Warren Buffett’s Advice to 2020 graduating students : Read, Learn to communicate, Find the job you love, it’s out there
Warren Buffett advises young people to read extensively, work on their communication skills, and strive for a job they will be excited to do each day.
The billionaire investor and
Berkshire Hathaway CEO shared those tips during a recent conversation with the
chancellor of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Their discussion served as
a virtual commencement address for students
graduating from Buffett's alma mater on Saturday, December 19.
Here are Key points
in Mr Buffett's advice as compiled by Business Insider:
1. "I would say this to this current year's class: I would love to
trade places with any of them. They feel they're going out into an uncertain
world but there's never been a better time."
2. "I owe my existence to the University of Nebraska. It doesn't get
much more fundamental than that." - Buffett's parents, Howard and Leila,
met at the college while working for The Daily Nebraskan newspaper.
3. "I've gotten a lot of nice gifts in my life but I don't think
I've ever gotten a nicer one than that." - Students from the university
once gave Buffett a book containing all of the front pages of The Daily
Nebraskan from the period when his father was the paper's editor.
4. "You want to look for the job in life that you would take if you
didn't need a job. Don't settle for anything, eventually, that's less than
working for a company you admire or people you admire - the job that if you had
no need for the money, it's still the job that you'd jump out of bed for in the
morning."
5. "I've been lucky enough to have one like that and I can tell you
there's just nothing like that. It isn't work any more, it's actually something
you look forward to every day. You won't necessarily find it the day you get
out, but it is out there."
6. "Develop communication skills. You've got to be able to write
well and you've got to be able to talk well and just fill your head. It is such
a wonderful time in life to have every day end up with you knowing a lot of
things that you didn't know the day before."
7. "I was so lucky to be born in the United States. I was lucky to
be born in Nebraska. I was a little bit lucky to have the parents I had, and I
was lucky to get the education I got. You go out with a winning hand. Now, that
doesn't mean that every single day is perfect, the world isn't that way. But
try to think of another country where you'd rather be. Try to think of another
era in which you would rather exist. I don't think you can do it."
8. "There's nothing that beats reading. You want to have an
inquisitive mind. People sometimes say to me, 'If you could only have lunch
with one person living or dead, who would you pick?' Well the truth is, by
reading you can have lunch with Ben Franklin or every great personality in the
history of the world."
9. "One of the family said one time I was a book with legs."
10. "By the age of 90, believe me, I've known a lot of people who
got very rich in their lives who were not successes. I've known people who were
very famous in their activities - not successes. I have never known anybody who
got to the age of 70 or so, and had all of the people love him or her that they
wanted, who ever felt like anything but a success."
11. "If your children, if your spouse, if your coworkers, if those
people at age 65 or 70, having seen what you do with them over a lifetime, if
you have the love of those people, you are a success. I've never seen anybody
that felt anything but a success if they had it. I've seen loads of people who
had maybe more talent than them, more money, more fame, but if they didn't have
that it was very hollow."
Source: Business Insider
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