Today's Take on Napoleon Hill's, Think and Grow Rich by America's #1 Resource Consultant, Terry Scott

Planting Seeds for a Brighter Future

 


Plant Some Seeds Today Quote Poster, Farm Sunset Motivation Wall Art, Success Mindset Print by Terry Scott

As a business consultant, I'm familiar with the classic text, Think and Grow Rich. I've probably read it several times. As a marketer, business owner, consultant and a follower of Christ, when I read it I read it through the multifaceted lenses of such. If you'll join me in this synopsis, over time I hope that I can bring these words and principles into today's world that holds such enormous resources that can get you what Hill presents and so more and at such a faster pace then those of Napoleon's time could even imagine. 

Principles remain, it's the techiniques and technologies that change. Put Hill's principles (which are really God's principles discovered by man that were intentionally withheld from the "common" man; and I'm talking men and women here) so that they could well be thought of as "secrets". 

As you join me with each session, you will see Hill’s words, and then you will see my commentary: how the principle applies right now, what it looks like in real life, and how to use today’s technology to put it to work with clarity and momentum. This is not theory for theory’s sake. It is a practical guide to thinking, deciding, and executing in a way that produces measurable results.

I also want to be clear about the spiritual foundation of this message. There is no magic pill here. No hocus pocus. No “new age” shortcut that promises results without character, discipline, and truth. The laws that govern sowing and reaping, stewardship, faith, diligence, and purpose were set in motion by God long ago. They are real. They are dependable. And they are available to anyone, whether you already know God deeply or you are still searching for meaning. These principles do not play favorites, but they do respond to alignment.

My hope is that Billionaire Think helps you build wealth the right way: with skill, with speed, and with responsibility. Because money is never the finish line. It is a tool. And if we are blessed to receive thousands, millions, or even billions, we should be wise stewards of it. We cannot take it with us, so we should manage it in a way that creates lasting good, multiplies blessings, and leaves a legacy that outlives us.

If you are ready to think bigger, move smarter, and build with purpose, you are in the right place.

Let's get started. 

Let’s look at the

AUTHOR’S PREFACE

IN EVERY chapter of this book, mention has been made of the money-making

secret which has made fortunes for more than five hundred exceedingly wealthy

men whom I have carefully analyzed over a long period of years.

 

The secret was brought to my attention by Andrew Carnegie, more than a quarter

of a century ago. The canny, lovable old Scotsman carelessly tossed it into my

mind, when I was but a boy. Then he sat back in his chair, with a merry twinkle

in his eyes, and watched carefully to see if I had brains enough to understand the

full significance of what he had said to me.

 

When he saw that I had grasped the idea, he asked if I would be willing to spend

twenty years or more, preparing myself to take it to the world, to men and women

who, without the secret, might go through life as failures. I said I would, and with

Mr. Carnegie’s cooperation, I have kept my promise.

What do we learn from this?

In Napoleon Hill’s era, the dominant message was clear: go to school, get a “good” education, and become a reliable worker in someone else’s system. Much of that structure served a purpose, and not all of it was harmful. But it did create a pattern where many people stayed content with paychecks and routines, rarely looking beyond their job description to build something greater.

What Hill called “the secret” was not hidden behind locked doors as much as it was hidden in plain sight. And that is still true today. The difference is that now the principles are widely available, yet many people walk right past them. They drive to work, drive home, spend a little time with family and entertainment, go to bed, and repeat the cycle. It is not that they lack potential, it is that they rarely create intentional space to grow it.

Here is the shift: if you take even one principle from Think and Grow Rich and apply it with today’s tools, your results can change faster than you think. If you invest one focused hour per day, consistently, you will begin to see the principles unfold in real time. I call this seed planting. Plant some seeds today and you must see a harvest tomorrow.

Long before Hill published Think and Grow Rich, Andrew Carnegie challenged him with a mission: identify the principles behind achievement and deliver them to the masses. Hill spent decades shaping that message for the world he lived in. The advantage you have is speed. You do not have to wait twenty five years, or even twenty five minutes, to begin. The time is now, and the urgency has never been greater.

Learn a little today, then repeat it tomorrow. Stay consistent. Be intentional about improving yourself, and your outcomes begin to improve with you.

Three Action Points

1. Protect one hour per day for intentional growth

   Schedule it. Defend it. Use it to read, think, plan, and build skills that increase your value.

2. Turn ideas into small daily outputs

   Do not wait for perfect conditions. Create something every day: a plan, a page, a pitch, a prototype, a post, an outreach message, or a simple next step.

3. Track your “seed planting”

   Write down what you planted each day and what you learned. Progress becomes obvious when you measure it.

Three Short Assignments

Assignment 1: Andrew Carnegie Research Sprint

Spend 20 minutes researching Andrew Carnegie and write 5 to 7 bullet points on what you learn. Search for these three things:

1. Andrew Carnegie’s “Gospel of Wealth” and what he believed the rich should do with wealth

2. How Carnegie built Carnegie Steel, especially his focus on systems, efficiency, and scale

3. Carnegie’s philanthropy and the types of causes he funded, and why


Assignment 2: Napoleon Hill Research Sprint

Spend 20 minutes researching Napoleon Hill and write 5 to 7 bullet points on what you learn. Search for these three things:

1. The origin story of Think and Grow Rich and how it was developed

2. The core principles Hill teaches and which ones appear most often in successful people

3. Hill’s background and influence, including what supporters and critics say, and what lessons you can still apply regardless

 


Assignment 3: Your One Hour Seed Plan

Create a simple one week plan for your daily one hour. Keep it realistic and repeatable. Include:

1. 15 minutes learning: read or listen to one focused chapter or concept

2. 30 minutes building: create something that moves your goal forward

3. 15 minutes reflection: write what you planted today and what you will plant tomorrow