The Success Paradox : Why Risk-Takers Thrive and the Educated Hold Back
Overview
The conversation left Sarah questioning her entire life. She sat across from her childhood friend, Tom, in a busy diner. Tom, with his usual carefree grin, had just explained how he made $200,000 last year flipping real estate.
"I just saw a deal, put some cash down, and ran with it," Tom said, shrugging. "It's not rocket science."
Sarah stirred her coffee, her MBA degree feeling like a heavy weight around her neck. She could not help but think of the countless spreadsheets she had poured over when considering a similar venture. After months of research and analysis, she had decided the market was "too volatile" and stayed at her corporate job.
Tom's success was not a stroke of luck-it was a pattern. Less-educated individuals often dominate industries like real estate, construction, or small-scale entrepreneurship, not because they are inherently better at these professions, but because they are more willing to take risks. Sarah's case, like so many others, highlights a critical dynamic: education and the perception of risk.
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Details
- ISBN-13: 9798307753705
- ISBN-10: 9798307753705
- Publisher: Independently Published
- Publish Date: January 2025
- Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.25 inches
- Shipping Weight: 0.38 pounds
- Page Count: 120
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