Suze Orman once said earning more than $800,000 would make her ‘sick to my stomach’—but that turning down Oprah Winfrey cured her self-doubt
Suze Orman once said earning more than $800,000 would make her ‘sick to my stomach’—but that turning down Oprah Winfrey cured her self-doubt
Today, Suze Orman may be known as the confident, no-nonsense, financial powerhouse that she is—but she wasn’t always that way. It was the late 1990s and with one hugely successful book already under her belt, publishing houses were fighting for the contract of her next best-seller.
The bidding war for publishing rights to The 9 Steps to Financial Freedom soon reached $800,000. However, rather than waiting to see how far the offers would climb, Orman insisted on ending it.
“What are you talking about? This book is going to go to a million and a half,” her bewildered literary agent said.
But an adamant Orman responded: “If somebody pays me that much money to write a book, I’m gonna get sick to my stomach. You choose which publisher you want to go with. But I don’t want more than $800,000.”
Orman says if she could go back in time she would have let the bidding rack up to millions, but looking back, she told Fortune: “I didn’t think I was worth it—I wasn’t a writer. I was a finance person.”
Suze Orman turned down Oprah Winfrey when she knew her self-worth
Now Orman, who went on to publish a total of 10 New York Times’ best-sellers and star in her own show on CNBC before most recently cofounding Securesave, knows her value.
“I know it big time,” she insists.
It all started in 1998 when she was offered a spot on the Oprah Winfrey Show to talk about the spiritual side of divorce on the back of a chapter........
