Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Life lessons - how I want to live my life

Randy Pausch's Last Lecture is a great lesson about how to live your life. If you haven't seen it (or read the book) I strongly recommend you watch it. The lecture surely impacted my approach to life and how I manage my priorities.

Over the last few years (and especially during my MBA), I have started to write down my own life lessons - the principles I want to apply to my own life. It is a list that gets refined over time and that I put together for myself - but I would be very pleased if it can inspire or influence just another person.

  1. Failures are forgotten but regrets stay with you forever...
  2. Listen before you speak
  3. Be honest - don't try to be someone else and don't bend the truth. There is less to remember that way!
  4. Don't be afraid of failure - Edison said "I haven't failed. I've just found 10000 ways that wont work". Embrace your mistakes and learn from them - Failure is what happens on the way to success.
  5. See competition as a blessing - Rivalry raises the bar for everyone and forces you to improve.
  6. Keep it simple - life is complicated enough. If your grand-mother can't get what you are trying to say, go back because it's too complicated
  7. Don’t let perfection get in the way of progress - Thinking and planning should not prevent you from acting and making progress
  8. Don't do anything stupid
  9. It's easier to ask for forgiveness than to ask for permission – you'll be surprised what you can get away with! (Note - the Don't do anything stupid has priority on this one...) When you are biased towards action, sometimes you just can't wait for permission!
  10. Don't give up - just think about how good you'll feel after you have passed through the tough times
  11. Have fun! Life doesn't have to be that serious after all...
  12. Act as if everyday was your last day on earth. Chasing Daylight by Gene O'Kelly is another great source of inspiration. After being informed of his imminent death, O'Kelly, CEO of one of the Big 4, documents how he managed the few months he had left to spend with friends and family. The strongest message? He kept his loved ones for the end - and ended up not having as much time as he wanted with them. I am not planning to leave this earth anytime soon but I want to be investing my time as if I was today was my last day. When you are on your deathbed, it's too late to fix those things...
I will be refining this list over time - coments welcome!

About me...

The first thing I would do in the real world is to introduce myself - and that's how I'll start my blog! Here is my bio...

Jean-Pierre Biard is a Tokyo-based innovator and entrepreneur. Trilingual and bicultural, JP first came to Japan at the age of 17 on a Rotary exchange. After completing his Bachelor of Commerce in his native Canada, he decided to move permanently to Tokyo in 2002.

JP has a background in strategic change management, business intelligence and enterprise data in the financial industry. During his 6 years with Lehman Brothers, JP became the youngest manager within operations in Asia and was the founding member of Enterprise Information Services and Sales Technology in Asia where he interacted with over 2000 users across 6 countries.

JP left Lehman in ’08 to complete his MBA at McGill University, where he focused on strategy and entrepreneurship. JP also made great use of his time back in school to travel throughout the Americas and spend some quality time with his two daughters.

JP is currently back in Tokyo and considering opportunities in the web / technology / finance areas while working on a number of projects.