Recently, I
have had to make some presentations about what it takes to be an entrepreneur or
start up a company, and what type of people I would hire or be associated
with. When asked, I usually come back
with this question: If you had a choice
to sail the seven seas either with the Royal Navy or as a Pirate/Privateer,
what would you choose?
Incredibly,
the answer to this simple question is really at the crux if you can be an
entrepreneur or not. One choice offers
the prestige and power of a great power, and known and respected entity, at the
price of having to conform to a certain system of rules and regulations based
mostly on seniority and position not necessarily performance and merit. The other offers a high risk lifestyle, but
with some freedoms and the ability to join a group of liked minded individuals. To sail to unchartered, risky lands; to fight
for what you believe in, and to seize opportunities wherever you go. How you
answer this question is the basis if you will be entrepreneur or not.
If you did
not choose being a pirate, does not mean you will not be a success in your own
right, it just means that you prefer a more ordered and predictable path to
that destination. Risk and the ability
to go to the unknown is not in your character.
Yes, you might have great success in your endeavors, but the likelihood
of being wildly successful is slim. As I like to say, you never find riches on a well
trodden path.
On the other hand, choosing to be a
pirate actually almost guarantees you will fail! You say what? I thought being a pirate is what it is all
about, and now you say being one almost assuredly means we will fail? Well, you
have to decide if that failure, or series of failures, stops you from going
forward, or if you choose to go forward, for a pirate sees failure, loss and
defeat as just mile markers on the road to success. If the goal (booty) is worth more than the
fear of failure? A pirate realizes Paulo
Coelho’s saying of “There is only one thing that makes a dream impossible to
achieve: the fear of failure.”
It is precisely the ability to go
beyond that fear, into unknown waters that having a pirate-like mentality is so
important. While being able to do what
Churchill says, "When you are going through hell, keep going." is so
vitally important. Having a pirate mind
means you just cannot give up…on the goal.
Secondly, having a pirate mind also
means you choose those people you associate with, and quickly realize that the
number is not so important as the quality of the individuals. As I say, “I find my chances for success
improve when I associate with a few talented people as opposed to a plethora of
mediocre ones.” And this is true in ANY
startup. Pick good, liked-mined people
that help you achieve your goals, and most importantly, want to be pirates.
Lastly, having a pirate like mind
means that you have the flexibility and resilience to keep going towards you
goal no matter what. It is NOT about
being viscous or uncouth, but in living by a code of honor that few on the outside
can ever understand. So as Steve Jobs once quipped, “It’s more fun to be a
pirate than to join the navy.”
Comments
I accidentally found this blog while searching for more info on that cnbc tv show "The Profit", but found something else called the Profit Prophet, a website written by two ladies (which appears to be abandoned now), and when searching for their "book", I found your facebook page linked to some of your blog posts., and I'm here now...
I'd much rather be a pirate!
BTW, noticing what Nick said, we often profit on leveraging the misconceptions of others, morale or imorale. I have become a cynic after 12 years as a self-employed tech contractor, but I realize it has actually helped me see the world in a way which allows me to make more money, rather than being all pollyannish about the wonderful world and it's possibilities, yada yada.