal: Play Football
PHILADELPHIA — It's been just over a year since 9-year-old Zion Harvey received a double-hand transplant, and he said Tuesday what he really wants to do is play football.

Boy With Double-hand Transplant's Next Goal: Play Football

Workers Find Moulted Snake Skin In Drain As Reptile Eludes Capture In Victoria

Workers Find Moulted Snake Skin In Drain As Reptile Eludes Capture In Victoria
VICTORIA — Works crews in Victoria have extracted moulted skin from a storm drain where a stubborn corn snake has been hiding for several days.

Workers Find Moulted Snake Skin In Drain As Reptile Eludes Capture In Victoria

Fists Not Football: Brain Injuries Seen In Domestic Assaults

Fists Not Football: Brain Injuries Seen In Domestic Assaults
CHICAGO — There are no bomb blasts or collisions with burly linemen in Susan Contreras' past. Her headaches, memory loss and bouts of confused thinking were a mystery until doctors suggested a probable cause: domestic violence.

Fists Not Football: Brain Injuries Seen In Domestic Assaults

The Secret Life Of Bees Revealed

The Secret Life Of Bees Revealed
“Bumblebees can see, smell, learn, remember and act on information, making them excellent models of fundamental psychological concepts,” said Orbán, who is a psychology instructor at Kwantlen Polytechnic University (KPU).

The Secret Life Of Bees Revealed