Since I am a part-time MBA student with a startup life, full-time work, and the constant hum of strategizing about the future, I have sat through more lectures on strategy, leadership, and success than I can count. But few of them compared to what I learned during the course of a quiet lunch with a billionaire.
No slides. No templates. No motivational clichĂŠs.
Just a calm, analytical mind with decades of experience living â and a very firm sense of what actually gets results in business and in life.
What I was hoping for was tips on market timing or deal flow. What I got was something more profound: an ad hoc lecture on focus, leverage, and legacy â the kind of insight no schoolroom offers but every founder needs.
This is what that hour taught me â and why I now view it as one of the most valuable âclassesâ Iâve taken to date.
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1. Hard Work is Ubiquitous â Strategic Energy is Rare
He faced me and explained to me, without hesitation:
âEveryone I know whoâs capable works hard. Thatâs the bare minimum. What matters is where â and why â you do it.â
It was the first time I understood that hard work wasnât a discriminator â direction was. He didnât waste time going after everything that glimmered. He placed one or two bets and bet the whole company, years before the world caught on.
As the one constantly toggling between activities, functions, and duties, I knew I wasnât without hustle. I was without focus. Strategy, he told me, isnât a matter of more â itâs a matter of less, better.
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2. MBAs Teach Tools. Real Success Requires Pattern Recognition.
I told him I was attending business school. He nodded and smiled:
âThatâs good. But the real edge comes when you stop memorizing and start recognizing.â
He wasnât discounting the worth of education. In fact, he valued disciplined learning. But he drew a distinct line: most people graduate with frameworks â the best of them become pattern spotters.
He dismantled how success in any enterprise isnât about the future â itâs about reading the signals around you faster than anyone else. Market cycles. Human behavior. Macro tailwinds. Good operators move quickly not because theyâre wild, but because theyâve already seen this movie.
It reprogrammed the way I now consume it all â not just lectures, but investor memos, user behavior, and even failure. Itâs all data â if youâre listening.
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3. If It Doesnât Matter in 10 Years, Donât Let It Derail Your Day
At some point in the middle of our conversation, he said the thought process he uses on most decisions:
âIf it wonât matter in a decade, donât let it ruin your week.â
It sounds simple. But when youâre early in your career â trying to prove yourself, raise capital, build a brand â itâs easy to get consumed by noise: opinions, delays, competition, impostor syndrome.
He reminded me that durability comes from perspective. Most people chase speed. The best focus on staying power. His moves werenât optimized for short-term optics â they were designed to still matter 25 years later.
Thatâs not something you find in a deck. Itâs something you build into your default thinking.
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4. Your People Strategy Is Your Strategy
I asked him what differentiated the successful businesses from the unsuccessful ones. His answer was quick:
âThe people. Always the people.â
He explained that talent, timing, and tech are all variables â but the shared experience in each long-term success was trust. He didnât just hire smart individuals. He partnered with individuals who could leverage emotional resilience, not just business logic.
For me, as a team builder still figuring out how to lead, that was everything. I no longer think about âhiringâ as simply putting bodies in seats â I think about it as choosing long-term teammates for the game Iâm committed to continuing to play.
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5. You Canât Scale Burnout
Later during our lunch, I asked him what he wishes heâd learned sooner.
He paused and clarified:
âI wouldâve protected my energy earlier. You canât multiply burnout.â
This was the lesson that hurt.
There is a cultural tendency, especially in startup existence and business school, to equate success with sacrifice. But his take was different. He viewed rest, boundaries, and clarity as not luxuries â but power.
He did not wear his tiredness as a badge of honor. He defended his calendar, his time, and his bandwidth like precious commodities. Because they are.
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Final Thoughts
That lunch break taught me more than many classes, books, or panels ever have.
Not because it was full of secrets â but because it was rooted in truth. Soft, hard-won, and often unseen truths:
⢠Strategy is choosing what not to do.
⢠Success accumulates slowly, then all at once.
â˘Your people are your greatest long-term investment.
â˘Your energy is finite â manage it like an asset.
â˘And most importantly: you donât need to be everywhere. You just need to be exactly where it matters.
In business school, we learn how to make spreadsheets. But in that conversation, I learned how to maximize for life â one built with clarity, strength, and awareness of the long game.

