Free Essay

Mean People Fail

In:

Submitted By 1001
Words 932
Pages 4
Mean People Fail

November 2014

It struck me recently how few of the most successful people I know are mean. There are exceptions, but remarkably few.

Meanness isn't rare. In fact, one of the things the internet has shown us is how mean people can be. A few decades ago, only famous people and professional writers got to publish their opinions. Now everyone can, and we can all see the long tail of meanness that had previously been hidden.

And yet while there are clearly a lot of mean people out there, there are next to none among the most successful people I know. What's going on here? Are meanness and success inversely correlated?

Part of what's going on, of course, is selection bias. I only know people who work in certain fields: startup founders, programmers, professors. I'm willing to believe that successful people in other fields are mean. Maybe successful hedge fund managers are mean; I don't know enough to say. It seems quite likely that most successful drug lords are mean. But there are at least big chunks of the world that mean people don't rule, and that territory seems to be growing.

My wife and Y Combinator cofounder Jessica is one of those rare people who have x-ray vision for character. Being married to her is like standing next to an airport baggage scanner. She came to the startup world from investment banking, she has always been struck both by how consistently successful startup founders turn out to be good people, and how consistently bad people fail as startup founders.

Why? I think there are several reasons. One is that being mean makes you stupid. That's why I hate fights. You never do your best work in a fight, because fights are not sufficiently general. Winning is always a function of the situation and the people involved. You don't win fights by thinking of big ideas but by thinking of tricks that work in one particular case. And yet fighting is just as much work as thinking about real problems. Which is particularly painful to someone who cares how their brain is used: your brain goes fast but you get nowhere, like a car spinning its wheels.

Startups don't win by attacking. They win by transcending. There are exceptions of course, but usually the way to win is to race ahead, not to stop and fight.

Another reason mean founders lose is that they can't get the best people to work for them. They can hire people who will put up with them because they need a job. But the best people have other options. A mean person can't convince the best people to work for him unless he is super convincing. And while having the best people helps any organization, it's critical for startups.

There is also a complementary force at work: if you want to build great things, it helps to be driven by a spirit of benevolence. The startup founders who end up richest are not the ones driven by money. The ones driven by money take the big acquisition offer that nearly every successful startup gets en route. [1] The ones who keep going are driven by something else. They may not say so explicitly, but they're usually trying to improve the world. Which means people with a desire to improve the world have a natural advantage. [2]

The exciting thing is that startups are not just one random type of work in which meanness and success are inversely correlated. This kind of work is the future.

For most of history success meant control of scarce resources. One got that by fighting, whether literally in the case of pastoral nomads driving hunter-gatherers into marginal lands, or metaphorically in the case of Gilded Age financiers contending with one another to assemble railroad monopolies. For most of history, success meant success at zero-sum games. And in most of them meanness was not a handicap but probably an advantage.

That is changing. Increasingly the games that matter are not zero-sum. Increasingly you win not by fighting to get control of a scarce resource, but by having new ideas and building new things. [3]

There have long been games where you won by having new ideas. In the third century BC Archimedes won by doing that. At least until an invading Roman army killed him. Which illustrates why this change is happening: for new ideas to matter, you need a certain degree of civil order. And not just not being at war. You also need to prevent the sort of economic violence that nineteenth century magnates practiced against one another and communist countries practiced against their citizens. People need to feel that what they create can't be stolen. [4]

That has always been the case for thinkers, which is why this trend began with them. When you think of successful people from history who weren't ruthless, you get mathematicians and writers and artists. The exciting thing is that their m.o. seems to be spreading. The games played by intellectuals are leaking into the real world, and this is reversing the historical polarity of the relationship between meanness and success.

So I'm really glad I stopped to think about this. Jessica and I have always worked hard to teach our kids not to be mean. We tolerate noise and mess and junk food, but not meanness. And now I have both an additional reason to crack down on it, and an additional argument to use when I do: that being mean makes you fail.

Similar Documents

Premium Essay

P1 Unit 1 Business

...Business Sector | Snac Attack | Cameron Blake Chartered Accountants | Sole Trader- A sole trader is a business which is owned by one person. The owner can employ others but they are their responsibility.A sole trader operates in the private sector. | Business Purpose and Activity – Snac Attack provides a food and drink service to consumers and customers to people in the local area. This business aims to make a profit. | Business Purpose and ActivityCameron Blake Chartered Accountants provides a service to the North East area. They provide customers with a service which can take care of their Financial Accounts. | | Size and scaleThis business operates on a small scale in the local area, Felling. | Size and ScaleThis business operates on a small regional scale. | | SectorSnac Attack operates in the tertiary sector as they provide a service to the customer. | SectorCameron Blake Chartered Accountants operate in the tertiary sector as they provide a service to customers. | | Liabilities This business has unlimited liability. This means that the owner is liable for all the debts of the business meaning that if the business fails the owner’s personal possessions may be taken. | LiabilitiesCameron Blake Chartered Accountants have unlimited liability. | Advantages | An advantage of being a sole trader is that the owner can make decisions by themselves meaning there wouldn’t be conflict over decisions so the decision making process is quicker. There is also no legal requirements...

Words: 2488 - Pages: 10

Premium Essay

Functionalist Views of Crime

...is society that causes the individual to commit crime. Social control theory looks at why people do not commit crime as it says that people are controlled by the primary and secondary agents of social control, such as the family or religion, and so should not commit crime. Functionalism is also a Right Wing theory, which believes that agents of social control like the police are fair and just; law reflects the collective conscience; people are biologically selfish and official statistics are valid. Functionalists included in this essay are Durkheim and Merton with evaluation from functionalist subcultural theorists, Cloward and Ohlin, and Marxism. Durkheim said that crime is inevitable: this is because people are not equally committed to the law due to individual differences and each society has its own definitions of what is deviant and so even a ‘society of saints’ will have deviance. He also said that crime is functional for society when there is the ‘right’ amount. The collective conscience needs to be at a moderate energy so that there is not too much or too little crime. When there is the right amount, society can progress as the criminal may be ‘the origin of the genius’ as they challenge societies current values. Durkheim also made the concept of anomie. At times of rapid change, society can enter a state of normlessness, as there are no common norms and values, which revert people back to being biologically selfish. Durkheim’s view of crime being functional has been heavily...

Words: 1317 - Pages: 6

Premium Essay

Failing In College Pressures By William Zinger

...does not mean Unsatisfactory Failing is a word that many people would like to believe is not in their vocabulary. Failing in life is sometimes necessary in order to get things done the right way. As William Zinger says in his essay “College Pressures”, “What I wish for all students is some release from the clammy grip of the future. I wish them a chance to savor each segment of their education as an experience in itself and not as a grim preparation for the next step. I wish them the right to experiment, to trip and fall, to learn that defeat is as instructive as victory and is not the end of the world.” I can relate personally to what William Zinger is saying because sometimes I wish I could just fail at things in order to think about the things that I would really...

Words: 974 - Pages: 4

Premium Essay

Functionalist Explanations to Crime and Deviance

...society that causes the individual to commit crime. Social control theory looks at why people do not commit crime as it says that people are controlled by the primary and secondary agents of social control, such as the family or religion, and so should not commit crime. Functionalism is also a Right Wing theory, which believes that agents of social control like the police are fair and just; law reflects the collective conscience; people are biologically selfish and official statistics are valid. Functionalists included in this essay are Durkheim and Merton with evaluation from functionalist subcultural theorists, Cloward and Ohlin, and Marxism. Durkheim said that crime is inevitable: this is because people are not equally committed to the law due to individual differences and each society has its own definitions of what is deviant and so even a ‘society of saints’ will have deviance. He also said that crime is functional for society when there is the ‘right’ amount. The collective conscience needs to be at a moderate energy so that there is not too much or too little crime. When there is the right amount, society can progress as the criminal may be ‘the origin of the genius’ as they challenge societies current values. Durkheim also made the concept of anomie. At times of rapid change, society can enter a state of normlessness, as there are no common norms and values, which revert people back to being biologically selfish. Durkheim’s view of crime being functional has been...

Words: 1317 - Pages: 6

Premium Essay

How To Write I Too Sing America Essay

...The american voice is something big to many people from different race and describe it in there own way to what it means to them. The research i have done on this topic was read and watched different videos on what the american voice means to people. To me what the american voice means to me is the right to say anything we have to say that is on our mind. What does it mean to being an american to me? Well i think in my opinion more freedom because in other countries there isn't really freedom and opportunities we have here. A text i choose was about colored men not being equal by “Langston Hughes The Weary Blues” in 1926. One quote i choose from the poem “I,Too,Sing America”. I chose this quote because every person in this world is equal and no one should feel left out. This poem gave so much detail and examples about how colored men were treated back then and still in some parts of the world like africa it's still going on today! Also i chose it because it's still a big thing in today's society. In the speech by Patrick Henry, Patrick argues about slavery should stop. So which made him have war with the troops. The setting of the speech is in the virginia convention March 23,1775 because he wanted to express himself. The speaker...

Words: 659 - Pages: 3

Premium Essay

Failure Is the New Success

...Failure is the new Success A great man once said that no human on earth is created in perfection. Yet, we, as members of the human race, fear failure. We are taught not to fail and, if we do, it is viewed as a shameful sign of weakness. Although we want to be succesful, it is ofren necessary to fail in order to learn the lessons that will lead to a more meaningful life. William Zinsser in “The Right to Fail” talks about how there is nothing wrong with failing. He uses some real life examples that could apply to many other people. He explains how the term failure mostly applies to all people under the age of twenty-one if they drop out of school. We all know that education and finishing school is very important but, just because a person dropped out from school it is officially over. We automatically think that “drop out” means they will never have a bright future. Zinsser then expresses his opinion that people who have actually dropped out of school or have failed multiple times still manage to reach similar success as people who did not drop out. Clearly, failing to finish school does not mean they will not be successful. He then also explains that parents are the ones who demand that we do not fail instead of telling us to “not” be afraid to fail. Although it may be difficult for parents, accepting their child’s future will offer a way for their child to become stronger and ready for the obstacles in their life. Furthermore, Zinsser cited Fred Zinnerman, the famous Hollywood...

Words: 557 - Pages: 3

Premium Essay

Affirmative Action

...classes, unequal pay and so much more effect today's youth and causing history to change slowly if at all. Affirmative action has good intentions and is very much needed in today's world however it sometimes fails doing what it was created to do. The extra points given to the students of color is seen to be unfair, fails at creating an economically diverse environment, and sets low expectations for students of color (But Not At This Cost). The does not believe the advantages are fair at all "For example, a perfect SAT score is worth 12 points. Being black gets you 20 points. Is there anyone who can look at those two numbers and think they are fair?" (Paragraph 2) also affirmative action fails to help those in need "They often benefit the children of the middle- and upper-class black American who have been conditioned to feel they are owed something" (Paragraph 4). The arguments given as to why this person does not support affirmative action fail to support his or her studies with actual proof from previous studies. Based on a study conducted by the College Board American Americans and Hispanics have the lowest income of all races in America. Lower earning families tend to live in affordable areas, that lack quality housing, schools, police enforcement. When a school fails to teach possible SAT skills or questions yet the child maintains a good GPA and is a well rounded student why hold it against them? With the growing rate of immigration it is common for a child to move during...

Words: 713 - Pages: 3

Premium Essay

Baby Boy

...consist of a group of people within society who share the same norms and values as one another as opposed to mainstream culture. For example criminals are part of a subculture because they hold different attitudes towards crime as the general public do. These individuals have rejected the norms of mainstream society and become inverted into their own sub culture in rejection of the main one which has failed them. For example the majority of this criminal subculture will feel materially deprived, which they will blame of society not meeting their needs. They will then resort to crime in order to obtain this materialism. There is also many other cultures within this main sub culture, for example drug takers or hippies. These sub cultures offer a sense of ID to the individual and allows them to integrate into their new society which they may not have otherwise been able to do into main society. However, subcultures alone cannot explain the trend in crime and deviance there are many other factors contributing such as the individual. Merton claims someone commits deviant behaviour when they are unable to achieve socially approved goals. Merton explains that a combination of structural factors (societies unequal opportunities) and cultural factors (strong emphasis on success). He continues with talking about the American dream, for most, the ultimate dream is to own a nice house and drive a fast car, if a working class individual can’t achieve this through legitimate means, Merton predicts...

Words: 1294 - Pages: 6

Premium Essay

Crime and Deviance

...sanctions which try to keep people from deviance. Internal social controls are behaviors and attitudes socialized into the individual to protect them from deviance. External controls are society’s mechanisms like the law and the police. Since everyone breaks social rules and norms, the sociology of deviance usually refers to those who do it big-time. 2 5/17/2002 Theories of deviance Who becomes deviant? Why do they do it? 5/17/2002 3 Labeling theory n Labeling theory: a person becomes deviant when they get labeled as such. Getting a deviant identity means distinguishing between primary and secondary deviance. Primary deviance is where most people do something deviant but it is not discovered; secondary deviance is where a person takes on the identity of a deviant and may be thrust into a “deviant career.” Labeling theory fails to explain when being labeled deviant can jolt someone out of becoming a career deviant. Deviants are seen here as helpless victims rather than bad guys 4 5/17/2002 Transmission theory n 5/17/2002 Cultural transmission theory or differential association theory: deviance is learned through “transmission,” social interactions with others who are deviant. Criminals learn from other criminals. Dependent on the intensity of contact with deviants; the age at which contact takes place (younger the more vulnerable); the ratio of contacts with deviants. Cultural transmission theory fails to explain those people who are...

Words: 973 - Pages: 4

Premium Essay

Atlantis Research Paper

...created it. Many people have searched for it in the depths of the ocean, but to no avail. There are many facts about Atlantis, lots of potential theories about its existence and possible location, however many of these propositions have little evidence to prove it. 1. Facts Roughly two and a half centuries ago, a Greek Philosopher named Plato wrote two books called Timaeus and Critias (Scientists Search for the Lost City of Atlantis). “Timaeus and Critias are the only existing written records which specifically refer to Atlantis” (Lost Civilizations: Atlantis). In the story, it states that the books are fact, not fiction (Lost Civilizations: Atlantis). This means that Atlantis could possibly be real. According to Timaeus, Atlantis was located near the Atlantic Ocean. It was also larger than Libya and Asia combined (Lost Civilizations: Atlantis). Critias provided a detailed description of Atlantis and stated that a cataclysm destroyed it (Lost Civilizations: Atlantis). According to...

Words: 691 - Pages: 3

Free Essay

Quotes

..." There will always be a time and a place for you to shine. Do not miss out on that moment when it comes." " Don't be afraid to fail. Get out there and experiment and learn and fail and get a rate based on the experiences you have. Go for it and when you go for it you'll learn what you're capable of, what the potential is, where the opportunities are, but you can't be afraid to fail because that's when you learn." " Difficulties are meant to rouse, not discourage. The human spirit is to grow strong by conflict." " Remember behind every gray sky, with clouds, is the sun shining and ready to peak through those clouds!" " The past is gone so it cannot be undone; all we can do is learn from it to help for a better future which is yet to come. A New Year is another new beginning and new directions to follow where you are destined to be." " The best moment in life is when you start believing in yourself." " Open every door of opportunity, and if it appears to be locked, kick it down." " We learn more about ourselves when we fail...so, don't be afraid of failing. Failure is a part of the long process of success. People who do not fail are those who do nothing." " Opportunity is the key to open the door of the Hall of Fame. After opening it with the keywords "I CAN" and pursuing the concrete set of goals with self-confidence and perseverance, you will find the VICTORY chair to relax and enjoy." " Smile because you can. Smile because you're alive. Smile because you're beautiful...

Words: 553 - Pages: 3

Premium Essay

Failure Is Not an Option!

... An opportunity is a chance, one that offers some kind of advantage. Just like an obstacle, you will always face ways of opportunities. Just because you failed at a task doesn’t mean you will fail at life. One thing I was always brought up on was never underestimate you. I feel as when you do underestimate yourself, you will not succeed at it. To me, negativity never gets you anywhere. Someone who complains all the time will be known as a complainer. Someone who purposely fails themselves in life will always be viewed as a failure at life. No one wants to be seen as that because no one would ever give them the encouragement or the support that makes them want to succeed. One thing that will make sure you guarantee not to fail is by eliminating failure as an option. By eliminating failure as an option, it automatically gives you a better attitude on things. You will start to feel confident in yourself and confident in whatever you do. The saying “it’s often easier said than done” is true on so many different levels. A person may say they will do something or say something to someone, and not necessarily mean it. When a person say they will work hard on a project, a task, etc. it’s up to them to live up to what they are saying. When a person can prove to not only themselves but to anyone else, people will start to view them as someone who has potential or an opportunity in life. An example of this is a homeless man or woman. To be honest the real reason why that person was homeless...

Words: 541 - Pages: 3

Premium Essay

American Dream

...and getting ahead. Today its obvious that people don't look at this dream. Times have changed since the 1970s, when the American Dream was a thing. Americans worry about job loss, respondents say that they've experienced either increased health-care costs or a cut in health benefits and have lost overtime raises or bonuses, and they live from paycheck to paycheck, and 47% say that no matter how hard they work, they can't get ahead. After the Second World War, America experienced a period of economic prosperity. There were a lot of Jobs that paid well, with good health and retirement benefits. About a third, now, say they worry “a lot” about losing their jobs, this a record not seen since the 1970s. Approximately 4.2 million people leave their jobs every month by getting fired or just leaving because they want to, while about 4.4 million get hired. (David Wallechinsky, Springboard 56) Meanwhile the government stopped employing people or cut down employment which pushed the unemployment rate a whole percentage point higher. People aren't dreaming of getting higher up in their jobs, they're having nightmares of of losing it. America is going downhill because young people run into obstacles making them feel they will fail and never achieve their dream. More than one sixth of the U.S. economy is dedicated to health care spendings and that percentage is going up every year. For families, the higher cost of medical care means less money for them and makes them think about...

Words: 694 - Pages: 3

Premium Essay

Management and Leadership

... Failure is a path to understanding success Success means being a winner, an achiever. When we are successful, we feel good. This means that we have achieved a goal that we have set, or that we have experienced some good fortune. Too often, however, our successes run through our fingers like water, regardless of how tight we cling to them, and soon we find ourselves unsuccessful once more (Rock, 2007). By the time Steve Jobs’ (1955-2011) Wikipedia page had been adjusted to past tense, eulogists had added a footnote to his biography of success – failure. Steve Jobs, though wildly successful, also failed often and badly. Therein, perhaps lies the larger lesson of his life: Sometimes you have to fail to succeed (Parker, 2011). The truth is you usually have to fail to succeed. No one emerges at the top. Even those born lucky eventually get a turn on the wheel of misfortune. Anyone with a resume of accomplishments also has a resume of failures, humiliations and setbacks. Steve Jobs was fired by the company he cofounded. Yet it was during this period of exile that he picked up a little computer graphics company later called Pixar® Animation Studios, the sale of which made him a billionaire. This is to say, to fail is human. To resurrect oneself is an act of courage (Parker, 2011). If you want to learn the secrets of success, it seems perfectly reasonable to study successful people and organizations. However, the research of Jerker Denrell, an associate...

Words: 1814 - Pages: 8

Premium Essay

Section 51 Advantages And Disadvantages

...Section 51(xxvi) of the Australian Constitution allows the Federal Parliament to make ‘special laws’ for the ‘people of any race whom it is deemed necessary’. Essentially, this means that the Federal Parliament can enact laws that distinctively addresses or regulates the members of one race. In the Tasmanian Dam Case, Justice Brennan defines the word ‘race’ as meaning ‘people who regard themselves…as having a particular historical identity in terms of their colour of racial, national or ethnic origins’. The Expert Panel believes that this definition is outdated, as it doesn’t take into consideration scientific and biological factors. In the Hindmarsh Island Bridge Case, the High Court was divided on whether a law could be passed which adversely discriminated against Indigenous Australians or other races using this head of power. The unsettled nature of this principle means it is potentially permissible to pass discriminatory laws. The Expert Panel has recommended that this power be removed and that a new head of power is added in which allows the Federal Parliament to pass laws ‘with respect to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders’ and in their benefit....

Words: 571 - Pages: 3