 At a young age, Robbins decided that he wanted to be rich when he grew up so that he could help people in need. He made his first million at the age of 24. Two years later, the huge success of his book, Unlimited Power, launched him into the mainstream. Born in downtown Los Angeles in 1960, Tony Robbins came from Hummel Beginnings, his stepfather, a former minor league baseball player who was working as a salesman, struggled to get by, and the family often couldn't afford to celebrate Thanksgiving and Christmas. However, today the story is different. From Bill Clinton to Oprah, life coach and author Tony Robbins have created some of the world's most powerful and famous people. His five best-selling books and popular self-help seminars have made him rich. Wealth X estimates that his worth at least $440 million. Robbins owns a resort in Fiji, travels by private jet, and is an owner of Los Angeles minor league soccer team. He has made the most of his success, along with Magic Johnson and Mayor Ham. Robbins invested in the Los Angeles Football Club, a new major league soccer franchise. He and his partners are building a $250 million state-of-the-art stadium in downtown LA using their private funds. In 2014, Robbins contributed $1 million to the $15 million global learning XPRIZE, which will be awarded to an organization that finds an innovative way to transform learning with technology. In today's video, I will be sharing with you lessons about success and entrepreneurship from the life of Anthony Robbins. 1. The path to success is to take massive, determined action. Robbins has coached some of the world's most high-profile people, including Oprah Winfrey, Andre Agassi, Bill Clinton, Paul Tudor Jones, Serena Williams, Leonardo DiCaprio, Nelson Mandela, Princess Diana, and Mother Teresa. His six-day date with Destiny Seminar costs $5,000 per person, and he regularly gets paid seven figures for one-on-one personal coaching. If you want to get anything done, you must take action. Some years ago, when I said I wanted to change my life, I remember staying at home for months, hoping something good would happen. As much as I wanted things to change in my life, I never saw that action must follow that decision. The moment I started to take action, doing as little as I could, as best as I could, things started to change. Most people want success, but would rather invest very little action or no action at all. Well, success doesn't come on a golden platter. To succeed, you must go after it with a club, chase it down a hole, and hold tight to it, so it doesn't sleep from your grip. To enjoy consistent success, you must be willing to take consistent action. 2. It is in your moments of decision that your destiny is shaped. At some point as a young person, you will be required to make a decision that would change your life or stunt your growth. For Anthony Robbins, while he was working as a janitor at around age 17, he saved a week's pay to attend a seminar organized by Jim Rohn. It was at this seminar that his life changed forever. Today, Tony Robbins has built an empire. The Anthony Robbins company isn't just limited to his speaking engagements, it's a diversified group of businesses in industries such as hospitality, education, media production and business services. The companies reportedly have a combined revenue that is approaching $6 billion a year, all from a decision to save a week's pay to pay to attend a 4-hour seminar. In your life, there are difficult decisions you must make, but which are the only ones guaranteed to make you rich. You alone know those decisions because they are peculiar to you. You either make those decisions so they move your life forward or you refuse to make them and remain stunted. Your great life starts with a difficult decision you must make. 3. If you do what you've always done, you'll get what you've always gotten. Yes, Anthony Robbins was born in a poor family where they could hardly have enough food for Christmas and Thanksgiving. He could have stood in that poor condition and while he was working as a janitor, he could have chosen he would die a janitor, but he chose to do something different to change his life. Albert Einstein reputedly defined insanity as doing the same thing the same way, yet expecting a different result. While your present way of living leads you to success, will the choices you are making now make you successful in the future? Will you ever become the person you desire to be if you keep living the life you are now presently living? Those are questions you must sincerely answer if you will ever succeed. Today, Robbins lives in Palm Beach, Florida. I'm a freak for the ocean, he told Fortune. It energizes me. His house has a 165,000 gallon infinity pool and a master bedroom that overlooks the ocean. Robbins also owns homes in Palm Springs, California, Sun Valley, Idaho, and the small town in British Columbia where his wife, Sage, grew up. He also owns the Nemo Resort and Spa in Fiji, a five-star resort that offers luxury villas, spa cuisines, massages and hydrotherapy and skipper diving trips to nearby Coral Rives. He lived at the Top Spa and Resort in Fiji for nearly 10 years. If you want to be successful, you must be willing to pay the price. Success may not come as soon as you want it, but through commitment and consistency, you will achieve a life of success. You may have goals and dreams you desire to achieve, but only by staying consistent will you achieve them. There is nothing more important to success than a determination to work at it. All of life's successes are people who chose to wait it out until they succeeded. When a Robbins hasn't forgotten his humble roots, the Anthony Robbins Foundation feeds more than 4 million people around the holidays each year through his International Basket Brigade and provides fresh water to over 100,000 people a day in India where water-borne disease is the leading cause of death for children. His Foundation runs programs to help the homeless encourage youth leadership and provides his books and tapes to prisoners if this video inspired you. The video. We love you.