1. Personal integrity is all.
While there are courses in Business Ethics in all business schools,
they generally deal with larger, corporate, strategic and tactical
issues. What I'm talking about here are personal ethics, which turn out
to be the single most important thing affecting a person's business
career.
2. People are absolutely key. Whether it's
investing in an entrepreneur, taking money from an angel investor, or
hiring a senior manager, A-caliber people are worth 10x those of
B-caliber.
3. Cash is king. Lots of time is spent in
business school looking at cash flow statements and analyses, but
typically from a larger corporate perspective. But the one lesson
that—one way or another—gets seared into the brain of every single
entrepreneur is that the presence or absence of cash is completely
deterministic for a business. Remember the Golden Rule of early stage
finance: "the person with the gold makes the rules."
4. Keep everything in perspective.
Bad stuff happens in every company, in every field, to every person.
When one is young and starting out, it can seem like every setback is
the end of the world. The more experience one has, the more one realizes
that nothing is permanent except death. Perspective helps one 'do
nuance', and makes it easier to not sweat the small stuff.
5. Technology is changing exponentially.
This certainly wasn't taught when I was in business school, and it
isn't taught in many places today. But it's the key tenet of Singularity University
(where I founded the Finance, Entrepreneurship & Economics program)
and it fundamentally affects every single business today that wants to
have any hope of surviving, let alone thriving.