What is the secret of success in life?
We spoke to three successful Nobel Laureates and asked them if they believe there is such a thing as 'the secret to success'
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We spoke to three successful Nobel Laureates and asked them if they believe there is such a thing as 'the secret to success'
If you put Nobel Laureates Joseph E. Stiglitz, Robert C. Merton and Robert J. Shiller in a room together, you wouldn鈥檛 find many similarities amongst them beyond the fact that they all received the highest honor in their academic field. So how did they do it?
For Stiglitz, he says that it was a number of different factors that led him to where he is today.
鈥淚 came from a very poor town in Gary, Indiana, where a degree was what was viewed as absolutely necessary to going forward,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd yet I鈥檇 always had a maybe excessively idealistic view that was mattered was ideas. I had the view, well, my success ought to be judged not by whether I have a degree or not but by what I do.鈥
In a world where credentials took precedence, Stiglitz took a leap of faith that he attributes to bravery. Others may call it something closer to crazy; he decided to get a PhD without an undergraduate degree.
鈥淚t was a mixture of idealism, that what really mattered was what you did and your ideas,鈥 Stiglitz says. 鈥淎nd maybe a mild dose of overconfidence.鈥
Entrepreneurs are often wrong too, but the lucky ones will make it.
Robert Shiller on the other hand approached his career, and ultimate success, with more of an entrepreneurial edge.
鈥淭here just isn鈥檛 any scientific authority that can investigate business ideas, you can鈥檛 centralize it,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t takes entrepreneurial judgement. And the entrepreneurs are often wrong too, but the lucky ones will make it.鈥
Change involves some amounts of risk. And we have to deal with it.
A great idea is a nice thing to have, but you also need to make it work, says Nobel Laureate Robert Merton. When we asked him for his secret to success, he shared a story about America鈥檚 greatest inventor.
鈥淓dison supposedly said when asked what鈥檚 the secret for successful invention,鈥 begins Merton. 鈥淭en percent inspiration and 90 percent perspiration. Meaning a great idea is good, but the really big thing is implementing the idea, making it work. And I think that鈥檚 what鈥檚 driven me.鈥
For Merton, his success has been all about knowing when to take risks and how to take them properly. He likes using a particular analogy to illustrate how crucial finding that balance can be.
鈥淚f you built a train that could go 300 kilometers an hour, but if the track will not take more than 100 kilometers an hour, you鈥檇 be insane to drive it at 300,鈥 says Merton. 鈥淏ut if always say we鈥檙e going to keep the speed limit at 100, you鈥檒l never have any innovation.鈥
鈥淐hanges involves some amounts of risk,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd we have to deal with it.鈥
Everything these Laureates have accomplished show how much you can achieve when you trust in yourself and your ideas. It proves that setting ambitious goals and focusing on something you're passionate about will take you far. However, what is certain is that success is personal and, dependent on whom you ask, the answer will always differ.
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