Recently, a friend who is a second-generation rich kid—worth over a hundred million—told me he has several assistants.
One is to help him find all kinds of beautiful women, to inquire about fun places. One time, I was with them and I realized how this "assistant" saves him time. This "assistant" is a pick-up expert, who sees a pretty girl on the street and approaches her, gets to know her, chats for a while, then invites her out for a meal or drinks. At that moment, the wealthy second-generation friend would "appear like a boss descending" at the date location, quickly getting to know the girl. This "dog leg" helps him find beautiful women, learn about their backgrounds, and test if they’re willing to go out and have fun—all of which saves him time.
Another "assistant" is dedicated to gaming. Not a professional gamer for hire, but simply playing games. Once I asked him, "If all you want is a high-level account, wouldn’t hiring a booster and buying gear do?" He said no, he wants to be the boss, to manage the guild in the game. A booster can only grind levels silently; they don’t know how to handle social relationships, so that’s not enough. He wants to be the guild leader, who commands loyalty. Usually, he doesn’t have time to manage everything himself, so he hires people to play, help recruit followers. When there’s clan wars or guild PK battles, he personally jumps in, feeling excited and fired up.
Besides these two full-time "assistants," there are many part-time people helping him with various tasks. Some spend all day recommending outfits for him, others organize basketball games every day. Of course, they’re all well-compensated. Instead of direct payments, they can get kickbacks from his spending. For example, the "assistant" who finds women, every time they take the second-generation rich kid to bars or similar places, costing tens of thousands, he can earn a commission of a few thousand to tens of thousands from the bar. So these people work their hardest to help him find ways to get things done, find places to spend money.
The process of assistants solving problems, the wealthy second-generation friend pays money to achieve the results.
Mutually beneficial, cooperative, win-win 🐶
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Recently, a friend who is a second-generation rich kid—worth over a hundred million—told me he has several assistants.
One is to help him find all kinds of beautiful women, to inquire about fun places. One time, I was with them and I realized how this "assistant" saves him time. This "assistant" is a pick-up expert, who sees a pretty girl on the street and approaches her, gets to know her, chats for a while, then invites her out for a meal or drinks. At that moment, the wealthy second-generation friend would "appear like a boss descending" at the date location, quickly getting to know the girl. This "dog leg" helps him find beautiful women, learn about their backgrounds, and test if they’re willing to go out and have fun—all of which saves him time.
Another "assistant" is dedicated to gaming. Not a professional gamer for hire, but simply playing games. Once I asked him, "If all you want is a high-level account, wouldn’t hiring a booster and buying gear do?" He said no, he wants to be the boss, to manage the guild in the game. A booster can only grind levels silently; they don’t know how to handle social relationships, so that’s not enough. He wants to be the guild leader, who commands loyalty. Usually, he doesn’t have time to manage everything himself, so he hires people to play, help recruit followers. When there’s clan wars or guild PK battles, he personally jumps in, feeling excited and fired up.
Besides these two full-time "assistants," there are many part-time people helping him with various tasks. Some spend all day recommending outfits for him, others organize basketball games every day. Of course, they’re all well-compensated. Instead of direct payments, they can get kickbacks from his spending. For example, the "assistant" who finds women, every time they take the second-generation rich kid to bars or similar places, costing tens of thousands, he can earn a commission of a few thousand to tens of thousands from the bar. So these people work their hardest to help him find ways to get things done, find places to spend money.
The process of assistants solving problems, the wealthy second-generation friend pays money to achieve the results.
Mutually beneficial, cooperative, win-win 🐶