Science
Says Overconfidence Key to Success
Average
people think overconfidence is a character fault; entrepreneurs embrace it.
Most
people assume overconfidence is a negative character
trait that creates failure through hubris and overreach. Science,
however, has long known that entrepreneurs are consistently
overconfident. If they weren't, they wouldn't launch startups.
A
recent issue of The New Yorker described a series of
scientific studies proving entrepreneurs consistently overestimate their
chances of success. In fact, one-third of all entrepreneurs are utterly
convinced there is absolutely no chance their startup will fail.
Since
nine out of 10 startups actually do fail, this is overconfidence with a
vengeance.
Put
another way, if entrepreneurs weren't overconfident, they'd stay put in their
salaried jobs like everyone else. Therefore, to be a successful entrepreneur, you must cultivate
overconfidence, rather than squelch it. Here's how:
1. Make success a must-have.
Average
folk want to be successful. But wanting something doesn't
cut it. Wanting won't push you forward against all odds. Wanting won't buoy you
up when big problems flood in.
Entrepreneurs
see success as something that they absolutely MUST achieve, no matter what
stands in their way. As Yoda said: "Do or do not... there is no
try."
2. Have bright, big goals.
Average
folk have wishes. They wish they could pay their bills. They wish they had a
better job. They wish they could take an extra day off.
Entrepreneurs
don't have wishes; they have goals that speak to the heart and roil in the gut.
They want to make millions, help billions, change the world.
3. Shrug off your failures.
Average
folk are crushed when they suffer a setback. They wallow in
disappointment. They make excuses. They blame fate.
Entrepreneurs
see failures as anomalies, temporary situations that teach them how to execute
more effectively the next time. And there always is a next time.
4. Ignore the naysayers.
Average
folk base their self-worth upon the opinion of others. They're afraid of
looking stupid. They're afraid of disapproval. They're really afraid of hearing
"I told you so."
Entrepreneurs
consider the complaints and comments of non-entrepreneurs to be nothing but
noise. As the old saying goes: "The dogs bark but the caravan moves
on."
5. Value courage above security.
Average
folk are obsessed with security. They want life to be predictable.
They want to feel safe. They look at the outside world through the lens
of their TV.
Entrepreneurs
know that the desire of security keeps you from becoming the best. They'd
rather live life on their own terms and die poor than suffer a half-life of
living in fear.
So
that's how it's done. One question remains: How do you know when you're
successfully overconfident?
Easy.
You won't know you're overconfident; you'll just feel like it's plain,
old self-confidence... even when you're preparing to move mountains.
Adapted
from "Business Without The Bullsh*t: 49 Secrets and Shortcuts
That You Need to Know."
BY Geoffrey James http://www.inc.com/geoffrey-james/science-says-overconfidence-leads-to-success.html?cid=em01014week22d
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