Success is a lousy teacher. It seduces smart people into thinking they can’t lose. - Bill Gates
Published: Aug 08, 2022
Description
Bill Gates has a lot of wisdom to share on how to build successful businesses and give back to society.

Bill Gates is a businessman, philanthropist, and co-founder of Microsoft Corporation. Gates is known not only for his extraordinary contributions to technology but also for his generosity and intelligence.

“Success is a lousy teacher. It seduces smart people into thinking they can’t lose.” - Bill Gates

Everyone wants to be successful, but Gates understands that success comes with dangers. Success can make you complacent and ignore the things that made you successful in the first place.

When you start to succeed, don't automatically think you can't fail again.

You often see someone as successful as Bill Gates, and it's easy to think he has to get everything right. He never makes mistakes, does he? Incorrect.

And he was the first to admit that he had to avoid letting his success make him feel invincible.

What Bill Gates wants you to learn from it

Bill Gates didn't get it right from the start. A Harvard dropout, his first company, Traf-O-Data, was a complete failure.

Before becoming the billionaire he is today, he had to learn some lessons. Fortunately, he is always willing to share his wisdom with the world.

Gates wants you to be humble when you succeed and learn as much as possible from your failures. Just because you make a lot of money on something doesn't mean it will happen to all your future businesses.

It would help if you still put in the work. You still have to be careful with your decisions. Nothing in life is guaranteed. If you're too arrogant or overconfident, it's easy to squander all your successes.

The best way to get results is to take action. The best way to learn is to fail. Success is not the finish line, it's just one step in a never-ending journey.

Don't assume you're commercially enlightened just because of an ounce of success.

Recent publications from this author (View All)
Related books (View All)