Investment expert shares 20 lessons for success in business and life
Byron Wien |
By Byron Wien, howwemadeitinafrica.com, 20-06-2014
Byron Wien is the vice
chairman of US-based Blackstone Advisory Partners. In a recent note, the
investment expert shared some of the lessons he has learnt in the first
80 years of his life. They are republished below.
1. Concentrate on finding a big idea that will make an impact on the
people you want to influence. The Ten Surprises (Wien’s annual
prediction of economic and political events), which I started doing in
1986, has been a defining product. People all over the world are aware
of it and identify me with it.
What they seem to like about it is that I
put myself at risk by going on record with these events which I believe
are probable and hold myself accountable at year-end. If you want to be
successful and live a long, stimulating life, keep yourself at risk
intellectually all the time.
2. Network intensely. Luck plays a big role in life, and there is no
better way to increase your luck than by knowing as many people as
possible. Nurture your network by sending articles, books and emails to
people to show you’re thinking about them. Write op-eds and thought
pieces for major publications. Organise discussion groups to bring your
thoughtful friends together.
3. When you meet someone new, treat that person as a friend. Assume
he or she is a winner and will become a positive force in your life.
Most people wait for others to prove their value. Give them the benefit
of the doubt from the start. Occasionally you will be disappointed, but
your network will broaden rapidly if you follow this path.
4. Read all the time. Don’t just do it because you’re curious about
something, read actively. Have a point of view before you start a book
or article and see if what you think is confirmed or refuted by the
author. If you do that, you will read faster and comprehend more.
5. Get enough sleep. Seven hours will do until you’re sixty, eight
from sixty to seventy, nine thereafter, which might include eight hours
at night and a one-hour afternoon nap.
6. Evolve. Try to think of your life in phases so you can avoid a
burn-out. Do the numbers crunching in the early phase of your career.
Try developing concepts later on. Stay at risk throughout the process.
7. Travel extensively. Try to get everywhere before you wear out.
Attempt to meet local interesting people where you travel and keep in
contact with them throughout your life. See them when you return to a
place.
8. When meeting someone new, try to find out what formative
experience occurred in their lives before they were seventeen. It is my
belief that some important event in everyone’s youth has an influence on
everything that occurs afterwards.
9. On philanthropy my approach is to try to relieve pain rather than
spread joy. Music, theatre and art museums have many affluent
supporters, give the best parties and can add to your social luster in a
community. They don’t need you. Social service, hospitals and
educational institutions can make the world a better place and help the
disadvantaged make their way toward the American dream.
10. Younger people are naturally insecure and tend to overplay their
accomplishments. Most people don’t become comfortable with who they are
until they’re in their 40s. By that time they can underplay their
achievements and become a nicer, more likeable person. Try to get to
that point as soon as you can.
11. Take the time to give those
who work for you a pat on the back when they do good work. Most people
are so focused on the next challenge that they fail to thank the people
who support them. It is important to do this. It motivates and inspires
people and encourages them to perform at a higher level.
12. When someone extends a kindness to you write them a handwritten note, not an e-mail. Handwritten notes make an impact and are not quickly forgotten.
13. At the beginning of every year think of ways you can do your job better than you have ever done it before. Write them down and look at what you have set out for yourself when the year is over.
14. The hard way is always the right way. Never take shortcuts, except when driving home from the Hamptons. Shortcuts can be construed as sloppiness, a career killer.
15. Don’t try to be better than your competitors, try to be different. There is always going to be someone smarter than you, but there may not be someone who is more imaginative.
16. When seeking a career as you come out of school or making a job change, always take the job that looks like it will be the most enjoyable. If it pays the most, you’re lucky. If it doesn’t, take it anyway, I took a severe pay cut to take each of the two best jobs I’ve ever had, and they both turned out to be exceptionally rewarding financially.
17. There is a perfect job out there for everyone. Most people never find it. Keep looking. The goal of life is to be a happy person and the right job is essential to that.
18. When your children are grown or if you have no children, always find someone younger to mentor. It is very satisfying to help someone steer through life’s obstacles, and you’ll be surprised at how much you will learn in the process.
19. Every year try doing something you have never done before that is totally out of your comfort zone. It could be running a marathon, attending a conference that interests you on an off-beat subject that will be populated by people very different from your usual circle of associates and friends or traveling to an obscure destination alone. This will add to the essential process of self-discovery.
20. Never retire. If you work forever, you can live forever. I know there is an abundance of biological evidence against this theory, but I’m going with it anyway.
12. When someone extends a kindness to you write them a handwritten note, not an e-mail. Handwritten notes make an impact and are not quickly forgotten.
13. At the beginning of every year think of ways you can do your job better than you have ever done it before. Write them down and look at what you have set out for yourself when the year is over.
14. The hard way is always the right way. Never take shortcuts, except when driving home from the Hamptons. Shortcuts can be construed as sloppiness, a career killer.
15. Don’t try to be better than your competitors, try to be different. There is always going to be someone smarter than you, but there may not be someone who is more imaginative.
16. When seeking a career as you come out of school or making a job change, always take the job that looks like it will be the most enjoyable. If it pays the most, you’re lucky. If it doesn’t, take it anyway, I took a severe pay cut to take each of the two best jobs I’ve ever had, and they both turned out to be exceptionally rewarding financially.
17. There is a perfect job out there for everyone. Most people never find it. Keep looking. The goal of life is to be a happy person and the right job is essential to that.
18. When your children are grown or if you have no children, always find someone younger to mentor. It is very satisfying to help someone steer through life’s obstacles, and you’ll be surprised at how much you will learn in the process.
19. Every year try doing something you have never done before that is totally out of your comfort zone. It could be running a marathon, attending a conference that interests you on an off-beat subject that will be populated by people very different from your usual circle of associates and friends or traveling to an obscure destination alone. This will add to the essential process of self-discovery.
20. Never retire. If you work forever, you can live forever. I know there is an abundance of biological evidence against this theory, but I’m going with it anyway.
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