6 Tips on Being a Successful Entrepreneur | John Mullins | TED

536,351 views ・ 2024-02-09

TED


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In 1995,
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a graphic design teacher named Lynda Weinman,
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and also an aspiring entrepreneur,
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decided to get the website Lynda.com.
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She did so because she needed a sandbox to play in,
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with the new graphic-design tools,
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the digital tools that were being developed at that time:
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Photoshop, Illustrator and many more.
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And she needed a place to put her students' work
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so all could see it.
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Well, she put that website together,
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and the business began to grow.
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And in 2002, she discovered it could be much, much more,
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so she moved all of her teaching online.
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Later, the business was sold to LinkedIn,
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who renamed it LinkedIn Learning,
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sold for 1.5 billion US dollars.
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Lynda is the poster child
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for what I call the counterconventional mindsets of entrepreneurs.
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So I want to tell you about these mindsets today,
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and here we go.
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So, number one,
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why do I call them counterconventional?
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First, these six mindsets run counter
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to the best practices, as we call them, that are done in big companies today.
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They fly in the face of much of what we teach at London Business School
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and other business schools
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about strategy, about marketing, about risk and about much more.
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Now, you might say,
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“John, what do you mean by ‘mindset?’”
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A mindset, of course, is up here, right?
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It's those things, attitudes, habits, thoughts, mental inclination
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which, when something comes our way,
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predetermines the response we make to that something that comes our way,
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and those somethings, as we entrepreneurs call them,
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are opportunities.
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So I want to tell you about these six mindsets,
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and the first one, I call "Yes, we can."
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Now, B-school strategy 101 says the following:
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what we're supposed to do, in a company, is stick to our knitting.
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We've got to figure out what we're really good at --
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we call them core competencies --
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and we've got to build on them, invest in them, nurture them,
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make them more robust.
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And if somebody comes along and says,
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“Can you do something different, that’s outside of that?”
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what are we supposed to say?
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"No, I'm sorry, we don't do that around here."
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Well ...
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A Brazilian entrepreneur named Arnold Correia
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built a wonderful business that, today, is called Atmo Digital,
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by disregarding those rules.
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He'd already reinvented his business twice,
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to become a major provider
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of event management and production services,
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when one of his customers said to him,
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"You know, I have 260 stores scattered all around Brazil,"
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and Brazil is a big country,
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"and I'd like to be able to broadcast training and motivational events
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to the stores in real time.
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So, Arnold, could we put televisions in the training room of all my stores,
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and could we build a satellite uplink
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so we can send all this wonderful stuff to the stores?"
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So what did he say?
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He said, “Yes, we could do that,”
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even though he knew nothing about satellite technology,
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had never operated outside São Paulo,
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but he got it done.
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Then, several years later,
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some of the other customers, one of them in particular, Walmart, said,
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“You know, it’s nice that we have all of these television screens
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in the back room of the store,
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but wouldn't it be cool if we had them on the sales floor?
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Because then, we could run advertising,
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so when the customer walks down the aisle for detergent,
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perhaps there's an ad for Procter and Gamble's detergent
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in that aisle?"
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And what did Arnold say to that request?
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"Yes, we can do that."
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Over a period of years,
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Arnold reinvented his business, fundamentally,
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four different times,
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by saying, when a customer wanted something new
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that lay outside of his core competencies,
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"Yes, we can."
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The second one I want to tell you about,
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I call "problem-first, not product-first logic."
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So in big companies today, it's all about the products.
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So while I'm in the US,
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my family and I have used Tide, for many years,
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to wash our clothes.
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And we get a chuckle, every now and then,
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because we can tell a new brand manager has come along,
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because what happens, they change the product, right?
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They take the blue speckles out of it
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and turn them green.
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And they call it "new, improved."
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Is this innovation, guys?
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I'm not so sure.
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Coca-Cola, what is there?
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There was Classic Coke, and then, there was New Coke.
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That didn't work out too well.
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Then, there was Diet Coke, Coke Zero and Vanilla Coke and Cherry Coke,
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lots of Cokes.
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I don't think this is what innovation is all about.
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But for entrepreneurs,
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we don't focus on products, we focus on problems.
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A guy named Jonathan Thorne
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developed a technology that did something very useful.
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This instrument you see in front of you is called a surgical forceps.
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It's the tool that almost every surgeon,
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in any kind of medical discipline,
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uses to do his or her work.
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But there's a problem with these surgical forceps --
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they stick to human tissue.
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So imagine you're having a facelift,
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and the plastic surgeon is doing the final touches,
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but the tissue sticks to the forceps.
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Maybe it's not going to look quite as good as it was supposed to look.
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And maybe the plastic surgeon is going to get a little frustrated,
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and it's going to take longer to do the work.
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And John said,
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"You know, that's a problem I think I can solve,"
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with a new silver-nickel alloy that he had developed.
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It turned out the business didn't grow very fast,
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focusing on plastic surgeons.
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So he said, "I wonder if there's another surgical specialty
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that has an even bigger problem that I could solve,"
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and he discovered one, and that's neurosurgeons.
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And neurosurgeons work in two places on our bodies,
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in our spines and in our brain.
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So I hope you never have brain surgery,
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and I hope I never have it,
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but if they have to take a little tumor out,
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I hope the forceps don't stick to some other tissues,
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because I kind of want to keep all the brain cells I can, right?
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John Thorne built a fantastic business,
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sold it some years later to Stryker.
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Stryker is very happy,
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John and his investors are very happy too.
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Why? Because John focused on solving problems,
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not on thinking about products.
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The next one, I call it “think narrow, not broad.”
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Like John Thorne,
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an entrepreneur I’m going to tell you about
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focused on a problem
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but thought very narrowly about the target market.
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But the big-company wisdom doesn’t want narrow target markets,
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it wants big target markets, right?
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Because you've got to move the needle.
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Why would a big company mess around with something small?
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Like John Thorne,
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Philip Knight and Bill Bowerman, when they founded Nike,
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a company we all know very well today,
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had identified a problem,
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but it was a problem that a very narrow target market had.
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Phil Knight was a runner, a distance runner,
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and he could run almost, not quite, a four-minute mile,
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and Bill Bowerman was his track coach.
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And there was a problem with their shoes,
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because running shoes, in those days, were really made for sprinters.
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And when sprinters train, they run around the track.
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It's a nice, smooth track.
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But distance runners don't run around tracks.
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Where do they run?
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They run on country paths and dirt roads,
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and they're always stepping on sticks and rocks,
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and so they get sprained ankles.
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And they run mile after mile after mile,
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and they get shin splints.
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Well, Knight and Bowerman said,
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"We need better shoes,
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shoes that are made especially for distance runners,
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especially elite distance runners, who really train a whole lot.
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So we're going to build a better shoe
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that's going to have better lateral stability,
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a wider footbed.
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It's going to have a little more cushioning in it,
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to protect against those shin splints --
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and by the way, if it's a little bit lighter-weight,
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a few ounces lighter,
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times all the steps in running a mile, or a two-mile, or a marathon,
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it’s going to make for faster race times too.”
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So we know what happened with Nike, right?
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Once they developed the skills
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to design shoes explicitly made for a target market, a narrow one,
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and once they learned to import those shoes from Asia,
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and once they learned to get athletes to adopt those shoes,
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what did they do?
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Well, John McEnroe in tennis,
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Michael Jordan in basketball came next,
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and we know what the story is with Nike today.
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They're the global leader in athletic footwear and much more.
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OK, the next one --
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“asking for the cash, and riding the float.”
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Big companies today are awash in cash.
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Even in these tricky times we are in today,
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there is cash all over the place, right?
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Merck, in 2018, spent all this money
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giving money back to shareholders through stock buybacks and dividends,
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and they could only find 10 billion worth of R and D to do,
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with all that cash.
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Is something wrong here?
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I think this just doesn't feel right.
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But for entrepreneurs like Elon Musk and the Tesla team,
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cash is the lifeblood of the entrepreneurial venture.
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So when Musk joined the Tesla team,
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he said, "What's the plan here?"
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And that team had a plan,
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and it was to build a really fancy sports car,
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make a lot of money from that one,
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use that money to build a somewhat lower-priced car,
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make some money from that one,
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and then, we're going to build a mass-market car
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that more people can afford.
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And in so doing,
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we're going to make a real dent in the emissions problem
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that the global automobile industry creates.
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Well, what Musk said is,
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"Let's go see if we can sell some cars."
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So ...
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they did a little road show in California,
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and they invited people, on this little road show,
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with three characteristics.
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Number one, they cared about the environment.
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Number two, they were wealthy.
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And number three, they thought it might be cool
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to have the next big thing parked in their driveway.
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Well, guess what?
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They sold 100 Tesla Roadsters for 100,000 dollars each,
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cash on the barrelhead, paid tonight.
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How much? Do the math.
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How much money have they got to start building Roadsters?
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10 million US dollars in the bank, in cash,
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before they had built Roadster number one.
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That principle has carried Tesla all the way through its journey.
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So when they introduced the Model 3, several years ago,
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nearly half a million consumers put down deposits
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of 1,000 dollars each.
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Do that math.
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Half a million consumers, 1,000 dollars each --
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half a billion dollars, in the bank, in cash,
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with which to begin doing the engineering,
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build the tooling, fit out the factory and more.
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Wouldn't you like to build your entrepreneurial venture
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with that kind of business model?
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OK, the next one.
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I call it “beg, borrow, but please, please don’t steal.”
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In B-school finance,
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we teach our students how to analyze whether a project's any good.
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So you figure out how much investment you have to do,
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and then, you figure out what the cash flow is going to be,
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going forward, year after year, for five years, 10 years or whatever.
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And then, you ask yourself,
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"Well, is that return on that investment sufficient?"
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And if the ROI is good enough, then you do the project.
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That's the idea.
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But for Tristram Mayhew, and Rebecca Mayhew, his wife,
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who built a wonderful business in the UK, called Go Ape,
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a treetop adventure business,
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they didn't think that way at all.
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They said, "We want to build a treetop adventure business,
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here in the UK."
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They'd seen one in France, that they liked, on a vacation.
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"So where can we get some trees?"
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Well ...
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Who's got trees in the UK?
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It turns out the UK Forestry Commission has trees in the UK,
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lots of them,
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in all these Forestry Commission sites,
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and the Forestry Commission was very interested
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in increasing their visitor count.
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Well, what better way to increase their visitor count
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than to have a Go Ape treetop adventure course
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on their land?
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So what Tris and Becs essentially did
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was go to the Forestry Commission and say,
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"Look, if you'll give us a chance to build five of these and show you that it works,
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we'd like an exclusive for the rest of them, for 25 years."
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The deal was done.
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Today, there are more than 30 Go Ape adventure sites
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across the UK,
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there are a whole bunch of them in the US,
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and how did that happen?
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Because they borrowed most of the assets they needed.
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They borrowed the trees,
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they borrowed the loos, they borrowed the parking lots,
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all that stuff.
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All they had to do was put their kit on the trees.
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Pretty cool.
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Now, entrepreneurs and permission are kind of like oil and water.
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If you're an entrepreneur, you kind of know that, right?
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But in a big company today,
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if you want to get something new done, something entrepreneurial,
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something that’s maybe a little different than the norm,
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you’ve got to pass it through the lawyers first.
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Because there are a lot of regulations everywhere,
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and you don't want to do something that's going to land a top exec in jail.
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So it's really hard to get a "yes" answer
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to doing something that's new and innovative,
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and it takes a long time.
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But it’s really easy to get a “no.”
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For entrepreneurs, however,
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like Travis Kalanick and Garrett Camp,
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who founded Uber,
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do you think they would have been wise to ask the permission
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of the San Francisco regulators?
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"Can we start a taxi company without any taxis?"
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No, maybe not, right?
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Because, had they asked,
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what do you think the regulators would have said?
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"There's no way you're going to do that.
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That's going to threaten the current taxi industry."
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So entrepreneurs don't ask permission,
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they just get on with it.
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Now, I don't condone many of the things that Uber did,
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along their journey,
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many of them unethical, some of them, probably, illegal.
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But the principle of entrepreneurs just getting on with it,
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when the regulations are perhaps ambiguous
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or haven't considered what could be done today, digitally,
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that's when you get on with it.
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OK, so I want to close with four questions for you.
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Question number one:
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Which of these mindsets are embodied in you today --
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maybe one or two of them already?
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Question number two:
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Which of the others can you learn?
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Are these learnable? I think they are.
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Question number three:
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Can you teach these to somebody you work with,
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who has some challenges for which these mindsets might help?
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And, more pertinently today:
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Is there a challenge you face today
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for which one of these mindsets, or a couple of them,
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might help you get beyond the roadblocks you're facing with that challenge?
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OK, so there we go.
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Six counterconventional, break-the-rules mindsets
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that can help anyone, maybe you,
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change the world.
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About this website

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