Tuesday, December 6th 2005 Become a Millionaire - The Cheaper Way
By Mark Borkowski. I don’t generally look forward to reading how-to business books. I usually find them full of platitudes, outmoded common sense, lacking wit and, worse of all, personalized advice that may only apply to the author. The book, You Don’t Need an MBA to Make Millions, by Tim Moore with Carol Davis and Allan Gould is a rare exception. The book is published by ECW Press. Tim Moore was, amongst other things, the Founder and Chairman of AMJ Campbell Van Lines. But, I looked with anticipation to
reading this second book by Tim Moore, the so-called "serial entrepreneur", because I have known Tim for many years and he’s always been a straight-to-the-point kind of guy, an honest rascal without all the pomposity that is usually the baggage with too many self-made men. So, as I began to read the book, I felt something odd happening to my senses. My mind floated back to Grade Seven when my teacher used Friday afternoons to read out loud sections from Call of the Wild Call by Jack London that, at my first thought, I could nap
during the reading and get an early, rested start to the pending weekend. But, as I heard his telling of the wild and exotic tales of the North lay claim to my vivid imagination, I felt drawn in more and more each proceeding week and actually started to anticipate being awake those Friday afternoons. In the same way, Tim’s new essays on his successes and, indeed, failings in the business world were hooking me. His re-telling of the awkward events as he first started a business while still in university filled me with the same thrills
and anticipation as those readings of my teacher--laughed when he laughed, angered when he felt frustrated and celebrated with him at his small but growing number of victories. Jack London’s narrative of the frozen adventures of a mystical wolf in the Canadian North during the Klondike Gold Rush became true for me then simply, I later realized with a more adult mind, because I connected with that wolf as if I was that wolf’s lifetime companion sharing the triumphs and tribulations along with that wolf. In
similar fashion, Tim slowly but surely draws the reader into his world, his mind and his soul. I felt "privileged" to be sharing his stories, as if we were both kibitzing about schoolboy antics over a hot chocolate and pie. It’s a special gift that not too many business people have, that of being humble as well as being proud. Indeed, it is this humility that cements a reader’s relationship with Tim and, as such, allows my easier understanding and acceptance of what Tim has to offer. Sure, Tim admits he has
failed and failed miserably. The adventures of the midnight mover, the Barbados bushwhack over an investment property, the mishandling of the nursing home scheme and, worse still, the total botching of a succession plan within his own trucking company all highlight the author’s admitted miss-steps. Yet, Tim lists not only these failures, but also the valuable lessons gleaned from the experiences. It is this direct link between a personal miss-adventure, shared imitatively, and the learned lessons that makes a personal handbook for any
aspiring entrepreneur, including me. These are hard lessons won, steeped in the old-fashioned but still relevant School of Hard Knocks. And Tim being the guy he is, an old fashioned entrepreneur who easily admits to not bowing before no king or law, as the episode over the unpaid parking tickets attests, he wants you to know simply he also had the helping hand or two on his climb to being a millionaire. In fact, he admonishes the reader to keep the faith in always being ready to help and praise others, especially his own staff, and
having total respect for the customer. I admit I’m prejudiced. I read every page. But, believe a believer, Tim’s book "How too be A Millionaire Without an MBA", is a true self-help book, deserving of apt attention and loyalty. Gee, it’s a lot cheaper buying and using this book than trying in thousands of grueling hours of study to earn an MBA, and you get smarter a lot faster, too! (Mark Borkowski is president of Toronto based Mercantile Mergers &
Acquisitions Corporation. He can be contacted at mercant@interlog.com). < read more news items...

|