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Rabu, 11 Mei 2011

How to Hire the Best, Never Give Up, and Be Hands On Like Howard Hughes by Evan Carmichael




"I intend to be the greatest golfer in the world, the finest film producer in Hollywood, the greatest pilot in the world, and the richest man in the world." - Howard Hughes

Howard Robard Hughes, Jr. (December 24, 1905 – April 5, 1976) was an American industrialist, aviator, engineer, film producer, director, philanthropist, and was one of the wealthiest people in the world.

When Hughes was a teenager he lost both his parents and was left with a family inheritance from money his father made by selling his inventions. Ever ambitious he was quoted as saying “I intend to be the greatest golfer in the world, the finest film producer in Hollywood, the greatest pilot in the world, and the richest man in the world.”

Hughes aggressively pursued business interests in Hollywood films, airlines, and hotels and casinos to expand his empire. He managed to turn his $1 million inheritance into a $2 billion fortune. Equivalent to $6.6 billion in today’s dollars, Howard Hughes was and still would be considered one of the richest men in the world.

Action Item #1: Surround Yourself With the Best

As entrepreneurs we can't do everything ourselves and need to recognize what we're good at and what we need to delegate to others to help us with. Getting the right team in place is one of the most important tasks you'll ever do as a business owner.

After inheriting his father's company as a teenager, Hughes recognized that he didn't have the knowhow to run the business and looked for someone who could. He hired 36 year-old Noah Dietrich to be his accountant and right-hand man on a $10,000 a year salary. For the next three decades, Dietrich eventually became director, vice-president and CEO of various branches of Hughes’ empire.

According to Robert Maheu, a chief advisor to Hughes: "Dietrich was delivering Howard profits of $50 to $55 million a year. Big bucks in those days."

Action Item #2: Don't Give Up On Your Goals

Whatever your goals are for your business you need to keep attacking them until you accomplish them. Forget about what other people say and that the odds might be stacked against you. Take consistent action every day until you reach your targets and believe that you can do it.

The Hughes H-4 Hercules was the world's largest flying boat, the largest aircraft made from wood and had the biggest wingspan of any aircraft ever built. It was contracted by the U.S. government to transport troops across the Atlantic to avoid German U-boats in the Second World War. Nicknamed the "Spruce Goose" it was three times the size of the largest plane ever previously built. Nobody thought Hughes would ever get it off the ground but he kept pushing towards his goal despite the naysayers.

According to Hughes: “This thing was a black sheep. Nobody wanted to fool around with it or become contaminated by it. We were working in a complete vacuum as to information based upon prior performance and prior design... I defy anyone today to design an airplane substantially more efficient than this one for its purpose."

Action Item #3: Be Hands On

Being an active part of your business is crucial to its success. You need to know when to hire people but you also need to know  what your job is and show people that you're dedicated to doing it and inspire them to do their jobs to the best of their abilities.

With some of the best people in the industry working for him, Hughes could have chosen to distance himself from the goings on of his various enterprises. But, instead, Hughes chose to be hands-on, involving himself in even the smallest of details. He would personally test fly all the planes that he helped design. He often even put his own life at risk to involve himself and improve his product. He was also, for the most part, adored by his staff, who appreciated his hands-on approach and were inspired by his dedication and enthusiasm.

According to Hughes: “If I have made a mistake in the design, then I’m the one who should pay for it. I certainly would not ask somebody else to fly a plane if I were afraid to do it myself.”

True Story

Hughes' love of flying first began when he attended a Yale-Harvard boat race with his father. After his father lost a bet that Harvard would win, the 14 year-old Hughes was promised anything he wanted. While his dad proposed buying him his own boat, Hughes Jr. asked to fly in the old broken down seaplane anchored in front of their hotel. With the plane’s old age and its corroded wires, Hughes’ father’s initial response was no, but Hughes Jr. proved so persistent that he could not be denied. “He finally gave in,” said Hughes. “This was the very first contact I had with flying.” Throughout his career, many more were forced to ‘give in’ to Hughes’ desires.

Kamis, 05 Mei 2011

How to Grow, Be Opportunistic, and Ignore Your Critics Like Robert Johnson (B.E.T. Founder) by Evan Carmichael

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"Anything that has to do with money, I want to be in that business." - Robert Johnson

Robert L. Johnson (born April 8, 1946) is an American businessman, best known for being the founder of television network Black Entertainment Television (BET). In 2001 Johnson became the first African American billionaire, and the first black person to be listed on any of Forbes world's rich list.

Johnson was born in Mississippi and was the 9th of 10 children. According to Johnson: "We weren't a welfare family, but we knew that if I wanted a bicycle it meant that somebody else wasn't going to get something else...If you wanted to go to college, you knew your parents couldn't pay your way.” He had an entrepreneurial drive and used his $15,000 in savings  to launch BET in 1980. It started with only two hours of old movies each Friday. In fact, for the first five years, BET would lose money. Soon, however, it began to expand its programming, and cable operators jumped on board. They believed that many of their subscribers would be interested in watching black-oriented shows.

Eleven years after its initial launch, BET became the first black-owned company to be listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Today, BET has spinoff channels and is the largest black-owned cable company in history. Johnson bought back all the BET stock seven years after it went public for $1 billion. He then sold it to media giant Viacom two years later for $3 billion.

Action Item #1: Always Be Growing

As entrepreneurs we need to always be finding new customers and growing our businesses. Whether it's launching new products, offering more services, or aggressively marketing your existing solutions, you need to always be growing.

Johnson has been called a serial entrepreneur thanks to his love of starting new businesses on the fly. Throughout his career, however, if there is one thing he has learned it is this: there are always new customers to go after.

According to Johnson: “If there’s something I can do and I feel it should be done, I just want to do it. I just don’t want to leave it undone because I’ll sit back and say, why didn’t I do that? Why didn’t I start that business?”


Action Item #2: Be Opportunistic

Entrepreneurs are the special individuals who can spot opportunities and then turn them into profitable businesses. In order to start a new company or grow your existing one you should always have an eye open for new opportunities.

Where Johnson sees the chance to make money, he jumps at it. No ifs, ands, or buts about it. And, while his critics use that fact as one more chance to knock him down, Johnson attributes his success largely to his opportunism. Johnson is an entrepreneur, plain and simple. He wanted to make money – and lots of it.

According to Johnson: "Whenever I see an opportunity and a chance to change something, I go at it... BET was never a legacy event for me. BET was something I started as an investment and I knew someday I would sell it."

Action Item #3: Ignore Your Critics

If you're doing something different then you're going to have your critics. People are going to attack you for ideas and try to knock you down. It's going to come from our competitors and in many cases even comes from our friends and family.

Johnson had a lot of critics as he built his business. One of his greatest successes in his own mind is being an African American who succeeded at the highest level - since he felt that "nobody expects minorities to be there." As much as others tried to paint his career in terms of black and white, Johnson has refused to let others identify him as anything other than an entrepreneur – and a good one at that.

According to Johnson: "Today, if I were to put on jeans and walk into a jewellery store, and I could probably buy the jewellery store ten times over. But the jeweller's going to look at me as a black guy in jeans who probably can't afford it, and maybe who just might steal something."

True Story

After being the first in his family to go to college, Johnson planned to start a career as a government worker. That all changed when the National Cable and Telecommunications Association hired Johnson as a lobbyist for the nascent cable industry. That experience proved to be a wakeup call for Johnson. He began to think about his own opportunity to create a cable channel just for African-Americans and would soon go on to launch BET.

Selasa, 03 Mei 2011

Two Wolves Inside Me


Two Wolf inside fight each others, which wolf will win? 





The one you feed!!!