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Gates and Buffett's Advice for Entrepreneurs

November 17th, 2009 @ 10:41 am

Categories: News, Opinion, innovation

Tags: Bill Gates, Passion, Professional Development, Strategy, Career, Management, Martyn Drake

Last week two of the world’s richest men spoke at a CNBC town hall event at Columbia University. One student, seeking career advice, asked which industry would “create the next Bill Gates”.

While Bill Gates mentioned several, Warren Buffett simply said, “find what turns you on”. If he’d been drawn in by the opportunity in Gates’s industry, he “wouldn’t have done so well”.

Later in the interview, when asked what advice they might give to students who didn’t know what to do yet, they both returned to the same theme.

Buffett said: “do what you would do if … the money meant nothing to you… You’ll have more fun and be more successful”.

Gates used a phrase straight out of Jim Collins’s hedgehog concept: “Find a thing that you’re passionate about, and that you’re good at”.

The statements sound so simplistic, it’s easy to overlook how powerful these principles can be.

Not only is it great career advice, it is great business advice, too –  look at Steve Jobs, James Dyson, Richard Branson and Ferran Adria (World’s Best Restaurant 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009).

Each began by working hard at and becoming extremely good at things they were passionate about, and then worked out how to make lots of money as they went along. Each surrounded themselves with others who shared their passions and values, and created powerful, focused and distinctive organisations as a result.

Having a clear, shared passion for something that others will value gives three major advantages to an organisation.

  1. People advantage: when a business is passionate about what it wants to do, it attracts similarly passionate people (outsiders who aren’t rarely get hired by the insiders who are), creating a unique and empowered culture.
  2. Execution advantage: a strategy is worthless unless it can be delivered. Having a strategy that keys into the passion in the company is half the delivery battle. In the best organisations, the strategy is simply about realising that passion.
  3. Competitive advantage: passion creates differentiation, which in turn creates attractive markets. When a company is openly passionate in a tightly-focused way, it defines it’s own  consumer base creates communities of advocates.

Being clear about what you are passionate about is key to making good decisions in many areas, from recruitment and development to strategy, marketing and even M&A.

Finding your passion may be, as Warren and Bill point out, the key to a successful and fulfilling career, but it’s also the key to a great organisation.

Ask the people in your business what they are passionate about. Listen carefully to what they say. Is there a single, consistent tune?

s there an underlying theme? Or is there a cacophony of different sounds? Ask the question, and you might learn far more than you expect.

(Photo: Ethan Bloch, CC2.0)

 
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  •  
    1

    gabriellecj

    11/18/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Gates and Buffett's Advice for Entrepreneurs

    This couldn't be more true. I left a career in banking to start up a translation and localisation agency because I was passionate about the different this service could make to multinational companies. I've surrounded myself with other language enthusiasts and we have built a very successful business in a relatively short period of time. Passion is almost a prerequisite for success!
    Gary Muddyman
    www.conversisglobal.com

  •  
    2

    mark.darby@...

    11/18/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Gates and Buffett's Advice for Entrepreneurs

    I agree entirely about the importance of passion. I was a high earner for a global consulting company and really enjoyed what i was doing, but not the organisation or its values and behaviours. I found myself doing things for clients despite the way i was rewarded and driven by the firm. So I quit and went off to make a difference in my own way, and now have a successful book (alliance brand), a well thought of little company in its space (alliantist) with a great team and a super software solution that equips people to get their jobs done well themselves, without the need for armies of consultants who leave the client no better off. Still a long way behind Buffet and Gates but I now sleep at night (when I am not working) and love every moment.

  •  
    3

    Martyn Drake

    11/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Gates and Buffett's Advice for Entrepreneurs

    Sincere apologies to the earlier readers who clicked on the CNBC link to watch the video and got sent to the wrong site. My mistake. The link has now been fixed and points to the correct page on CNBC.

  •  
    4

    anjoliwax

    01/17/10 | Report as spam

    Uk Employment Guide

    Finding a job is hard at the moment. I think it?s going to get harder as the years go by and more of the employed become unemployed.
    UK Careers

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