Robert T Kiyosaki (Donald J Trump) Books in Order
Part ofDonald J Trump Books in OrderBrowse the Robert T Kiyosaki and Donald J Trump collaboration books in order, with summaries and tips on where to start their shared wealth-building advice.
Last updated: December 19, 2025
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Publication Order
1 book
Why We Want You To Be Rich
by Donald J Trump
2006
Donald Trump and Robert T Kiyosaki warn that the middle class is shrinking and traditional advice no longer works. They urge readers to study money, build businesses, and invest in real assets so cash flow, not wages alone, supports their future.
Series background & context
The Robert T Kiyosaki (Donald J Trump) collaboration series brings together two very different public figures who share a similar message about money. One built the Rich Dad brand around financial education; the other built a global profile as a real‑estate developer, television host, and now twice‑elected US president. In these joint projects they compare notes on wealth, risk, and why they think financial literacy matters more than formal credentials.
The best entry point is Why We Want You To Be Rich: Two Men, One Message. Written in the mid‑2000s, it argues that the American middle class is under pressure from debt, demographic change, and globalization. Rather than relying on employers or government programs, they urge readers to study money, learn the difference between assets and liabilities, and move toward the “business owner” and “investor” side of the Cashflow Quadrant that Kiyosaki uses across his Rich Dad books.
Much of the book is presented as a back‑and‑forth conversation. Trump draws on stories from New York skyscrapers, Atlantic City casinos, and his television profile; Kiyosaki talks about his early ventures, mentorship, and real estate investments. The tone is direct and often blunt, with plenty of side comments about mutual funds, traditional retirement advice, and the dangers of staying in the employee mindset forever.
Midas Touch: Why Some Entrepreneurs Get Rich — And Why Most Don’t picks up the conversation several years later, focusing less on the middle class in general and more on what separates a successful business from a struggling one. Together they outline a five‑part framework built around character, focus, brand, relationships, and paying attention to the small details that compound over time. Throughout, they argue that entrepreneurship is a learnable skill but not an easy path, and they use their own wins and losses as case studies.
Around these flagship titles sit other resources that carry both men’s names, from forewords in essay collections to Trump University programs that echo Rich Dad language about cash flow, leverage, and starting a business. This page gathers those projects so you can follow the arc of the partnership without having to chase down scattered editions, audio courses, and reprints.
Readers should expect opinionated takes and a marketing edge: the books sometimes point toward seminars, games, or other products, and they are not neutral textbooks. But if you’re curious about how Trump and Kiyosaki see the economy, entrepreneurship, and personal wealth, this collaboration series offers a concentrated look at where their views overlap—and where their backgrounds lead them to emphasize different parts of the same financial story.
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