Philanthropist
Warren Buffett is joined onstage by 24 other philanthropist and
influential business people featured on the Forbes list of 100 Greatest
Business Minds during the Forbes Media Centennial Celebration at Pier 60
on September 19, 2017
At 88,
Warren Buffett has a lot of wisdom — and
sharing it with students is one of the many wonderful things he’s known for.
One lesson the Berkshire Hathaway CEO loves to teach is the importance of developing good personal qualities at a young age.
Establishing good habits — even the little ones, like saying “please” and “thank you” — is a major key to success, he told
Yahoo Finance’s editor-in-chief last year.
A high IQ won’t make you stand out
Buffett elaborated on the topic
in a talk to MBA students from the University of Florida in 1998.
The
legendary investor started his speech with a little game: “Think for a
moment that I granted you a right — you can buy 10% of one of your
classmate’s earnings for the rest of their lifetime.”
The decision
should be based on merit, Buffett advised, so it’d be unwise to pick
the person with the highest IQ, the richest parents or the most energy.
“There’s nothing wrong with getting the highest grades in the class,
but that isn’t going to be the quality that sets apart a big winner from
the rest of the pack,” said Buffett.
He
continued: “You’d probably pick the person who has leadership
qualities, who is able to get others to carry out their interests. That
would be the person who is generous, honest and gave credit to other
people for their own ideas.”
And here comes the hooker: In
addition to this person, Buffett told the students they had to sell
short another one of their classmates and pay 10% of what they do.
“You wouldn’t pick the person with the lowest IQ,” he said. “You’d
think about the person who turned you off, the person who is
egotistical, who is greedy, who cuts corners, who is slightly
dishonest.”
If you see any of those qualities in yourself, you can get rid of them. “It’s simply a question of which you decide,” he said.
There’s
nothing wrong with getting the highest grades in the class, but that
isn’t going to be the quality that sets apart a big winner from the rest
of the pack.
Warren Buffett
CEO, Berkshire Hathaway
“If you write the good qualities down and make them habitual, you
will be the one you want to buy 10% of when you’re all through, ” said
Buffett. “The beauty of this is that you already own 100% of yourself,
and you’re stuck with it. So you might as well be that person, that
somebody else.”
Buffett said he sees people his age — or even 20
years younger — with “self-destructive behavior patterns,” and they’re
entrapped by them.
Essentially, integrity — honesty, virtue and
morality — can make or break you in the professional world. And if you
choose not to make it a priority, you risk getting stuck with a
reputation for deceit.
What Buffett looks for in a good hire
All of this goes back to what Buffett himself looks for when deciding who to
hire
or invest in. His decision isn’t based on business metrics, test scores
or degrees. Instead, it’s all about one’s personal qualities.
“There was a guy, Pete Kiewit in Omaha, who used to say he looked for
three things in hiring people: integrity, intelligence and energy,”
Buffett said. “If they didn’t have the first, the other two would kill
them, because if they don’t have integrity, you want them dumb and
lazy.”
It makes sense — if you can’t trust someone to act with
integrity in a situation that demands it, then should they really be
allowed anywhere near you or your brand?
The answers seems like a resounding “no,” but it also raises another, more difficult question: How do you know who to trust?
At Berkshire Hathaway’s
annual meeting in 2007, an attendee asked Buffett that exact question.
The
billionaire dipped into his store of wisdom and offered this sage
perspective: “People give themselves away fairly often. When someone
comes to me with a business, the very things they talk about, what they
regard as important — there are a lot of clues that come as to
subsequent behavior.”
Don’t be someone who turns people off
The
big takeaway here is that if you want to be the person who is
successful, who everyone wants to hire, you need to build habits of
integrity.
There are a handful of ways to do that:
- Fulfill your promises
- Be honest
- Be trustworthy
- Give credit where credit is due
- Be mindful and emotionally intuitive
- Manifest humility
- Be willing to admit you’re wrong
- Offer help when it’s needed
- Treat others with respect
- Be charitable
- Be patient
Intelligence
and ambition are valuable traits, but even so, a lack of integrity
won’t make you stand apart from the others — nor will it get you hired,
at least not by Buffett.
Tom Popomaronis is a commerce expert and proud Baltimore native. Currently, he is the Senior Director of Product Innovation at the Hawkins Group.
His work has been featured in Forbes, Fast Company and The Washington
Post. In 2014, he was named one of the “40 Under 40” by the Baltimore
Business Journal.
No comments:
Post a Comment