Q: What daily activities do you find inspiring and motivating? — Linda, Malmo, Sweden
On Monday, I went out to the Mojave Desert to watch Virgin Galactic, our space tourism company, complete its first rocket-powered flight — it was a truly awesome sight. I treasure such moments, when my team and I find ways to make the impossible possible, inspiring ourselves and others to attempt even greater feats.
I don’t seek out motivation and inspiration, yet these qualities are essential to my work. I tend to have a lot of energy, so I often find it hard to stop myself from thinking about and talking about all the possibilities facing our businesses. When I was writing my autobiography, Losing My Virginity (Virgin Hardbacks, 1998), I thought about calling it “Talking Ahead of Myself,” because whenever I come up with an exciting new idea or hear about a thrilling new proposal, I want to tell the world right away.
That’s partly because I find telling others about our ideas to be motivating: Even if some people think we’re being unrealistic, the first step in making an idea a reality is often just sharing it. My talking publicly about our plans has sometimes sparked interest from potential investors and, in the case of international expansion, local partners, which gives our talented teams at Virgin extra incentive to forge ahead.
A lot of our best ideas for making the impossible possible and the impetus to pursue them have come from an unlikely source: our April Fools’ Day jokes. Long ago, we embraced the annual tradition of playing elaborate pranks on our competitors, the media and the public. In the past we announced that we bought Pluto; we said that we were launching a company called Virgin Volcanic to explore the world’s most active volcanoes; and in 1989 we even flew a UFO over London (it was actually a hot-air balloon built to look like a saucer).
This year we announced that Virgin Atlantic was introducing new glass-bottomed planes that would fly between London and Aberdeen, Scotland. The concept captured people’s imaginations, and many urged us to make it happen, so we set to work. Our team found that while building glass-bottomed planes probably wouldn’t be practical since luggage is usually stored below, installing giant windows in the roofs of our planes for stargazing at night and so that passengers can view the beautiful vistas during the day may someday be possible, when someone develops a lighter type of glass. (We’re discussing the possibilities with manufacturers and will keep people posted.)
We’ve found that there’s real value in inspiring our customers, since it reminds them of our adventurous spirit and our commitment to disrupting stale industries.
Because we’re known to play pranks, sometimes people don’t believe us when we’re serious.
In 2004, when we announced our plans to create Virgin Galactic, lots of people thought we were joking. But then in 2008, when we sent out an announcement about a new partnership with Google to launch Virgle, a business dedicated to creating a human settlement on Mars, some people, including some news agencies, took us at our word. Many in the Las Vegas audience, where we unveiled the joke, wanted to sign up. IMAGE – HOW STUFF WORKS
But be careful about playing pranks on your competitors — you may inspire them instead. [Project Virgle, dubbed by Virgin and Google as Virgle: The Adventure of Many Lifetimes, was a Google April Fools’ joke featured on the main page of Google Search on April 1, 2008. The motto of Project Virgle was, “Things will get better. Eventually”.]
In 1986, I played an April Fools’ joke on the music industry, claiming that we had introduced a supercomputer called Music Box that would let people download any song, anywhere. Record label bosses from around the world called us up and pleaded with us not to kill their businesses. The joke was on us, though: Steve Jobs, the Apple co-founder, told me that the story helped to inspire iTunes, the online music store that revolutionized the music industry — and brought our music retail business, Virgin Megastores, to its knees.
If you’re an entrepreneur looking for a revolutionary idea, you will probably need to take inspiration from wherever you can find it, including rivals’ products and services, fiction, and even your own childhood dreams. Or perhaps you need to inspire your team to reach for more ordinary goals like improving your business’s profit margin or introducing a new product that’s still at the prototype stage. The point is to get the discussion started: If you talk ahead, your team will understand your vision for the company, and you can start working toward it together.
When you encounter naysayers, just keep forging ahead.
After all, who would have thought that the company that brought you the Sex Pistols would go on to run a bank? Or that the guy who needed to borrow a secondhand plane to launch an airline would one day help to create the space tourism industry?
As the great actress Audrey Hepburn said, “Nothing is impossible, the word itself says ‘I’m possible!'”
The Woman Beside the Man
When asked how she coped with having such a driven husband, Joan Branson replied, “Extremism in the pursuit of excellence is not a vice.”
She went on to say that behind the hype that surrounds her billionaire husband, is a man who works from home and spends a lot of time with the family.
A man who focuses on being creative rather than competitive.
A man who simply tries to be better than he was yesterday.
A man who if he fails is fond of quoting Lord Sebastian Coe: “Winning is built on a robust diet of defeat.”
‘Excel don’t compete …’ .great advice Joan.
Editor’s Note: Entrepreneur Richard Branson regularly shares his business experience and advice with readers.
Thanks to Lorre White, The Luxury Guru
Image: How to Make A Difference
Lorre White celebrates Richard Branson on How to Stay Inspired
May 8, 2013 by