Some people want to believe there’s a magic bullet that leads to business success, and they’ll hang on to a theory because it seems so simple. When Malcolm Gladwell wrote in his book Outliers that it took 10,000 hours to master something, people ran with it, and started repeating that advice. There are many examples of successful business people who spent thousands of hours building great companies, such as Henry Ford, Ray Kroc, Steve Jobs, and numerous others, so the 10,000-rule would apply. However, it doesn’t always work that way. 

Bryant Urstadt in his Bloomberg Businessweek article, “Oh, the Places You Won’t Go,” says that success is a combination of nature and nurture, and some people attain success by working a fraction of those thousands of hours, while others never become successful even after 10,000 hours.

Achieving success in business comes down to the same principles that have always been true: you have to work hard, spread your risk, keep making small decisions, avoid procrastinating, and get lucky. Then there are the practical day-to-day efforts such as marketing and servicing your customers effectively, watching your cash flow, treating your employees right, creating great products and services, and fulfilling the specific pain of your industry. It may take 10 hours, 10,000 hours, or 100,000 hours to get there.

If you’ve read Outliers or have opinions about what it takes to succeed, let me know in the comments below.