From pizza delivery man to millionaire

 From pizza delivery man to millionaire

Alomari took 7 years, built 4 businesses to reach a fortune of millions of dollars after financial distress and near bankruptcy.


One day in January 2012, Ahmed Alomari (Michigan, USA) drove under the snow to complete the last 3 pizza deliveries, ending a 15-hour shift. Suddenly, his wife - Nancy - called to say that the house had run out of oil, so the heater was not working. Their debit card was used for an overdraft and the oil company refused to provide the service without paying the bill.


"What are we going to do tonight?" Nancy asked. She was pregnant with her first child at the time. "I just received $2 for my last order and made $80 today," Ahmed replied.


That cold night in 2012 was a moment Ahmed would never forget. It was in the moment of stalemate that he thought he had to get rid of the "I'm the victim" mentality. You cannot become rich by making excuses and perpetuating bad habits. His point is "no pressure, no diamonds".


Ahmed Alomari, aka GMoney. Photo: Ahmed

Ahmed Alomari, aka GMoney. Photo: Ahmed


After that, over the past 7 years, Ahmed Alomari (38 years old) has established and built 4 online businesses. He also invests millions of dollars in the stock market and trains hundreds of students financially. Entrepreneur estimates his fortune at about $7.5 million.


Ahmed believes that a network of acquaintances is just as valuable as a net worth. "Relationships open doors that money can't," he says.


"I invested a lot in learning and finding mentors. People often underestimate the role of abundance mindset in success," says Ahmed. According to him, if you want to become a millionaire, you have to remove all the negative things and deadlocks from your life. You need to surround yourself with smarter and more successful people.


Of course, before achieving today's achievements, he was also financially exhausted several times, almost going bankrupt. "We all have a heartbreaking story, guess what? No one cares. Life is 10% what happens to you and 90% how you react," Ahmed said.


After defining his psychology and learning, he started building a network of social media influencers, then sold it to a former MySpace executive in 2016. One of the properties he sold. in that deal is the top 5000 celebrity news site on Alexa. This site has almost a million hits per day. All from social media.


But what followed did not go so smoothly. Just two weeks after selling the company, his mother, Catrina, was diagnosed with stage 4 ovarian cancer. In 2017, while he was in trouble, he lost most of his fortune in a sophisticated scam. . Ahmed's fortune returned to negative when he had to raise 4 children and his pregnant wife.


His children were then kicked out of the private school. The car is in debt. Debt collection, letters and visits from the Internal Revenue Service are a normal part of everyday life. In the most difficult time, his family had to use the jars of change accumulated for many years to buy food. Once, while his wife went to the grocery store to buy groceries, he had to run around the parking lot to avoid the debt collector from grabbing the family's last car.


Once again, Ahmed claims to never give up and make no excuses. He began to take advantage of his relationships, built 3 new online businesses, achieved millions of dollars in revenue and played the stock market.


His second company operates a social media celebrity website, bringing in nearly $2 million in revenue since its founding in 2018. The third is an online e-commerce store. online, generating nearly $2 million in revenue in the first four months of 2020. Along with that, he owns a multi-million dollar consulting business that is still doing well today.


"I usually think about the results and benefits that the customer wants rather than the products or services I want to sell. When you really focus on the customer's needs and become the problem solver for them. , your business will grow exponentially," he said.


Ahmed emphasized that the turning point in his business was knowing that he was in business to satisfy the needs of his guests. "When you understand their problems on a deeper level, you can really confidently make sure to give them what they need. Then the money will come on its own," he added.


Neil Patel, a world-renowned marketing expert, calls Ahmed "One of the best brand-building, customer-connected social media users he knows". Outside of business, Ahmed enjoys investing and guiding others in the stock market.

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