I’m looking forward to sharing posts from time to time about
things I’ve learned in my career at Microsoft and
the Gates Foundation. (I also post frequently on my blog.)

Here are three
things I’ve learned from Warren over the years:
1. It’s not just about
investing.
The first
thing people learn from Warren, of course, is how to think about investing.
That’s natural, given his amazing track record. Unfortunately, that’s where a
lot of people stop, and they miss out on the fact that he has a whole framework
for business thinking that is very powerful. For example, he talks about
looking for a company’s moat—its competitive advantage—and whether the moat is
shrinking or growing. He says a shareholder has to act as if he owns the entire
business, looking at the future profit stream and deciding what it’s worth. And
you have to be willing to ignore the market rather than follow it, because you
want to take advantage of the market’s mistakes—the companies that have been
underpriced.
I have to
admit, when I first met Warren, the fact that he had this framework was a real
surprise to me. I met him at a dinner my mother had put together. On my way
there, I thought, “Why would I want to meet this guy who picks stocks?” I
thought he just used various market-related things—like volume, or how the
price had changed over time—to make his decisions. But when we started talking
that day, he didn’t ask me about any of those things. Instead he started asking
big questions about the fundamentals of our business. “Why can’t IBM do what
Microsoft does? Why has Microsoft been so profitable?” That’s when I realized
he thought about business in a much more profound way than I’d given him credit
for.
2. Use your platform.
A lot of business leaders write
letters to their shareholders, but Warren is justly famous for his. Partly
that’s because his natural good humor shines through. Partly it’s because
people think it will help them invest better (and they’re right). But it’s also
because he’s been willing to speak frankly and criticize things like stock
options and financial derivatives. He’s not afraid to take positions, like his
stand on raising taxes on the rich, that run counter to his self-interest.
Warren inspired me to start writing my own annual letter about
the foundation’s work. I still have a ways to go before mine is as good as
Warren’s, but it’s been helpful to sit down once a year and explain the results
we’re seeing, both good and bad.
3. Know how valuable your time
is.
No matter how much money you have, you can’t buy more time.
There are only 24 hours in everyone’s day. Warren has a keen sense of this. He
doesn’t let his calendar get filled up with useless meetings. On the other
hand, he’s very generous with his time for the people he trusts. He gives his
close advisers at Berkshire his phone number, and they can just call him up and
he’ll answer the phone.
Although Warren makes a point of
meeting with dozens of university classes every year, not many people get to
ask him for advice on a regular basis. I feel very lucky in that regard: The
dialogue has been invaluable to me, and not only at Microsoft. When Melinda and
I started our foundation, I turned to him for advice. We talked a lot about the
idea that philanthropy could be just as impactful in its own way as software
had been. It turns out that Warren’s brilliant way of looking at the world is
just as useful in attacking poverty and disease as it is in building a
business. He’s one of a kind.
Author: Bill Gates
Co-chair, Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation
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