Fortune | FORTUNE 10月10日 17:09
创业者O'Kelley的经验:失败与成长
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本文讲述了创业家O'Kelley早期职业生涯中的多次失败经历,包括被解雇和公司出售。他分享了从这些挫折中学习到的宝贵经验,强调了自我认知、从错误中吸取教训以及坚持不懈的重要性。O'Kelley认为,年轻时的失败经历是通往智慧和成功的必经之路,并鼓励新一代创业者拥抱挑战,从每一次经历中积累经验,最终实现职业目标。

💡 早期失败是成长的催化剂:O'Kelley在20多岁时经历了三次被解雇,但他并未因此气馁,反而认为这些经历帮助他认识自我,并为未来的成功奠定了基础。他强调,正是这些“艰难的学习”塑造了他。

🚀 拥抱不确定性,吸取教训:O'Kelley的早期职业生涯充满了动荡,包括dot-com泡沫的影响和公司的出售。他坦承自己曾因愤怒和不理解而处理不当,但正是这些负面经历让他认识到需要更成熟地应对商业世界的挑战。

🌟 创业的价值在于持续学习和积累:O'Kelley通过创立AppNexus并成功出售,以及联合创立Scope3,最终实现了巨大的商业成功。他认为,30年的创业经验,包括无数的错误和与优秀人才的合作,是他最大的财富,提供了巨大的优势。

🎯 领导力的基石是经验而非一帆风顺:O'Kelley鼓励年轻一代拥抱被解雇的经历,将其视为领导力发展的重要组成部分。他认为,正是这些经历帮助建立起在科技领域取得成功所需的“肌肉”。

“For many of us who are entrepreneurs, we don’t listen to anybody, and we just make a bunch of mistakes,” O’Kelley tells Fortune’s Orianna Rosa Royle. “I go back to myself in my 20s, I wasn’t going to listen to anyone. I thought I knew everything, I burned a lot of bridges, and spent a lot of time learning the hard way.”

After graduating from Princeton University in 1999, the serial entrepreneur was ready to take on the tech industry. O’Kelley’s first defeat came at a little consulting company, where he tried his hand at launching an internet commerce company. It failed, and so he was fired (by his best friend, no less). “It was pretty embarrassing to go to Princeton and six weeks after college, be unemployed on your dad’s sofa.” he recalls.

Unemployed and stuck living back at his parents’ home, he made some calls to former mentors begging for a job. Luckily, an opportunity swiftly came up, and he jumped to a vice president role at IT consulting firm LogicSpan—but again, the stint was short-lived. 

The dot-com crash hit, and the company had to be sold to another consulting firm. Every single employee’s job was saved, but O’Kelley put his own role on the chopping block after he let his boss know just how betrayed he felt by the sale.

“I was like, ‘I worked my butt off for you, I trusted you—how dare you sell the company?’ I kind of threw a fit. I definitely handled it poorly, and the guy who hired me fired me,” he adds. 

“He taught me so much, and I just couldn’t get my head around the idea that I wasn’t the center of the world. I needed a Galileo to come in and just smack me upside the head and say, ‘It’s the dot-com crash. People are laying off hundreds of thousands of people.’” 

The third layoff that cost him ‘tens of millions’ of dollars—but it inspired his big break

At this point, O’Kelley was only a few years into his post-grad career and had already been sacked twice. But he wasn’t deterred, and actually landed a promotion: An executive vice president role at Cetova, a corporate performance management business. 

“That one I didn’t get fired from, because I quit in a huff,” he says, before adding it landed him an even bigger opportunity. O’Kelley pivoted to his first C-suite role as CTO of online advertising company Right Media, where he helped invent the ad exchange and technology that would later become programmatic advertising. 

But in 2007, he got fired moments before Yahoo snapped up the company for $850 million—and it was the best thing that ever happened to him. 

“I very wisely walked into the boardroom before they took the offer and said, ‘You all would be freaking crazy to take this deal.’ And so they fired me. And getting fired cost me tens of millions of dollars,” O’Kelly recalls. 

“I was so angry about getting fired that I started AppNexus the second my non-compete was over, and spent the next four years taking every single customer back from Right Media,” he adds. “That’s a pretty furious, intense way to spend my first 10 years out of college. I still haven’t had a good exit from a company.” 

Becoming his own boss turned out to be the best career move O’Kelley ever made. A decade after founding the ad-tech company he sold it to AT&T for $1.6 billion—and became a multimillionaire in the process. He then went on to cofound and lead Scope3, which achieved a valuation of $100 million in 2023 after a $20 million funding boost. 

Advice for Gen Z: getting fired makes you a better leader 

Entrepreneurs hoping to make a name in the tech scene may hear O’Kelley’s early career journey and wince at the repeat firings and uncertainty that came with it. But that’s exactly what the 48-year-old CEO advises that Gen Zers today, who are struggling to get a footing and even getting fired months into new roles, should embrace.

“I got fired three times in my early 20s, but I was getting fired for the right reasons in a sense of trying to figure out who I am—and that self awareness, that journey to wisdom, that journey to meaning and purpose, that is the point of life, is the point of business,” O’Kelley explains. 

“Other folks will recognize you in that journey, and they’ll hire you…That’s the point of being young, is to find the path to being old and wise.”

The only non-negotiable? Learn from it all—the good, the bad, and the ugly. Whether it be from shadowing senior staffers, volunteering to do the grunt work, or even getting fired, the Gen X executive says experience builds the muscle Gen Z will need to lead.

“For anybody early in their career, investments you make in yourself early pay off big time later,” O’Kelley says. “I’ve worked for 30 years as an entrepreneur. I’ve seen everything—or at least a lot of things. I’ve made so many mistakes. I’ve worked with so many amazing people. The richness of everything I’ve learned gives me a massive advantage at this point in my life.”

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创业 O'Kelley 职业发展 失败 成长 领导力 Entrepreneurship O'Kelley Career Development Failure Growth Leadership
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