This is written by “srininao” at my forum. I think it’s an excellent post and want to share this with you. You can also continue the thread if you want at http://www.successandlife.com/forum/showthread.php?t=9561

 Re: 7 lessons from the skool of Life that an MBA won’t teach you

Networking: If there’s anything I’ve learned in the 2 months since I’ve been out of school, it’s that I didn’t know a thing about networking. The only thing I learned about networking in business school is that it was important. The reality is, like most things in life, networking is a skill you have to develop. One of the things I made conscious effort to do was to follow the networking strategies of books like Brian Tracy’s Luck Factor and Never Eat Alone.* Perhaps the best networking advice I’d ever come across was volunteering for organizations in your area of professional interest. I started to do that and the interview I had today was purely the byproduct me recognizing the hiring manager’s name when I checked him in at an event. The next day he emailed me about the position even though I didn’t get a chance to talk to him at the event. The other important realization I’ve come to is that networking is something you should be doing whether you have a job or not. I’m in the position I’m in because I didn’t network in my last semester at business school the way I should have.

Ego: There really is no class in business school that teaches you how destructive the power of your ego is, although there should be. I made an error in judgment early in my business school career, which completely changed the trajectory of my MBA experience. I indirectly violated someone’s trust and never managed to earn it back. My ego-driven desire to get ahead was what caused that decision and in the long run, it didn’t even pay off.

Enlightenment: I’d love to see the day when a business school offers a course on enlightenment. Just imagine a bunch of MBA students sitting in a room meditating and contemplating life while the professors appears to be some sort of monk. This kind of coursework is highly unlikely, but enlightenment is an important quality of all important leaders. In fact at the top of Maslow’s Hierarchy is self-actualization and thus in my mind essential to effective leadership.

Goal Setting: To say that business school doesn’t teach us how to set goals* might seem ridiculous to some. But, if you ask some MBA students what they want to do they will most likely reply “find a job after graduation and make 6 figures.” While that’s a noble goal, it’s really more like a task. It’s only through my study of personal development that I’ve come to understand the power of goal-setting. If MBA programs offered a course on goal accomplishment for one semester, it’d be really interesting to see how much more effective people would be. If I could go back and do it again, I would have kept a visible reminder of my goals somewhere all during business school.

Perseverance: Nobody teaches you this in business school. This is a lesson that you can only get through the Skool of Life. Unfortunately we’ve been conditioned to believe failure is bad. But it’s times like these you have to remember that Michael Jordan said”

“I’ve missed more than 9000 shots in my career. I’ve lost almost 300 games. 26 times, I’ve been trusted to take the game winning shot and missed. I’ve failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed.”

Detachment: If we could master on skill that would forever change the quality of our life experience is becoming detached from outcomes. Business school is a goal driven environment where everybody is trying to get a good job, make good money, and end up doing what they love. So ,being detached from all outcomes would be almost looked down upon. However, if we did become detached we would find an a peace of mind inside ourselves that would allow us to sale through our personal and professional lives.

Patience: According to Wayne Dyer, in A Course in Miracles it says somewhere that “Infinite patience leads to immediate results.” I personally am not the most patient person in the world.* But, there is something I’ve noticed in my moments of patience. Usually after I surf, I’m often stuck in traffic, but I’m so wiped out and mellowed out that I’m completely patient no matter how bad the traffic is. This kind of peace where nothing phases you is an ideal place to operate from.

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Comments

10 Responses to “7 lessons from the skool of Life that an MBA won’t teach you”

  1. Alan Tiong June 17, 2009 at 12:35 pm #

    hm… Great lessons. There are indeed too many skills that are not taught in school which is essential to master it through real life experience.
    Nice post! Patric. Hope to see somemore related post!

  2. Shaiju June 18, 2009 at 4:47 am #

    All the seven lessons taught by the school of hard knocks, I think these cannot be taught in school as a theory. It has to be experienced when one comes out of the school. I think experience is the real teacher, the world is the real school.

  3. Affiliate Cloaker June 18, 2009 at 10:49 am #

    Education they say is not confined merely within the four-walls of a classroom. Nor does it end when you leave the portals of an academe. It’s a life-long process of discovery, tests, tweaks, and turns. It’s how you treat and face life’s lesson that makes who you are and what you’ve become. :)

  4. admin June 18, 2009 at 10:55 am #

    hey guys,

    I’m glad you agree with ‘srinirao’. I agree too – also, do you see that you’ll never know where, who and what you can learn from? :-)

    Take care

    Patric Chan
    http://www.successtrace.com

  5. Kathleen Schulweis June 18, 2009 at 12:05 pm #

    This is good advice and quite to the point. I teach networking skills to entrepreneurs, many of whom are MBA\\\’s, lawyers, and physicians.

    We all need this training and continuous reminders as there\\\’s more to life than social networking. Not that I am knocking social networking-I use that too.
    But: The top 3 ways to grow a business are still:
    networking
    referrals
    public speaking

    Kathleen

  6. Brother Paul June 18, 2009 at 1:27 pm #

    Excellent post, Patric.

    One other lesson that an M.B.A. won\’t teach you–the following people never had M.B.A.s: Bill Gates, Abraham Lincoln, Richard Branson, Mary Kay Ash, Walt Disney, Henry Ford, Michael Dell, Frank Lloyd Wright, and Steve Jobs.

    Success is more about “drive” than education. Because if you don’t have the “drive” you will never put your education into gear.

    As always, another great post, Patric!

    Make it a great day!

  7. Imatch June 18, 2009 at 10:10 pm #

    So true…so true…….these simple virtues are what accounts to the most in life! Patric you are so right…..this is more than just an MBA!

  8. Jackie June 19, 2009 at 7:00 am #

    The life lessons here equal no other.They are all in black and white as far as their existence and application is concerned.
    However,patience and detachment are alien to me in terms of application-Am jobless and broke…
    God bless.

  9. Nikhil Singh June 20, 2009 at 7:40 am #

    I think, schools never teach everything, so there should not be consider that every or any business school or tech school will teach you life lessons or other important lessions as well.
    There are so many examples where a particular owner of a successful company is not a MBA educated.
    All is depends upon the persons ability to grasp the things surrounding and work accordingly to achieve appropriate success in any field of work.

    All the Best buddies

    With regards
    Nikhil B. S.

  10. Iskandar June 26, 2009 at 10:10 pm #

    This 7 lessons will change my way of thoughts and thinking…Hoping that in future I\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\’m able to achieves all the Se7en Lessons…and be success…Never Say Die…

    Thanks…

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