Why it pays to work hard Richard St. John

(Music)

Eight to be great: The eight traits successful people have in common.

Number two: work.

When I was interviewing all these successful people,

they kept telling me how hard they worked.

And I remember standing there thinking, “Ah, jeez, another comment about work?

Why don’t they tell me the real secret to their success?”

Then finally I realized, hard work is a real secret to their success.

All successful people work very hard.

Martha Stewart said to me, “I’m a real hard worker.

I work and work and work all the time.”

Media tycoon Rupert Murdoch said, “It’s all hard work.

Nothing comes easily. But I have a lot of fun.”

Did he say fun? Yes. Successful people have fun working.

That’s why I say they’re not really workaholics.

They’re workafrolics.

Jim Pattison, chairman of the Jim Pattison Group, is a workafrolic.

He says, “Business is my recreation.

I’d rather go to our factories and meet with our people

than go to the beach, I can tell you that.”

Dave Lavery, the NASA whiz who builds those robots for Mars,

said to me, “We work our fingers to the bone.

But it doesn’t seem like work. It’s fun.

It’s what we want to do. We don’t want to put things down and go home.”

Bill Gates is a workafrolic. Even after he was a multimillionaire,

he worked most nights until 10 p.m., and only took two weeks off

in seven years. And he probably spent them on his computer.

Oprah is a workafrolic.

She says, “I never see daylight. I’d come into work at 5:30 in the morning

when it was dark, and leave at 7 or 8 when it was dark.”

I’m a workafrolic.

And over the years, I’ve gone through many days and even weeks without much sleep,

just because I was having so much fun.

And I gotta admit, at times like that you say to yourself,

“Am I the only one working this hard?”

Because there’s a myth it comes easy to some people.

You turn on the TV, nobody’s working that hard.

A guy like Chris Rock stands up on stage,

tells a few jokes. What’s hard about that?

But even Chris says, “I wasn’t the funniest guy growing up,

but I was the guy who worked on being funny the hardest.”

Trust me. I’ve interviewed over 500 successful people,

not one of them said it came easy,

even though they were doing what they loved.

We tend to underestimate work and overestimate talent.

But in the end, work tops talent.

Arthur Benjamin, America’s best math whiz,

said to me, “I think numbers and I have always gotten along.

But I’m sure my ‘talent’ is just due to the time and hours and work

that I’ve put into it.”

Many talented people don’t achieve as much success as they could,

unfortunately, because they sit back on their talent

and never learn to work hard.

That’s what happened to Michael Jordan when he first started playing basketball.

He had the talent, but he wasn’t putting in the work,

and the coach actually cut him from the high school basketball team.

Boy, that was a wake-up call. He says, “I was very disappointed.

I started working on my game the day after I was cut.”

And he soon became the hardest working player in basketball,

who made fun of the other players who weren’t working hard.

And that hard work is what made him the greatest basketball player of all time.

So I’d say the real gift isn’t talent,

it’s the ability to work hard.

And we tend to underestimate work and overestimate smarts.

But in the end, work wins over smarts.

In fact, many successful people aren’t the smartest, they just work the hardest.

Francois Parenteau, who Business Week called the top independent analyst on Wall Street,

said to me, “I’m certainly not that smart.

I can’t even remember my own zip code.”

But he also says, “Work is a big part of my life.

I think about investments pretty much 24 hours a day,

seven days a week.”

Nez Hallett III is CEO of Smart Wireless,

and I thought, that’s ironic because he told me he’s not that smart.

He says, “I graduated from high school with a C average,

and college with a C-minus average.”

But now the smart PhD’s are reporting to him.

How did he do it?

He said, “If you’re going to be successful at anything,

the key thing is to work hard.”

I’m not smart.

As proof, here’s my actual 12th grade report card.

It was the only one my parents ever kept.

Don’t ask me why they kept it; it’s nothing to brag about.

As you can see, I was a C student, not an A student.

I don’t think I’d even make it into college these days.

So how did I achieve some success and wealth?

I just worked hard, many 60- to 80-hour weeks.

And now I know I’m not alone.

Thomas Stanley studied hundreds of millionaires,

and he discovered most millionaires weren’t A students,

didn’t score high on tests and teachers didn’t think they’d ever succeed.

But they did succeed, because they worked hard.

So the good news is if you’re not the smartest,

if you’re a C student, not an A student,

the really good news is you can still succeed.

Because the word “success” has two C’s and no A’s.

(Laughter)

You can still succeed as long as you work hard.

And what if you are smart?

Well, I’m sorry, there’s absolutely no hope for you.

Because many smart people don’t achieve as much success as they could, unfortunately,

because they rest on their smarts and never learn to work hard.

Jeong Kim, president of Lucent Technologies, says,

“People who are the smartest sometimes don’t realize their full potential,

because things get too easy, so they don’t push themselves hard.”

After a talk I gave at one of the world’s top 10 business schools,

a man came up to me and said,

“You know, when I got my MBA here a few years ago,

I was one of the smartest people in the class.

I thought I had it made. So after I graduated,

I sat back and I didn’t work hard.

And I went downhill.

And now, at this point in my life, I’ve gone nowhere.

I haven’t achieved any success at all.”

He said, “Thanks for the wake-up call. Now I know what I need to do.

I need to work.”

So the bottom line is, whether you’re smart or not,

whether you’re talented or not, just keep working.

(Applause)

(音乐)

八成大:成功人士的八个共同点。

第二:工作。

当我采访所有这些成功人士时,

他们不断地告诉我他们工作有多努力。

我记得站在那里想,“啊,天哪,关于工作的另一个评论?

他们为什么不告诉我他们成功的真正秘诀?”

后来我终于意识到,努力工作是他们成功的真正秘诀。

所有成功的人都非常努力。

玛莎·斯图尔特对我说:“我是一个真正的努力者。

我一直在工作、工作和工作。”

媒体大亨鲁珀特·默多克说:“这一切都很辛苦。

没有什么是容易的。但我有很多乐趣。”

他说好玩吗? 是的。 成功的人工作很开心。

这就是为什么我说他们不是真正的工作狂。

他们是工作狂。

吉姆帕蒂森集团主席吉姆帕蒂森是个工作狂。

他说,“生意是我的消遣。

我宁愿去我们的工厂和我们的人会面,也

不愿去海滩,我可以告诉你。”

为火星建造这些机器人的美国宇航局高手戴夫·

拉弗里对我说:“我们的手指一直在工作。

但这看起来不像是工作。这很有趣。

这是我们想要做的。我们不想要 放下东西回家。”

比尔盖茨是个工作狂。 即使在他成为千万富翁之后,

他大部分时间都工作到晚上 10 点,七年里只休息了两周

。 他可能把它们花在了他的电脑上。

奥普拉是个工作狂。

她说:“我从来没有看到过日光。我会在天黑的时候早上 5 点 30 分上班,

在天黑的时候 7 点或 8 点下班。”

我是个工作狂。

多年来,我已经度过了很多天甚至几周没有太多睡眠,

只是因为我玩得很开心。

我不得不承认,有时你会这样对自己说:

“我是唯一一个工作这么努力的人吗?”

因为有一个神话,这对某些人来说很容易。

你打开电视,没人这么辛苦。

像 Chris Rock 这样的人站在舞台上,

讲了几个笑话。 这有什么难的?

但即使是 Chris 也说:“我不是成长过程中最有趣的人,

但我是最努力让自己变得有趣的人。”

相信我。 我采访了 500 多名成功人士,

没有一个人说这很容易,

即使他们在做自己喜欢的事情。

我们倾向于低估工作,高估人才。

但归根结底,工作重于天赋。

美国最好的数学天才亚瑟·本杰明

对我说:“我认为数字和我一直相处融洽。

但我确信我的‘天赋’只是由于我投入的时间、时间和工作

。 " 不幸的是

,许多有才华的人没有取得尽可能多的成功

,因为他们坐视自己的才华

,从不学习努力工作。

这就是迈克尔乔丹刚开始打篮球时发生的事情。

他有天赋,但他没有投入工作

,教练实际上将他从高中篮球队中除名。

男孩,这是一个警钟。 他说:“我非常失望。

我在被裁后的第二天就开始研究我的比赛。”

他很快就成为了篮球界最努力的球员,

他取笑其他不努力的球员。

正是这种努力让他成为了有史以来最伟大的篮球运动员。

所以我想说真正的天赋不是天赋,

而是努力工作的能力。

我们往往会低估工作而高估智慧。

但最终,工作胜过聪明。

事实上,许多成功的人并不是最聪明的,他们只是最努力地工作。

被《商业周刊》称为华尔街顶级独立分析师的弗朗索瓦·帕伦托 (Francois Parenteau)

对我说:“我当然没那么聪明。

我什至不记得自己的邮政编码。”

但他也说,“工作是我生活的重要组成部分。

我几乎每天 24 小时、

每周 7 天都在考虑投资。”

Nez Hallett III 是 Smart Wireless 的首席执行官

,我认为这很讽刺,因为他告诉我他没那么聪明。

他说:“我高中毕业时平均成绩为 C

,大学毕业时平均成绩为 C-。”

但现在聪明的博士们正在向他汇报。

他是怎么做到的?

他说:“如果你想在任何事情上取得成功

,关键是努力工作。”

我不聪明。

作为证明,这是我实际的 12 年级成绩单。

这是我父母唯一保留的。

不要问我为什么保留它; 这没什么好吹嘘的。

如您所见,我是 C 学生,而不是 A 学生。

我想我现在连大学都考不上了。

那么我是如何获得一些成功和财富的呢?

我只是努力工作,每周工作 60 到 80 小时。

现在我知道我并不孤单。

托马斯·斯坦利研究了数百名百万富翁

,他发现大多数百万富翁都不是 A 学生,

考试成绩不高,老师们认为他们永远不会成功。

但他们确实成功了,因为他们努力工作。

所以好消息是,如果你不是最聪明的,

如果你是 C 学生,而不是 A 学生,

那么真正的好消息是你仍然可以成功。

因为“成功”这个词有两个C,没有A。

(笑声)

只要你努力,你仍然可以成功。

如果你很聪明怎么办?

好吧,对不起,你绝对没有希望。

因为许多聪明人没有取得尽可能多的成功,不幸的是,

因为他们依靠自己的聪明才智,从不学习努力工作。

朗讯科技总裁 Jeong Kim 说:

“最聪明的人有时并没有充分发挥自己的潜力,

因为事情变得太容易了,所以他们不会努力推动自己。”

我在世界排名前 10 的商学院中做过一次演讲后,

一位男士走过来对我说:

“你知道,几年前我在这里获得 MBA 学位时,

我是班上最聪明的人之一。

我以为我做到了。所以毕业

后,我坐下来,没有努力工作。

我走下坡路

。现在,在我生命的这个阶段,我无处可去。

我没有取得任何成就 完全成功。”

他说:“谢谢你的叫醒。现在我知道我需要做什么了。

我需要工作。”

所以底线是,无论你是否聪明,

无论你是否有才华,只要继续努力。

(掌声)