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P.T. Barnum was 70 years old when he turned his most popular lecture into this book in 1880. By then, he’d already built America’s most famous museum in New York, introduced General Tom Thumb to audiences, served as mayor of Bridgeport, gone broke from a disastrous investment in a Connecticut clock company, and clawed his way back. He was 60 when he co-founded the traveling show that eventually became Barnum & Bailey Circus. The Art of Money Getting compresses a lifetime of hustle into 20 plainspoken rules.
Core Principles
1. Don’t Mistake Your Vocation
Barnum’s first rule: pick the work you’re built for, then aim to be the best at it. Most people get this backward. They take whatever job pays and spend decades fighting upstream. The people who succeed have a knack for what they do. Find your knack first.
2. Avoid Debt Like the Plague
Debt eats self-respect. Barnum says young people, especially, should avoid it. The moment you owe somebody money, you’ve handed them a piece of your freedom. The whole game is keeping income above outgo.
3. Whatever You Do, Do It With All Your Might
Half-doing is expensive. Barnum watched neighbors spend whole lifetimes poor because they only kind of worked, while somebody else got rich doing the same job thoroughly. The people who go all in pull ahead of the ones who don’t.
4. Preserve Your Integrity
Nobody buys from someone they don’t trust. You can be the friendliest merchant in town, but if a customer suspects you of cheating, they’ll walk to the next shop. Dishonesty might pay this week. It costs you over a lifetime. Reputation is the actual asset.
Try It Now
Examine your current work. Does it match your natural abilities? If not, what would? Make a plan to move toward it.
List your debts. Create a concrete plan to eliminate them, starting with the smallest. Avoid taking on any new debt this month.
Pick one task you’ve been half-doing. This week, do it with all your might. early and late, leaving no stone unturned.
Quote
“Money is, in some respects, like fire. It is a very excellent servant, but a terrible master.”