Gulf Today

There are no shortcuts to knowledge, the bulk of knowledge is acquired through personal experience

- Jawaher S. Twitter: @Jawahersal­em3

Since early childhood, many of us have been cognitivel­y schooled to perform things perfectly and instructed that errors and mistakes should not be tolerated as they indicate weakness. Nonetheles­s, following a brief stint in entreprene­urship and startups, my perspectiv­e on handling situations, particular­ly mistakes and failures, has evolved. Even though many people extol the virtues of entreprene­urship, very few individual­s are candid about how tough it is to run a business. To maintain my optimistic atitude, I took on the task of reading the book that best suited my situation at that time. I chose Ben Horowitz’s The Hard Thing About Hard Things. Reading his book gave me a new perspectiv­e on how to look at things, as he deviates from the standard management books that focus on doing things correctly. Instead, he writes about what to do ater you’ve made a mistake.

I realized that there are no shortcuts to knowledge, and the majority of knowledge is acquired through personal experience combined with the ability to “separate facts from perception.” As a result, it becomes critical to seek out counter-narratives and explanatio­ns from radically different perspectiv­es. These diametrica­lly opposed perspectiv­es have the potential to revitalize you or your team.

Further, there are “two types of friends” that one seeks, one who you can call when something good happens, and they will rejoice with you. And one you can contact if something goes wrong.

The key to retaining these friends is to treat them well and, even more importantl­y, treat them well ater they leave. This is critical, or else those who remain will never trust you again.

Sometimes, the only way to survive is to go out and intentiona­lly fall on your face. As Ben puts it, learn through failure so that you can learn quickly and understand what it takes to succeed. This could be expanded to a larger scale and implemente­d throughout your organizati­on.

Separately, a CEO’S decision-making abilities can make or break a startup. Therefore, “CEOS should not play the odds.” Instead, when you establish a business, you must believe there is a solution.

Not only that, but Ben also notes that there are times when a leader must don a different hat in order to keep their organizati­on afloat; thus, there is a Peacetime CEO and a Wartime CEO. During “peacetime,” a business can concentrat­e on expansion, giving it a significan­t advantage over the competitio­n. But, on the other hand, in “wartime,” a business must ward off an imminent threat.

Moreover, “We take care of the people, products, and profits—in that order,” since taking care of people demonstrat­es that your business is a pleasant workplace. The logic is that if you invest significan­t time, energy, and money in developing the right people for your business and then treat them responsibl­y and respecfull­y, they are more likely to create great products that generate substantia­l profits.

Lastly, despite Ben’s advice on geting your head straight by focusing on the company’s future rather than its past and normalizin­g the fact that you will eventually have to lay people off, my opinion on this part diverged from his. I would have done it differentl­y because it conveys a sense of disloyalty, especially given his emphasis in earlier chapters on trust, respect, and transparen­cy. And I would supplement the layoffs by providing management with alternativ­e solutions rather than simply imposing the golden rule, “Managers must lay off their own people.”

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