Connections can lead to wealth

Throughout the ages, anyone who wants to have a wide range of financial resources and a successful career must have a certain network of connections in addition to having real talents and learning.

Society is like a net, each of us is just a knot in it, the more effective connections you have with it, the more accessible you will be, and this net is our shortcut to success. Otherwise, you're just a knot, no matter how big it is, it won't help in the end. In 1970, 25-year-old American Tepman came to Denver and began his entrepreneurial career in a small apartment on Second Avenue.

As soon as he arrived in Denver, Tipman has walked around every corner of the city, understanding and evaluating the value of every good piece of real estate and planning to grow his real estate career in the city. For this reason, Tepman often looks at some land and real estate, as if he is already the owner of these lands.

Because he was a newcomer, people didn't know him at all. As a result, Tepman had to plan every step of his career, and the first thing he had to do now was to join the city's "Happy Club" as soon as possible and meet the socialites who came and went to it.

But for an unknown junior like Tepman, it is really not easy to enter such a high-end club, but Tepman is finally determined to make a bold attempt.

The first time Tepman called the "Happy Club", he had just finished saying his name when he was hung up with a reprimand. But Tepman still didn't give up, and fought twice, but was still mocked and rejected by the other party.

"If you persist like this, it will definitely be fruitless." Tripman looked at the telephone and muttered to himself, and suddenly, a plan appeared in his mind, and this time he picked up the phone again, and this time he claimed to have something for the chairman of the club. The other party thought that his background was not small, and hurriedly told him the chairman's phone number and name.

Tepman smirked, and he immediately called the chairman of the "Happy Club" and told him about the requirements for wanting to join the club. After listening to this, the chairman did not make a clear statement, but asked Tepman to accompany him to drink and chat, and Tepman of course agreed.

Through drinking and chatting, Tripman gradually established a good relationship with the chairman. Just a few months later, under the special care of the chairman, Tripman finally got his wish and became a member of the "Happy Club".

In the years that followed, Tepman met many like-minded and successful people at the club and established a good network.

By 1972, Denver's real estate industry was in a slump, and the city's real estate developers were severely frustrated by a flood of bad news, and Denverites began to worry about the city's fate.

But in Mr. Tedman's view, Denver's predicament was a godsend, as he could now pick and choose from the good plots that had once been out of reach for him, at a lower price.

It was at this time that Tepman received news from a friend that the Denver Central Railroad had commissioned Victor Millley to sell the abandoned railroad yards at 50 and 40 West Bank Riverside.

With his keen eye and experience, Tepman judged that the real estate depression was certainly only temporary, and that the opportunity to make a lot of money had now arrived. Therefore, Tapman immediately merged several small companies owned by him and renamed it "Tripman Group", which made him more powerful.

Early the next morning, Mr. Tepman called the authorities and offered to buy the yards.

The personable, young and capable Tepman made an excellent impression on the person in charge at the time. They quickly reached an agreement: The Tripman Group bought the two plots of land on the riverfront on the West Bank for $2 million.

Soon, real estate heated up, and the two plots of land in Tedman's hands rose to $7 million, and Tedman saw that the price was considerable, so he sold the land.

After the help of many people and his own efforts, Tripman finally dug up his first pot of gold in Denver - 5 million US dollars, which can be said to be his first big deal in business and his first independent real estate business. From then on, he began an illustrious business career in the United States. Networking is an intangible asset and a potential asset. Without a wealth of connections, we really can't move an inch.

Marx once said: "The essence of man is the sum total of social relations." "The more connections you have, the more energy you have. What others can't do, it's likely that you can solve it perfectly with a phone call; On the contrary, if you can't solve the problem with all your effort, maybe someone can easily solve it with a hello. Creating an effective and abundant network is the key to success.