Opinion & Editorial

Olympian: 3 items for real success

I’ve hit rock bottom more times than I can count.
As a gymnast, I overcame injuries that would have ended many other athletes’ careers – only to watch my Olympic dreams slip out of reach. As a businessman, I built a successful start-up – and then lost it all.
The main thing I’ve learned? Setbacks can be productive if you’re willing to learn from them. Today, as I lead a successful company, I constantly inform my decision-making with the lessons I learned as an athlete and entrepreneur:
* First, never give up.
When I was 12, I trained under gymnastics coach Ralph Reeves, the toughest coach I ever had. I would spend hours perfecting my craft – getting up on the pommel horse as I tried not to look down at my cracked and bloodied hands. Upon finishing each routine, Coach Reeves would utter one word: “Again.”
As the Junior Olympic Games approached, it looked like my hard work was about to pay off. Then, I blew out my knee and tore my ACL, MCL and meniscus while training. Refusing to let my injury determine my fate, I went on to win my first national championship.
I eventually graduated from the University of Oklahoma as a five-time All-American and NCAA champion with a spot on the Olympic roster. But due to the United States’ boycott of the 1980 Moscow Olympics, I never got a chance to participate.
I was devastated, but I picked myself up – again – and transitioned to the business world. More setbacks awaited.
* Second? Forgive others.
In the mid-1980s, I started my first company. But before I knew it, the relationship I had with my business partner soured and I found myself broke, divorced and living in a tiny apartment on a loan from my ex-father-in-law.
That episode would have been enough for a logical person to never open another business.
Call me illogical. After this incident, I went on to build and sell multiple successful companies. I say this not to brag, but merely to prove my bona fides to other entrepreneurs who are just starting out and facing their own challenges.
It’s crucial to forgive your colleagues, your subordinates, even yourself. I didn’t dwell on losing my Olympic dreams; I moved on to compete as a businessman. And I didn’t vow revenge on my ex-partner, I forgave him.
* Finally, trust but verify.
As an athlete, I had to trust and listen to my body, my doctors, my coaches and trainers to overcome my injuries. After my experiences, I’ve learned to pay very close attention to what people are saying – and more importantly, what they aren’t saying – in the boardroom. Reading body language and getting to know people before you do business with them is just as important as studying their qualifications on paper.
Today, as I lead a business, I spend countless hours strategizing for and planning out my board meetings. Sometimes my preparation lasts three times as long as the actually meeting. But as I learned throughout my athletic experience, preparation is the best way to ensure success.
If you’re an entrepreneur, you will eventually experience a business setback. It’s inevitable. But the next time you do – pause, make a game plan and think to yourself, “again.”

Michael Wilson is the CEO of Healthcare Highways. This piece originally ran on InnovationMap.com.

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