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Media Interviews

A Forbes Magazine Interview

Question: We wanted to start by exploring your arrival in Hong Kong, your background. You’re obviously influenced by your father, a teacher. He instilled in you a deep thirst for reading and knowledge. It sounds as if, despite the difficulties of your early career, you are an optimist about the future. Would you classify yourself as an optimist?

Li: First of all, I am an optimist. When you study hard and work hard, your knowledge grows, and it gives you confidence. The more you know, the more confidence you gain. When I was 10 years old, I lost my schooling, but I still had plenty of hope to return to school. When we came to Hong Kong, the family had no choice, and I had to work. I was facing life for the first time. I was 12 years old, but I felt like a 20-year-old. I knew then what life was. My father had tuberculosis, which was as devastating a disease as cancer is today. If you were rich and could afford proper care, you might have a better chance. We had no choice. I needed to be strong, and needed to find some way to secure a future.

Question: And as long as you have that preparation, that confidence, you have the general belief that things will work out?

Li: During the Japanese occupation, besides working, I also needed to get plenty of fresh air to remain healthy, because at that time, I also had TB. But at the same time, I also needed to study and work. That gave me confidence. I got my first break right after the Second World War. My boss needed a letter written. He had a secretary who wrote his letters for him, but he was on sick leave. When he asked around the office to see who could take his place temporarily, my colleagues recommended me. My boss said that my letters were quick and nice, and I got his meaning. He was happy with my work, and I was promoted to head a small department. I always believe that knowledge can change life. It was a case of knowledge changing my life.

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Post image for Interview with Andrew Reynolds – The Cash On Demand Millionaire. Read His Full Story. From Rags to Riches…

A millionaire-magazine interview.

Andrew Reynolds is a quiet revolutionary. If you met him in the street, you’d pass him off as just another, regular bloke. But beneath the quiet, unassuming exterior is a quite extraordinary person. His success story is that he was just an ordinary guy who discovered the secret of making money, a secret that he now shares with other people.

Reynolds certainly looks like Mr Average. Just the wrong side of 50, he is a regular guy who’s taken his fitness seriously. He has frequent sessions with his personal trainer most days of the week, and has a full-time housekeeper to keep him on track with his nutrition – yet he’s maintained a down-to-earth , ‘in touch with his roots’ personality. OK, he drives a rather sexy Bentley GT, the marque favoured by Premiership footballers, but beyond that, there’s little surface evidence of anything that might speak of a man who’s pulled in £30 million entirely by his own initiative in the past 10 years.

The self-effacing demeanour, the quiet voice, and the eyes that glint with an occasional hint of irony bring to mind a low-profile – perhaps highly successful – accountant or surveyor. Then again, Reynolds might be one of those bods from personnel, someone who’s embroiled in the intricate detail and day to day machinations of corporate life – a classic small ‘cog’ in some huge, faceless multinational. That would be a big mistake. Apart from his fear and loathing of accountancy (see related articles), if you’re looking for the leader of the charge against life in the corporate job factory, Reynolds is the man. He describes himself as shy and certainly isn’t a natural extrovert, yet he has given a number of bravura performances in front of thousands of entrepreneurs as he explains his Cash On Demand® system that is at the heart of his success. Anyone present at the time, or watching DVDs of Reynolds live on stage at one of his Charity Entrepreneur Bootcamps or conferences, can see that this is a man compelled to overcome any innate shyness because he knows he has to deliver a message. That message is simple: You too can do it.

I watched this guy telling me how to make $30,000 a month from home, and something just clicked

His eureka moment came in 1997 after years of professional unhappiness working for ‘big business’. “I’d bought some videos of a guy in the States in 1993 which showed you how to make several thousand dollars a month working from home,” he explains. “I’d watched them, and then I did what most people do, I’d put them on the shelf and not done anything about it.

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