9 Lessons I Learned from Peter Thiel about Contrarian Ideas, Investing, and Startup Success
When you look at the most successful people in Silicon Valley, a pattern emerges. They are not simply smart. Nor are they merely ambitious.
What sets them apart is their willingness to hold ideas that sound wrong to most people and still pursue them with relentless conviction.
Peter Thiel is perhaps the clearest embodiment of this quality. He has built his careerâand his fortuneâon the belief that being contrarian is not just about being different. It is about being right when everyone else is wrong.
To understand Thielâs worldview, it helps to think about the way he frames questions. Where most investors ask, âWhat is everyone excited about?â he asks, âWhat is overlooked?â While others look for evidence that confirms their assumptions, he searches for the blind spots in our collective vision.
This habit of questioning consensus is what led him to back a fledgling social network called Facebook when it was still just a curiosity among college students.
Grab a copy of this book now!
9 Lessons I Learned from Peter Thiel about Contrarian Ideas, Investing, and Startup Success - John Korsh
9 Lessons I Learned from Peter Thiel about Contrarian Ideas, Investing, and Startup Success
When you look at the most successful people in Silicon Valley, a pattern emerges. They are not simply smart. Nor are they merely ambitious.
What sets them apart is their willingness to hold ideas that sound wrong to most people and still pursue them with relentless conviction.
Peter Thiel is perhaps the clearest embodiment of this quality. He has built his careerâand his fortuneâon the belief that being contrarian is not just about being different. It is about being right when everyone else is wrong.
To understand Thielâs worldview, it helps to think about the way he frames questions. Where most investors ask, âWhat is everyone excited about?â he asks, âWhat is overlooked?â While others look for evidence that confirms their assumptions, he searches for the blind spots in our collective vision.
This habit of questioning consensus is what led him to back a fledgling social network called Facebook when it was still just a curiosity among college students.
Grab a copy of this book now!