罗伯特的爸爸是谁呀"
的有关信息介绍如下:
确有其人,但是富爸爸的家族要求清崎保密。
根据《富爸爸》系列的书推断,以及北京财商公司的人透露,清崎的“富爸爸”最有可能是著名的7-11超市创始人,7-11最早的店面就开在夏威夷。
7-11的原创者是美国南方公司,1973年日本的伊藤洋华堂将其引入日本,成立"约克七公司"就是现在的7-11的前身,也是伊藤洋华堂旗下的优势企业。
罗伯特清崎于1947年4月8号出生
是白羊座
Richard Wassman Kimi
Richard Kimi of Hilo, hotel industry pioneer, 83
You guys wanna know who was Rich Dad?
His name was Richard Wassman Kimi, a great person.
"Mike"s true name is Alan Richard Kimi
Long before tourism was the state's No. 1 industry,
a young man from Hilo had a vision.
In the mid-1950s, Richard Wassman Kimi noticed
that the tourists who came to
the Big Island arrived on large ships or airplanes,
meaning they had money.
But the then-29-year-old felt there very few affordable places for local residents
who wanted to visit Hilo for a day or two.
So in 1956, despite the naysayers who told him he was crazy,
Kimi built the 30-room Hotel Hukilau in Hilo.
The small hotel was one of the first along Banyan Drive,
which now is lined with East Hawai'i's largest hotels,
such as the Naniloa and Hilo Hawaiian.
Kimi, a visionary and pioneer in the local hotel industry for decades,
died Dec. 19 in Honolulu. He was 83.
The Hotel Hukilau catered to the budget-conscious and local residents and was consistently packed.
Realizing that his concept was working,
Kimi went on to build Hukilau and Seaside hotels in Kona, Maui, and Kaua'i,
and he would also purchase the old Waikiki Biltmore Hotel,
now the site of the Hyatt Regency.
Alan Kimi, Richard's son and president of Seaside Hotels Hawaii, said his father never wanted to build large hotels.
He said his father's main objective was to serve local residents and budget-minded visitors.
"People traveled by boats in those days and the ones that traveled by plane were rich," Alan Kimi said.
"So his idea was, as the airplanes became bigger, what about the average guy?
What about the local traveler, people that lived in Kona,
but that wanted to go to Hilo for a couple of days
but couldn't afford it?
That's how it started."
Kimi said his father was one of the first to put together air, room and car packages for residents.
He also was a leader in taking reservations via fax machines and toll-free numbers.
"Dad's whole life was keeping things simple," Kimi said.
"When it came to our product, which was a local hotel,
it was friendly,
and it was clean, and well-maintained and affordable."
Richard Wassman Kimi was born Feb. 3, 1925, in Hilo and was the son of Territorial Sen.
William Kimi. Soon after the Dec. 7 attack on Pearl Harbor,
Richard Kimi enlisted in the Army,
where he was promoted to sergeant at age 19.
After the war, Kimi returned to the Big Island and worked for his family business,
which sold Army surplus goods.
But the business struggled,
so Kimi took the Army equipment that wasn't sold and turned to construction.
He and his brothers built Kimiville,
a low-rent housing project in Hilo,
and later built the Hilo Hukilau at the site of the family's surplus store.
Although the store was gone,
the Kimi family stuck together to run the new hotel business.
"He always thought five to 10 years ahead,
" Alan Kimi said. "When we had meetings and said,
'This is what our quarter was and this is what our last six months were,
' he said, 'I'm not interested. Just tell me five,
10 years what you guys are going to be doing.'
We were really blessed to have him as a mentor."
Richard Kimi also enjoyed teaching and sharing his sales,
marketing and business knowledge.
One of his students was Robert Kiyosaki,
author of the "Rich Dad, Poor Dad" books,
who based his original "rich dad" on Kimi, Alan Kimi said.



