12 ENTREPRENEURS SHARE THE BEST ADVICE THEY RECEIVED FROM A TEACHER
YOU
DON'T HAVE TO BE HEADED BACK TO SCHOOL TO HEED THIS VALUABLE ADVICE
FROM TEACHERS.
From
fostering character to keeping things simple, it’s often words of
wisdom that teachers offer during casual conversations or
informational sidebars that have the biggest impact on students.
With
back-to-school season upon us, a dozen entrepreneurs shared the best
advice they ever received from a teacher:
1. DON’T LET BAD DAYS STOP YOU
“My
12th-grade anthropology teacher told me: ‘When you’re feeling
bad, do the work and let the feelings take care of themselves.’
This turned out to be great advice for running a business. Every
startup, even the most successful, is a roller coaster. When the bad
days hit, you can’t let them stop you. I’ve found that the act of
doing the work often makes you feel better.”--Amy
Pressman, president and cofounder of Medallia,
a provider of customer
experience management solutions
2. BE PRECISE
“My
second-grade teacher, Ms. Caruso, gave us a seemingly simple writing
assignment: Describe how to build a peanut butter sandwich. On the
day we turned in our assignments Ms. Caruso had bread, silverware,
and jars of peanut butter and jelly.
She
collected our papers and began reading them one by one: ‘First you
take the bread, (Ms. Caruso took the loaf of bread still in the bag)
then you take the peanut butter and put it on the bread. (Ms. Caruso
took the jar of peanut butter and placed it on top of the bread bag).
Then you take the jelly and put it on top of the peanut butter.’
(Ms. Caruso took the jar of jelly and placed it on top of the jar of
peanut butter).
The
class was laughing because we had a Jenga tower of groceries and not
a peanut butter sandwich. As it turned out, not one person in our
class had accurately described how to make a peanut butter and jelly
sandwich. This exercise taught me the importance of precisely
transmitting information to others so they can execute on a
vision.”--Catalina
Girald, founder of Naja
Lingerie,
an undergarment
manufacturer
3. GO FOR IT
“My
high school English teacher Melody Wong pushed me to take the AP
English exam, even though I hadn’t taken the class. I ended up
scoring a five, the highest possible mark. Her encouragement taught
me that sometimes you can do things even if you don’t have the
right pre-qualifications. Just go for it and you might surprise
yourself.”
--Jess Lee, CEO and co-founder of the social commerce website Polyvore
--Jess Lee, CEO and co-founder of the social commerce website Polyvore
4. REALLY LISTEN
“The
greatest advice I ever received was from an acting teacher who
insisted that I ‘really listen and really do the task’ while
performing. Those words have echoed in my mind time and time again
whether I am directing, interviewing, hiring, or presenting to
clients. Working with clients or colleagues, I find that by truly
listening half of my work is done. When you take the time to really
listen, you connect and can hear what the other party really feels,
needs and wants, and you can move forward without second-guessing or
worrying.”--Terry
Rieser, cofounder of TAG
Creative,
a New York-based marketing firm
5. DON’T GIVE EXCUSES
“One
of the stern nuns in my high school once told me: ‘Don’t give me
excuses; change your behavior.’ Although this was in response to a
somewhat minor situation it has stayed with me and dictated so many
decisions in my adult life. It is always easy to explain why
something didn’t work the way I wanted it to, why I was not making
the money or achieving the success I wanted. Each time I found myself
looking for a reason why I didn’t hit the mark I realized I was
making an excuse and I needed to change my behavior.” -Patty
Lennon, founder of Crowdfund
With Ease,
a crowdfunding consulting firm
6. CHALLENGE AUTHORITY
“The
best advice I ever received was from my high school political science
teacher, Peter Duynstee. On the first day of my junior year, he said
the only lesson he wanted us to take away from his class was a simple
one that he wrote on the blackboard: CHALLENGE AUTHORITY. This simple
message is pretty stunning, seeing that he taught at a Catholic
school, but he wanted us to question leaders, not accept the norm and
do our own thing. It’s stuck with me for life.”--Jim
Zambrano, CEO and founder of First
Abroad,
a gap-year travel agency
7. DON’T OVER THINK
“My
10th-grade chemistry teacher, Dr. Jerry White, noted that I tended to
over engineer problems and said to me: ‘Don’t over think it. The
answer to most of life’s problems require nothing more than common
sense.’ I keep this in mind every time I’m struggling for an
answer to a problem I’m trying to solve.”
--Aashish Dalal, founder and CEO of the parking app ParkWhiz
--Aashish Dalal, founder and CEO of the parking app ParkWhiz
8. ANYONE CAN CHANGE THE WORLD
“My
business professor Catherine Duggan said that every bit of business
history was made by someone who was relatively unknown the minute
before they decided to do something that changed the world. Sure,
those folks seem famous and daunting now, but when they started--just
like we did, in a business school dorm room--no one knew or cared
about them at all.”-Robert
D. Biederman, CEO and cofounder of the consulting firm HourlyNerd
9. SHOW UP EVEN WHEN YOU DON’T WANT TO
“In
high school some of the concepts in chemistry class got hard, and
there were things being taught that many of us didn’t understand.
We just wanted to give up. Anticipating that some of us might quit
learning altogether, our chemistry teacher told us this was normal
and it might even go on for several days. When this happened, he
asked us to just show up in class anyway without worrying if we would
really learn the concepts. We did and eventually we grasped what was
being taught. This advice really helped me later; whenever things get
hard and I don’t want to deal with them, I show up anyway and at
some point I am able to figure them out.” --Harman
Singh, founder of the online
education platform WizIQ
10. FOCUS ON YOUR STRENGTH
“My
physics advisor told me to look for your top strength, for something
that you can do better than anyone else, then focus your energy on
it. For entrepreneurs, this means positioning your company in such a
way that it can be No. 1 in the area of choice.”--Johann
Schleier-Smith, cofounder of Tagged,
a social discovery platform
11. CHARACTER MATTERS
“My
high school chemistry Dr. Minne taught me a lot about atoms and
bonds, but it was a lesson of actions, not words, that has stuck with
me. I missed the spring final exam because of sports commitments, and
Dr. Minne let me make up the test at his house. When I arrived, he
sent me up to his study and simply said ‘Leave the exam on my desk
after an hour and a half. I have to run.’ As I looked around the
room, I quickly realized that his bookshelves were filled with every
chemistry book imaginable, all of which held the answers to the
questions laid out before me. The temptation was obvious, but I
resisted. Putting me in this situation taught me about my own
character, but also silently passed along the piece of advice to
trust in others, and to believe in them as he believed in
me.”--Matthew
Bellows, founder and CEO of Yesware,
a software provider
12. LOOK PEOPLE IN THE EYE
“My
high school guidance counselor, Mr. Neil Ginsburg, noticed that I
wasn’t making good eye contact with him during a meeting. I’ll
never forget his words to me: ‘When you don't look someone in the
eye, it suggests you don’t feel good about yourself or that you’re
hiding something. Making eye contact is one of the best ways to build
a relationship or kill one before it begins.’”--Kat
Gordon, founder of the annual marketing event The
3% Conference
BY STEPHANIE
VOZZA
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