Excerpt
Some business people intuitively know how to create wealth. They are constantly
increasing the value of their business holdings, regardless of industry
conditions or economic cycles. It’s more than good luck, since the same people
strike gold again and again. These wealth-creators just seem to have the Midas
touch. I call them Midas Managers.
Midas Managers are a rare breed: they account for less than 1% of all
businesspeople. This, in part, explains the lack of value currently being created
by private owners. Less than a quarter of private companies in the U.S.
will be worth more in five years than they are today.
Midas Managers are also unusual people. They build substantial wealth
based on market knowledge, and the ability, as legendary entrepreneur Ted
Turner describes it, to see “just over the horizon.” They are motivated by
money, but seek to create both personal and business wealth. They focus on
a few critical success factors and use straightforward metrics to measure their
progress toward them. They understand the behavior and motives of players
around them. They are reflective, but with enough salesmanship to get what
they want. They think strategically, but act practically. They usually master
only one or two wealth-creating strategies; then they look for situations where
they can apply these same strategies over and over. More often than not, they are contrarians. J. Paul Getty, a Midas Manager of the first degree, famously
summed up their mindset when he said that “no one can possibly achieve any
real and lasting success … by being a conformist.”
Of course, Midas Managers have existed as long as there’s been commercial
activity. Their names are very familiar to any student of business:
Medici, Rothschild, Morgan, Rockefeller, Buffett, and Gates. Most Midas
Managers, however, do not have familiar names. Only their families and
community know that they “fell into something.” It is this lesser-known group
that interests me, especially their ability to create wealth from relatively small
companies even during changing times. This book contains their stories.
New Rules of Wealth Creation
Every so often the rules of business change. In the past 200 years this has
occurred several times. First came the Industrial Revolution, which in the early
19th century ushered in the Industrial Age. John Henry may have beaten the
mechanical spike-driver in lore, but machines have dominated in every other
way for more than 150 years. Next came the Information Age, which began in
the 1950’s with the arrival of computers and reached a climax in the 1990’s
with the explosion of the Internet. Computers changed the way we work, making
complex jobs easy and enabling routine tasks to be performed at ever-lower
costs. During this Age, knowledge workers and MBAs reigned supreme.
Now we have entered the Conceptual Age. On September 11, 2001, the
United States was thrust into a global war with terrorists. At about the same
time, China entered the World Trade Organization. The combination of
these events birthed the Conceptual Age and thrust U.S. businesses into a
global war of their own. The Conceptual Age marks the intersection of
globalization, logistics, and advanced technology. This Age is defined by
multi-dimensional thinking. This Age requires business owners to conceptualize their way to success. Operational excellence is no longer enough. In
the Conceptual Age, it is merely the starting point. Machines, capital and
employees are no longer the main factors in creating business wealth. In
the Conceptual Age, the biggest is the manager’s ability to conceptualize
solutions. Walt Disney would be proud: our imaginations are now the major
constraint on wealth creation.
There are various ways to describe behavior required for creating wealth
in the Conceptual Age. But the most important skills center on the human
mind, or, more precisely, on the two hemispheres of the brain. The Information
Age worked the left side of our brains, where we do heavy analytical
lifting; success in the current Age relies on the right side, the source of our
creativity. In his book, A Whole New Mind: Moving from the Information
Age to the Conceptual Age, author Daniel H. Pink argues that the left brain
capabilities that ruled the Information Age, while still necessary, aren’t sufficient
in the Conceptual Age. The skill sets required now reflect the imperative
placed on design, innovation and market knowledge in the 21st century. As
children, many of us were told to avoid artistic careers in favor of a more
reliable future in business. In the Conceptual Age, our ability to be “artsy”
will in large part determine our success in business. In a world where the
major resources are available to everyone, it is the ability to do more with
less that separates winners from losers.