Jim
Koch is an American entrepreneur, author and a passionate beer lover who left
his lucrative business in Wall Street to start his own beer company, Boston
Beer, from scratch and make it among the most successful brands in the US
market with an annual revenue of around $1 billion. I have read a few books
about Koch, including his book, Quench Your Own Thirst: Business Lessons
Learned Over a Beer or Two, and below are four lessons I believe you should
learn from Koch`s thrilling life.
1. Do what you
love
Koch
had a business and law degree from Harvard and had a lucrative, high-paying
job, yet he wasn’t happy. When he thought about the whole situation, he
realized that consulting wasn’t what he wanted to do for the rest of his life. So
he quit after spending five years at a consulting group in Boston and went to
do what he loved best; manufacturing and selling beer.
“Getting rich is life’s biggest booby trap. It comes down to what would
you rather be, happy or rich? I say do what’s gonna make you happy.” – Jim
Koch
2. Career
wanderings aren’t bad
If
you still can’t find your calling or have wasted a couple of years working on
something you later found out doesn`t fit you, don`t worry. Koch`s career
path wasn`t linear. He began his adulthood life deciding to be in the beer
business. In fact, he was encouraged not to do so by his father whose net
income in the last six months of his brewing career was less than $500.
Koch
found his calling at the age of 34 and believes he wouldn’t have made it without his many career wanderings,
including working as an outward bound instructor and spending three and a half
years mountaineering across America.
One
of the lessons he learned from that job is that you never climb a mountain to
get to the middle. You either aim for the top or don`t climb at all. With this
lesson in mind, Koch intended to make The Boston Beer Company the biggest
high-end beer in America, and now his net worth is over $1 billion.
3. When there’s
a will, there’s a way
When
he launched his first product, Koch`s best idea was to hire someone to sell it for him because,
though he knew a lot about brewing and the law, he wasn’t a good salesman.
Unfortunately, none of the five Boston-based wholesalers agreed to represent
him thinking the market wasn’t ready for an expensive American beer.
So
he got himself a wholesaler license, leased a truck and hovered around Boston
cold-calling bars. They liked his beer, and the wholesaler`s cut went into his
pocket.
“The values you want to live have to come from your own living heart.
You have to be the best model of those values. You have to push yourself to the
highest possible standard, because it’s not reasonable to expect anybody else
to have a higher standard than you do as a leader.” – Jim Koch
4. Monday may
never come
One
Friday morning, a friend left a message with Koch`s secretary that he would
call him on Monday. Unfortunately, that man didn’t make it and died of a heart
attack on Sunday. So Koch asked for that message to be framed and hung on his
office wall to remind him that Monday doesn’t always come. The lesson here is
simple; life is short and whatever you have on your plate do it ASAP, if not
now.
One
of the things you must do, according to Koch, is start collecting experiences
as quickly as possible. If you’re in your twenties or thirties, the best
question to ask yourself is “What experiences will I regret not having ten years from
now?” Write them down, make a plan and a deadline and
use necessity and pressure to force yourself to take action because you
probably won’t have enough time or freedom to do many things once you start a
career, get married, and have a family.
Life is also short relationship-wise. You don’t know when your
loved ones will go. One day, one of you will leave, and you don’t know whether
you`ll ever have a goodbye moment together.
So make it a habit each day of
calling somebody you haven’t seen in years or make sure your friends or parents
are okay. It will make both of you feel good, and when that inevitable moment
comes, you won’t have many regrets.
Kindly Note : All ideas and materials presented herein are for informational and educational purposes only, and is not intended for commercial or trading purposes. Neither does it mean to misguide anyone. Kindly make informed decisions on your own risk. Neither livettcelearn.blogspot.in website nor any of its owner shall be liable for any errors or delays in the content or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.
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