A callous headline? I don't mean it to be. I simply want to emphasize that you can beat the market. We've got the research to prove it.

I'll understand if you're skeptical. We're in a recession, and no one knows exactly how bad it will get. But ask yourself: Would you rather try to outrun a limping market, or a galloping one? The former, of course. Now is the time. No more excuses.

An accomplished amateur
Go after the market for the same reason that dozens of explorers have risked everything to reach the summit of Everest. As British explorer George Leigh Mallory explained before his 1924 try for the top of the planet, a journey from which he would never return: "Because it's there."

We've all heard that quote, in some form or another, for years. Here's one that may have escaped you: "I've never considered myself a professional, but rather an accomplished amateur."

Would you believe that's the self-portrait of recently deceased pioneer Sir Edmund Hillary? With his Sherpa guide, Tenzing Norgay, he successfully reached the apex of the world in May 1953, and then the South Pole five years later. Yet he considered himself an amateur.

How remarkable. If Hillary could summit Everest or conquer the Antarctic as an "accomplished amateur," surely you -- an amateur investor -- have no excuse for failing to beat the market.

Be an accomplished investor
Let's put this into perspective. Had you bought a SPDR S&P 500 exchange-traded fund on Jan. 2, 1998, and held through Nov. 28, 2008 -- all the while reinvesting dividends -- you'd have achieved a 0.7% annual return over the ensuing decade. Could you have beaten 1% returns?

Unquestionably. Consider dividends. Each of the following stocks have dividend yields -- separate from returns -- that substantially exceed 5%:

Company

Yield

AllianceBernstein (NYSE:AB)

11.30%

Navios Maritime (NYSE:NM)

9.90%

Kinder Morgan Mgmt. (NYSE:KMR)

9.70%

Cedar Fair LP (NYSE:FUN)

14.4%

Sources: Yahoo! Finance, CAPS screener.

You could also have bet on a superior stock picker. Some of America's top growth fund managers have sustained 10% or better annual returns for more than a decade. Ken Heebner, for example, has won big by betting on winners in well-positioned industries. Today, he's betting on Abbott Laboratories (NYSE:ABT) and Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC).

But Heebner is a pro. An expert. Could an "accomplished amateur" achieve similar returns?

Absolutely. David Gardner -- a self-professed amateur -- has documented a full decade of 20% returns. Yet he didn't have the opportunity you have today; an opportunity that has Warren Buffett oversexed for the first time since 1974.

Be a Fool for your portfolio
David's track record shows that it's possible to beat the market consistently without the advantages that come with classic financial training. But he's not the only one. Witness the remaining roster of the market-beating Motley Fool Rule Breakers team.

  • Charly Travers studied the molecular mysteries of cancer cells before turning his microscope on biotech stocks.
  • Rick Munarriz is a musician with an MBA and a keen sense of consumer trends and tech.
  • Karl Thiel is an English major who worked for a small biotech fund before finding the Fool. He's twice recommended IPG Photonics (NASDAQ:IPGP) to our subscribers and both picks are market beaters today.
  • Sarah Goddard is a trained hydrology and hydraulics engineer who possesses an uncommon knack for understanding market dynamics.
  • And then there's yours truly, who was in the PR business for 13 years -- a job that required intense study of tech industries and business models -- before the Fool made it possible to scratch together a living writing about stocks.

In simpler terms: We're not purely numbers Fools. We're business-focused investors who study and invest in firms bringing disruptive changes to the industries we know intimately.

I believe that you can and should invest similarly. That you should strive to be an "accomplished amateur" who, like Sir Edmund, quests for the stock market summit because the quest is exhilarating and the rewards incalculable.

Perhaps your excuse is that, in investing, you've had no guide or didn't know where to start. Let that be true no longer. Take a free trial and get 30 days of access to our research and recommendations at Rule Breakers, and we'll try to reach the summit together.

This article was originally published on June 7, 2008. It has been updated.

Huaneng Power and IPG Photonics are Rule Breakers recommendations. AllianceBernstein is an Income Investor recommendation. The Motley Fool owns shares of IPG Photonics, which is also a Rule Breakers recommendation.

Fool contributor and Rule Breakers team member Tim Beyers didn't own shares in any of the companies mentioned in this article at the time of publication. Check out Tim's portfolio holdings and Foolish writings, or connect with him on Twitter as @milehighfool. The Fool's disclosure policy was last seen leaving Camp 6 in a quest for the summit of Mt. Market.