{"id":2092,"date":"2017-09-03T05:55:05","date_gmt":"2017-09-03T12:55:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/moneyppl.com\/?p=2092"},"modified":"2023-03-05T04:27:13","modified_gmt":"2023-03-05T11:27:13","slug":"8-ways-facemicroapplegooglezon-ceos-successfully-handle-stress-running-huge-business","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/dev.moneyppl.com\/8-ways-facemicroapplegooglezon-ceos-successfully-handle-stress-running-huge-business\/2092\/","title":{"rendered":"8 Ways Successful CEOs Handle The Stress of Running a Huge Business"},"content":{"rendered":"
Our reality is essentially constituted by order and chaos, and our lives are essentially a process of navigating the line between the two.<\/p>\n
You encounter chaos when you don’t understand what’s going on, you can’t easily predict what’s going to happen next, or you don’t experience the results you expect to when you take a certain action.<\/p>\n
You experience order when you understand what’s happening, you can pretty easily predict what’s going to happen next, and you get the results that you expect to have when you take a certain action.<\/p>\n
When you experience too much chaos it can cause a lot of stress. Uncertainty means you don’t know what you’re facing, so you feel like you’re facing everything, and that takes an immense toll after very long.<\/p>\n
When you experience too much order, it can also cause a lot of stress. Too much order is tyrannical, it’s soul crushing, it’s mind numbing, and it’s tedious, and it’s boring.<\/p>\n
What you want to have in your life is the exact right mix of order and chaos. You want to have one foot in order and the other in chaos. So you have a “home base” so to speak, and a new territory to explore.<\/p>\n
You don’t want so much chaos that you’re terrified, and you don’t want so much order that you’re dead inside.<\/p>\n
Instead the ideal balance gives you a sense that time is passing correctly. When you strike the ideal balance between chaos and order, you’re interested in what you’re doing and you forget about yourself. You get lost in the moment. You’re engaged. You’re exploring, learning, and likely creating something.<\/p>\n
If you feel overwhelmed by stress in your life, and that stress is sapping your energy instead of charging you up, it may be that the balance of chaos and order in your life is off somehow.<\/p>\n
Sometimes this is unavoidable, especially if you are in the pursuit of greatness and relevance and usefulness to your society. As you take on responsibility for more (and that is what becoming successful ultimately means, it means you are given greater and greater responsibility as you prove yourself worthy of it to your society), there are more encounters with both chaos and tyrannical order.<\/p>\n
Reckoning with this, transforming total chaos into balanced order by leaning into it and bringing your attention and energy to bear upon it, to understand it, make sense of it, and map it out to gain mastery over it- is the work of the successful among us.<\/p>\n
Also: transforming too much order into chaos, by introducing disruptive (and better) thinking into an overly ordered system is the work of the most successful among us.<\/p>\n
Here’s how the CEOs of some of the world biggest companies, the people who do this best and have to do it the most, successfully handle the stress of running a huge business.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Bill Gates, the richest man in the world for many years running, and the founder of the world-bestriding, software titan, Microsoft Corporation, deals with the stress of running the world’s biggest software company (and the world’s biggest charity, The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation) by reading before bed.<\/p>\n He likes to read before he goes to sleep every night, and is so committed to the habit that he always reads for at least an hour before going to sleep, no matter how late it is. The difference in the self-reported amount of reading done by the rich versus the poor according to studies is staggering.<\/p>\n The average member of the one percent (the top one percent of income earners in the United States) reads 60 books a year, which comes out to 5 each month. The average member of the bottom 25% of income earners in the United States reads 0 books a year. It turns out that reading every day both increases the amount of knowledge you have (and remember that knowledge is power), and is also a great antidote to stress.<\/p>\n Words are inherently the imposition of logical order on a disorderly and chaotic world by the thinking human mind. Reading every day puts you in the mindset of doing this, and of doing it well. Thinking clearly and critically is not easy, but it can be learned just like any other skill, and we all generally have a very high aptitude for developing this skill to its utmost.<\/p>\n The written word is the most effective form of clear thinking. Committing words to writing requires the mind to organize them clearly and think about them critically. Running your brain through this process is one of the most important things you can do on a daily basis both to combat stress and sharpen yourself. By participating in the act of organizing and reckoning with the chaotic world through written words, you train your brain to do this in your every waking moment.<\/p>\n Young Gates has taken a lot of advice from mentor Warren Buffett throughout the years, and Gates says that the key to Warren Buffett’s success is keeping things simple. Once in an interview with Fortune Magazine, Gates told the interviewer about Buffett:<\/p>\n “His ability to boil things down, to just work on the things that really count, to think through the basics — it’s so amazing that he can do that. It’s a special form of genius.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Daily reading sharpens the mind’s ability to think clearly about a subject and reduce it to its most simple essentials.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n Tim Cook is the CEO of Apple and it is under his oversight that the world renowned maker of incredibly beautiful, elegant, and downright sexy computers, phones, and music players grew to the point of being the most valuable company in the world.<\/p>\n These Cupertino, California cats have just literally billions of dollars, cash on hand, sitting around in bank accounts. It’s insane the kind of money the world has eagerly poured into their coffers for their electronic devices.<\/p>\n Managing a business that powerful and that important is one of the most high stress positions to be in on the entire planet by far. Tim Cook has to deal with the ever changing marketplace and the breakneck speed of technological innovation, especially in software. On top of that, he has to fight off other multi-billion dollar corporations that are gunning for his profits, both through market competition, and through endless legal actions over intellectual property disputes that keep Apple fighting in the court system for hundreds of millions of dollars.<\/p>\n So if you think your job’s stressful, listen to what Tim Cook says to do about stress. The Apple CEO was recently given an honorary degree from the University of Glasgow, and in his address to the students of that college when he visited to accept his degree, Cook advised students to simply tune out the noise of cynics, and critics, and haters, and negative thoughts:<\/p>\n “In today’s environment, the world is full of cynics and you have to tune them out. Because if not, they become a cancer in your mind, in your thinking, and you begin thinking that you can’t or that life is negative.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Stay true to a vision and ignore the voices that tell you all the reasons you can’t, all the reasons you should be hesitant, all the reasons you should be fearful, or anxious, or timid. You don’t need to hear that garbage. You really don’t.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n Meg Whitman is one of America’s most successful and capable CEOs with an amazing career at several Fortune 100 companies such as Proctor & Gamble, eBay, and now Hewlett-Packard. One thing Meg Whitman does to reduce stress in her extremely high stress jobs, is she goes fly fishing with her son about six times a year.<\/p>\n Engaging in leisurely activities, especially with a physical component and aspect of communion with nature is about the most important way you can decompress and recharge your batteries to keep fighting the good fight and handle the stress of making your way to the very top of your field of work.<\/p>\n Nature is where our ancestors started not very long ago. Our understanding of nature is hardwired into us by instinct. Even if you had never seen a snake in your entire life, and had never been told what one was, the first time you saw one, you would jump so high your head would hit the ceiling. And you would keep your distance from it. And probably, you would be intensely fascinated with it and have trouble looking away from it.<\/p>\n The same is true of your experience of a sunset, waves crashing on an ocean beach, a bubbling stream of water passing over smooth river stone in a creek, or stepping into a forest. Even if you’d never seen a forest before and had no cultural context for understanding it, you would some how feel both at home and in a mysterious and magical place with regenerative properties for your mental health.<\/p>\n Going out into nature and spending a relaxing time doing a nice outdoor sport like fly fishing or whatever it is that you personally like, brings everything back into proper alignment. It smooths out the rough places in your mindset, war weary from the many battles of your struggle upward. It restores your sense of awe and wonder.<\/p>\n It gives you a living picture of the balance and harmony of nature and civilization, chaos and order, and you will bring that picture back with you into your work and pursue your goals with renewed vigor.<\/p>\n1. Bill Gates<\/h2>\n
2. Tim Cook<\/h2>\n
3. Meg Whitman<\/h2>\n