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8 Entrepreneurial Lessons You’ll Never Learn In School

8-Entrepreneurial-Lessons-You’ll-Never-Learn-In-School

Entrepreneurial Lesson1. The indomitable will to succeed.

The most important trait you won’t learn in school is to get out there and try 100 things to build a business and get over the fact that 98 of them won’t work. And then get right back out there and try another 100.

—Barbara Corcoran, founder of The Corcoran Group and Shark on Shark Tank

Entrepreneurial Lesson2. Failing is OK when aiming big.

School punishes those who fail, so kids don’t push through their comfort zone to the next level. In the real world, there are no participation awards or grade inflations. From my experience at Draper University, I’ve learned that team-based teaching is extraordinarily effective. People work harder to make sure they don’t let down their team. And we teach these teams that failing is OK if they try something big.

—Tim Draper, founding partner of DFJ

Entrepreneurial Lesson3. Question everything.

I wish school had taught me to question everything. As an entrepreneur, you’re always looking to find some basic assumption about the business that other people are following—but that you can question and use to gain insights into your business. For me, it was the thought that once you are pigeonholed as a TV writer, you can’t break into film. So I wondered why. Writing is writing. When I realized there was a basic assumption about how a TV writer is supposed to behave versus a feature film writer, I was able to erase the distinction in my own mind and in the industry’s mind. Today, it is commonly acknowledged that the best material is on TV. Question all assumptions.

—Roberto Orci, Hollywood producer and screenwriter whose movies and TV shows have grossed over $5 billion worldwide

Entrepreneurial Lesson4. Creativity and people management.

No. 1, school should teach creativity as much as multiplication tables. Entrepreneurs need to be innovative. Maybe your new company makes $10,000 a month. What will you do when it makes $10 million a month? The process of thinking about this ahead of time will help you prepare correctly.

No. 2, school should teach how to manage people. No one was born with that skill, but you need a team to scale your business. You need persuasion skills so awesome people will work with you. And you need people reading skills to spot those who are not high quality or have big personality flaws that will derail your team.

—Tai Lopez, investor and advisor

Entrepreneurial Lesson5. How money and cash flow work.

Learning about money and cash flow, and how to handle it, should be a required course in grade school. No one teaches us how to manage debt, and why we should or should not have debt. We also don’t learn how to handle investments and create wealth for ourselves. As a result, most people today die broke.

—Jay Georgi, founder of Nadvia

Entrepreneurial Lesson6. How to be your own boss.

No teacher in school ever taught me about how to be your own boss.
1. Learn time management skills.
2. Focus on your strengths and hire for your weaknesses.
3. Find a mentor who has already been at the top of the mountain you want to reach and  made many of the mistakes that you will inevitably make.

— Gary Nealon, president of Nealon Solutions and The Rox Group

Entrepreneurial Lesson7. Never, ever give up.

The No. 1 thing I wish schools taught is to never, ever give up. No matter what. Have so much freaking confidence that there’s no way you can fail; just learn the wisdom to make adjustments and keep your head on straight. I learned that in the school of hard knocks, not the formal education system.

—Steve Griggs, founder and CEO of Steve Griggs Design

Entrepreneurial Lesson8. Success without happiness, love and service leads to emptiness.

Although information, competition and achievement are critical to success, they’re not enough to create a fulfilling life. Success is the sweetest when it is built with heart, purpose and passion, but you’ll never learn that in school. Money, power and fame by itself will never bring you true happiness.

—Nafisé Nina Hodjat, founder and managing attorney of The SLS Firm      

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