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Do you swim with sharks?
Money Making Insider | 11 March, 2010 | Hot Topics:
Don't take a chance on luck
By Harvey Mackay
Luck seems to have a peculiar attachment to work. I'm sure that you have heard the Dave Thomas quote: "It seems the harder I work, the luckier I get."
I would tend to agree with that statement, but I think there are a few other conditions that affect your "luck" – things like instinct, timing, market conditions, and public opinion, to name a few. I know plenty of folks that have worked their heads and hearts off, but for some reason or another, they just aren't successful in what they accomplish.
On the other hand, I have witnessed others who seem to have fallen into a bed of roses – business-wise or financially. Predictably, most of their friends are totally amazed and can't figure out how or why this person made it. Pure luck? Probably not. More likely, they were in the right business at the right time. Oh, we should all be so "lucky".
Call it whatever you like, but I prefer not to rely on luck when it comes to business. I leave that for the casinos.
I'll admit, I've been "lucky" on many occasions, such as the time I was in London many years ago and was late for a play. I started to step off the curb without looking to my right. I pulled back for a reason I still can't explain. Being in London, where they drive on the "wrong" side of the road, a big bus almost wiped me out. Go figure it! Had I taken that step, I would have been dead within a nanosecond. I would bet that most of us could tell a similar story.
What is the correlation between luck and success? Frankly, I think Dave Thomas, who founded the Wendy's chain, had it right. As for my business life, I prefer to do everything in my power to make my own "luck" – long hours, clear goals, calculated risks, good hires, expert advice, and a reasonable amount of fear have guided me.
I've had plenty of incentive too, like putting my name on my product. Nothing makes you try harder than putting your identity on the line.
Was it luck that led to the creation of so many well-known products? I think not. Rather, it was creativity and the courage to redevelop already invented products. For example, Coca-Cola started out as a headache medicine. Post-it Notes originated when a 3M inventor created bookmarks for his prayer/song book. Levi jeans – with rivets instead of buttons – were made out of leftover tent canvas when miners needed pants.
Milkshakes were invented not so much by luck as by necessity. In 1874, 16 years after the first soda fountain opened, Robert M. Green was mixing his popular drink, consisting of sweet cream, syrup, and carbonated water. When he ran out of sweet cream and there was no way to get more that day, he started substituting vanilla ice cream, hoping no one would notice. Everyone noticed -- and he went from grossing R42 a day to R4,200.
Yo-yos were used as weapons in the ancient Far East. Sixteenth century hunters in the Philippine Islands tied wooden disks together with a long piece of rope or twine. They would sit in trees and fling the weapon at prey. If it missed, they would pull it back quickly and try again. Donald Duncan saw the yo-yo in action in the early 1920s, changed the design, and created a child's toy, my grandson's favorite possession.
Even Avon Cosmetics got its start when a door-to-door book salesman named David H. McConnell decided to offer a small sample of perfume to women. Soon the perfume became more popular than the books and McConnell established the California Perfume Company, which changed its name to Avon Products in 1939.
Lucky? No. Good business. Taking risks, being creative, and reading and reacting to markets will trump luck every day. You can bet on that.
Mackay's Moral: Good luck usually depends on good judgment.
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Editors note
Chris Densley
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