Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - Who has several classic stories about getting rich?
Who has several classic stories about getting rich?
Cactus Jack's Universal Pill Six years ago, Jack Baran Qiqi and his wife Amy were at their home in Iowa. Suddenly, an advertisement for seaweed mineral spring appeared on the TV screen: when trace elements dissolved in water and made a "whoop" sound, an inspiration came out in his mind: why don't we make a solid cleaner that can be put into water? With the help of a chemist, Jack (now 55 years old) began to develop cactus Jack universal cleaner-a bullet-shaped pill that can turn a quart of water into a cleaning solution to clean everything from the floor to the mirror, even pet stains. Then, he developed a car scrubbing and waxing pill and a laundry "vitamin" that looks like a pill, which can replace detergents, bleaches and fabric softeners. Last year, the gross profit of his product sales exceeded $2 million. "The best way to make money is to find a problem and solve it," said Balenci. But he warned that these inspirations are "like fish that slip easily" and need to be hooked quickly. Take out an exercise machine in the refrigerator. Mark David spent several months looking for the secret to improve muscle elasticity, and finally found it in his brother's refrigerator. David, a 44-year-old Alabama native, has a unique skill and works as a left-back for the baseball team of 1999. He tried his best to improve his sensitivity. At first, the former naval officer was content to squeeze an old tennis ball to strengthen his grip. One day, David suddenly opened the refrigerator and took out an egg. It suddenly occurred to him that this might be more suitable for the outline of his hand, so he invented a rubber egg to replace the old tennis ball. Inspired by this, David, who resigned as a nuclear factory inspector a year ago, started to set up a company called "Danenda" to sell this kind of rubber egg for muscle training (and eliminating tension). Then he went to visit a patent lawyer, but the other party claimed that his oval object was "too ordinary" to apply for a patent, and even his wife advised him to give up this business. But David thinks this egg is golden. In a few months, he persuaded his friends and relatives to raise $654.38+$8,000, and found a more encouraging lawyer. Now, David, who is divorced and has two children, has brought the Chicago baseball team and Clinton into his customer base. Although people still laugh at him, he has earned back $4 million for it. Bode Gampisberg, a 37-year-old former tool and dye manufacturer, pointed to his elegant Victorian house in Toronto with a history of 100 years, and skillfully answered the question about how much money his "quick dirt filter box" earned, that is, he exchanged a cat garbage processor for a villa building. Gampisberg invented an appliance chain tray, which allows cat owners to sift out the things left by cats from their straw nests without digging. In just two years, nearly 2 million sets were sold in the United States at a price of 19.95 USD. This "chain disk" not only made him rich, but also won the Canadian inventor award of 1996. 1994, the grandson of the German inventor Gampisberg thought that "there must be a better way" when cleaning the nest of the pet cat Blaquis. At this time, he suddenly remembered a part-time job at the age of 16: putting bread flour on shrimp bags with a sandbox filter. Immediately, he made a model of a lead cat nest filter, applied for a patent, and went to a friend's hair salon to sell his invention to wealthy potential investors. Sure enough, Dini Petty, a Canadian talk show host, volunteered to raise $654.38 million+,and Gampisberg embarked on the road to wealth. When Mrs Clean was a pet lover aged 16, Joey Mangano was inspired to use fluorescent flea collars to prevent cats and dogs from getting lost at night. Many years later, a large pet product company launched a similar product. Mangano, a 42-year-old holder of many beneficial patents, learned a lesson: "I told myself that the next time I had a good idea, I must put it on the market." Sure enough, inspiration came again. This time, when Mangano, the mother of three children in Long Island, new york, was cleaning the floor at home, she found that mops always took a short time, and she threw away a batch every few months, so she wanted to invent a more durable plastic mop that could self-wring. In 2002, Mangano managed to sell thousands of her "magic mops" on the TV sales network QVC. After QVC was promoted again, it sold 1.8 million mops in 20 minutes, and buying a mobile phone was almost like madness. Today, Mangano has accumulated a wealth of $80 million through sales, and owns half a dozen other best-selling inventions, including a folding jewelry box designed for travel. Six years ago, Abe, the 8-year-old daughter of Jon Flack, a truck vendor, saw her father carefully wipe off the oil on the newly fried pork with paper and thought, "Dad, if this pork is fried standing up, you will save a lot of trouble and the oil will drip down by yourself." Aibeixin drew a sketch in his mind of something new that would make lard drip automatically. From then on, Mr. and Mrs. Flack, who lived by White Bear Lake in Minnesota, began to get rich quickly. First of all, Abe's grandfather, Jon, 8l, has a unique business vision. He saw that the baby granddaughter's invention must have a broad market prospect, so he mortgaged a farm to raise start-up funds. Jon then persuaded skeptical retailers, including Wall Warehouse Center, to sell his products. Now, relying on the invention of the six-year-old daughter: "automatic dripping device for lard", the monopoly income of Jon's family has exceeded $ 654.38+0 million a year. For Danielle Zazie, a barber in Dallas, the "Happy Fingers" in 2000 didn't look so good. Out of the need for cash, Zazie began to teach in beauty salons how to use fingers as curling irons to do hair. But those clips that slip easily seem to be difficult to control. At that time, she thought that if she had fingers like styrofoam, she could teach this class. Later, when she went to a cloth store to buy buttons, she came across a roll of foam material used to line the top of the car. She took some, sewed a metal thread between the two layers, and created Fadini, a simple curling device. By 2004, she earned $654.38 million a year. Scott Stirling, 48, called invention a science.
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