http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2013/commencement-address-houston-0607.html
Below is the prepared text of the Commencement address by Drew Houston '05, the CEO of Dropbox, for MIT's 147th Commencement held June 7, 2013.
Thank you Chairman Reed, and congratulations to all of you in the class of 2013.
I'm
so happy to be back at MIT, and it's an honor to be here with you
today. I still wear my Brass Rat, and turning this ring around on
graduation day is still one of the proudest moments of my life.
There
are a lot of reasons why this is a special day, but the reason I'm so
excited for all of you is that today is the first day of your life where
you no longer need to check boxes.
For your first couple
decades, success in life has meant jumping through one hoop after
another: get these test scores, get into this college. Take these
classes, get this degree. Get into this prestigious institution so you
can get into the next prestigious institution. All of that ends today.
The
hard thing about planning your life is you have no idea where you're
going, but you want to get there as soon as possible. Maybe you'll start
a company, or cure cancer, or write the great American novel. Or who
knows? Maybe things will go horribly wrong. I had no idea.
Being
up here in robes and speaking to all of you today wasn't exactly part of
my plan seven years ago. In fact, I've never really had a grand plan —
and what I realize now is that it's probably impossible to have one
after graduation, if ever.
I've thought a lot about what's
different about the life you're beginning today. I've thought about what
I would do if I had to start all over again. What got you here was
basically being smart and working hard. But nobody tells you that after
today, the recipe for success changes. So what I want to do is give you a
little cheat sheet, the one I would have loved to have had on my
graduation day.
If you were to look at my cheat sheet, there
wouldn't be a lot on it. There would be a tennis ball, a circle, and the
number 30,000. I know this doesn't make any sense right now, but bear
with me.
I started my first company in a Chili's when I was 21.
My cofounder, Andrew Crick, and I had never done this before. We were
wondering if you needed to wear a suit to City Hall, or if you needed to
make a company seal for stamping important documents. It turns out you
can just go online and fill out a form and be done in about two minutes.
It was a little anti-climactic, but we were in business. Over onion
strings we decided that our company was going to make a new kind of
online course for the SAT. Most kids back then were still using these
old-school 800-page books, and the other online prep courses weren't
very good. We called it Accolade, an SAT vocab word meaning an award of
distinction. Well, actually, we called it "The Accolade Group, LLC"
which we thought sounded a lot more impressive.
I stopped at
Staples on the way home to pick up some card stock. Clearly, the most
important order of business was to Photoshop a logo and print out some
business cards that said "Founder" on them. The next order of business
was to hand them out at conferences, and tell girls "why yes, I do have a
company." It was awesome.
But the best part was learning all
kinds of new things. I lived in my fraternity house every summer, and up
on the fifth floor there's a ladder that goes up to the roof. I had
this green nylon folding chair that I'd drag up there along with armfuls
of business books I bought off Amazon and I'd spend every weekend
reading about marketing, sales, management and all these other things I
knew nothing about. I wasn't planning to get my MBA on the roof of Phi
Delta Theta, but that's what happened.
A couple years later,
things started going downhill. I felt like I had to paddle harder and
harder to make progress, and at some point I just snapped and couldn't
deal with any more math questions about parallel lines or the train
leaving Memphis at 3:45. I figured something was wrong with me. I felt
guilty for being so unproductive. Starting a company had been my dream,
and, well, maybe I didn't have what it takes after all.
So I took
a little break. Of course, if you're in course 6, sometimes "taking a
break" means writing a poker bot. For those of you who don't know what a
poker bot is, what happens when you play poker online is first, you sit
for hours and click buttons, and then you lose all your money. A poker
bot means you can have your computer lose all your money for you.
But
it was a fascinating challenge. I was possessed. I would think about it
in the shower. I would think about it in the middle of the night. It
was like a switch went on — suddenly I was a machine.
In the
middle of all this, my mom and dad wanted all of us to come up to New
Hampshire to spend a family weekend together. But I really wanted to
keep working on my poker bot. So I pull up in my Accord and open the
trunk, and next I'm dragging all my computer stuff and all these wires
into our little cottage. The dining room table wasn't big enough so I
started moving all the pots and pans off the stove to make room for all
my monitors. This time it was my mom who thought something was wrong
with me. She was convinced I was going to jail.
I was going to
say work on what you love, but that's not really it. It's so easy to
convince yourself that you love what you're doing — who wants to admit
that they don't? When I think about it, the happiest and most successful
people I know don't just love what they do, they're obsessed with
solving an important problem, something that matters to them. They
remind me of a dog chasing a tennis ball: their eyes go a little crazy,
the leash snaps and they go bounding off, plowing through whatever gets
in the way. I have some other friends who also work hard and get paid
well in their jobs, but they complain as if they were shackled to a
desk.
The problem is a lot of people don’t find their tennis ball
right away. Don't get me wrong — I love a good standardized test as
much as the next guy, but being king of SAT prep wasn’t going to be
mine. What scares me is that both the poker bot and Dropbox started out
as distractions. That little voice in my head was telling me where to
go, and the whole time I was telling it to shut up so I could get back
to work. Sometimes that little voice knows best.
It took me a
while to get it, but the hardest-working people don't work hard because
they're disciplined. They work hard because working on an exciting
problem is fun. So after today, it's not about pushing yourself; it's
about finding your tennis ball, the thing that pulls you. It might take a
while, but until you find it, keep listening for that little voice.
Let's
go back to the summer after my graduation, the summer you're about to
have. One of my fraternity brothers, Adam Smith, and his friend Matt
Brezina were starting a company and we decided it would be fun for all
of us to work together out of one apartment.
It was the perfect
summer — well, almost perfect. The air conditioner was broken so we were
all coding in our boxers. Adam and Matt were working around the clock,
but as time went on they kept getting pulled away by potential investors
who would share their secrets and take them on helicopter rides. I was a
little jealous — I had been working on my company for a couple years
and Adam had only been at it for a couple months. Where were my
helicopter rides?
Things only got worse. August rolled around and
Adam gave me the bad news: they were moving out. Not only was my supply
of Hot Pockets cut off, but they were off to Silicon Valley, where the
real action was happening, and I wasn't.
Every now and then I'd
give Adam a call and hear how things were going. Things were always
pretty good. "We met with Vinod this afternoon," he would tell me. Vinod
Khosla is the billionaire investor and cofounder of Sun Microsystems.
Then Adam dropped the bomb. "He's going to give us five million
dollars."
I was thrilled for him, but it was a shock for me. Here
was my faithful beer pong partner and my little brother in the
fraternity, two years younger than me. I was out of excuses. He was off
to the Super Bowl and I wasn't even getting drafted. He had no idea at
the time, but Adam had given me just the kick I needed. It was time for a
change.
They say that you're the average of the 5 people you
spend the most time with. Think about that for a minute: who would be in
your circle of 5? I have some good news: MIT is one of the best places
in the world to start building that circle. If I hadn't come here, I
wouldn't have met Adam, I wouldn't have met my amazing cofounder, Arash,
and there would be no Dropbox.
One thing I've learned is
surrounding yourself with inspiring people is now just as important as
being talented or working hard. Can you imagine if Michael Jordan hadn’t
been in the NBA, if his circle of 5 had been a bunch of guys in Italy?
Your circle pushes you to be better, just as Adam pushed me.
And
now your circle will grow to include your coworkers and everyone around
you. Where you live matters: there’s only one MIT. And there's only one
Hollywood and only one Silicon Valley. This isn't a coincidence: for
whatever you're doing, there's usually only one place where the top
people go. You should go there. Don’t settle for anywhere else. Meeting
my heroes and learning from them gave me a huge advantage. Your heroes
are part of your circle too — follow them. If the real action is
happening somewhere else, move.
The last trap you might fall into
after school is "getting ready." Don't get me wrong: learning is your
top priority, but now the fastest way to learn is by doing. If you have a
dream, you can spend a lifetime studying and planning and getting ready
for it. What you should be doing is getting started.
Honestly, I
don't think I've ever been "ready." I remember the day our first
investors said yes and asked us where to send the money. For a 24 year
old, this is Christmas — and opening your present is hitting refresh
over and over on bankofamerica.com and watching your company's checking
account go from 60 dollars to 1.2 million dollars. At first I was
ecstatic — that number has two commas in it! I took a screenshot — but
then I was sick to my stomach. Someday these guys are going to want this
back. What the hell have I gotten myself into?
You already know
this feeling: at MIT we call it "drinking from the firehose." It’s
about as fun as it sounds, and all of us have the internal bleeding to
prove it. But we’ve also learned it's good for you. Today, one valve
shuts off. Now you need to go out and find another firehose.
Dropbox
has been mine. As you might expect, building this company has been the
most exciting, interesting and fulfilling experience of my life. What I
haven't really shared is that it's also been the most humiliating,
frustrating and painful experience too, and I can't even count the
number of things that have gone wrong.
Fortunately, it doesn't
matter. No one has a 5.0 in real life. In fact, when you finish school,
the whole notion of a GPA just goes away. When you're in school, every
little mistake is a permanent crack in your windshield. But in the real
world, if you're not swerving around and hitting the guard rails every
now and then, you're not going fast enough. Your biggest risk isn't
failing, it's getting too comfortable.
Bill Gates's first company
made software for traffic lights. Steve Jobs's first company made
plastic whistles that let you make free phone calls. Both failed, but
it's hard to imagine they were too upset about it. That's my favorite
thing that changes today. You no longer carry around a number indicating
the sum of all your mistakes. From now on, failure doesn't matter: you
only have to be right once.
I used to worry about all kinds of
things, but I can remember the moment when I calmed down. I had just
moved to San Francisco, and one night I couldn't sleep so I was on my
laptop. I read something online that said "There are 30,000 days in your
life." At first I didn't think much of it, but on a whim I tabbed over
to the calculator. I type in 24 times 365 and — oh my God, I'm almost
9,000 days down. What the hell have I been doing?
(By the way: you guys are 8,000 days down.)
So
that’s how 30,000 ended up on the cheat sheet. That night, I realized
there are no warmups, no practice rounds, no reset buttons. Every day
we're writing a few more words of a story. And when you die, it's not
like "here lies Drew, he came in 174th place." So from then on, I
stopped trying to make my life perfect, and instead tried to make it
interesting. I wanted my story to be an adventure — and that's made all
the difference.
My grandmother is here today, and next week we'll
be celebrating her 95th birthday. We talk more on the phone now that
I’ve moved out to California. But one thing that's stuck with me is she
always ends our phone calls with one word: "Excelsior," which means
"ever upward."
And today on your commencement, your first day of
life in the real world, that's what I wish for you. Instead of trying to
make your life perfect, give yourself the freedom to make it an
adventure, and go ever upward. Thank you.
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