Richard Branson quotes:
Screw It, Let’s Do It.
Having a personality of caring about people is important. You can’t be
a good leader unless you generally like people. That is how you bring
out the best in them.
A business has to be involving, it has to be fun, and it has to exercise your creative instincts.
We've got an engaging, edgy, vibrant, fun product, ... It may or may not work, but we're going to give it our best shot.
I believe in benevolent dictatorship provided I am the dictator.
We look for opportunities where we can offer something better, fresher,
and more valuable, and we seize them. We often move into areas where
the customer has traditionally received a poor deal, and where the
competition is complacent. And with our growing e-commerce activities,
we also look to deliver ‘old’ products in new ways. We are pro-active
and quick to act, often leaving bigger and more cumbersome
organisations in our wake. When we start a new venture, we base it on
hard research and analysis. Typically, we review the industry and put
ourselves in the customer’s shoes to see what could make it better.
I wanted to be an editor or a journalist, I wasn't really interested in
being an entrepreneur, but I soon found I had to become an entrepreneur
in order to keep my magazine going.
We'd love to be involved with the creation of something very special, something quite large and something quite exciting.
You never know with these things when you're trying something new what can happen. This is all experimental.
Well, I'm somebody who is just living...living life, and if I get frustrated by something, then I like to try to put it right.
It has been like hitting up against a solid brick wall. All day and all night long, we battled to get through it.
Right now I'm just delighted to be alive and to have had a nice long bath.
We have not scratched the surface ... It does seem that it needs to be treated like a war.
If I was a businessman, or saw myself as a businessman, I would have never gone into the airline business.
There is no one to follow, there is nothing to copy. We may even allow
those aliens who landed here 50 years ago a chance to go home.
Records are made to be broken. It is in man's nature to continue to strive to do just that.
We're going where no one has gone before.
Ridiculous yachts and private planes and big limousines won’t make
people enjoy life more, and it sends out terrible messages to the
people who work for them. It would be so much better if that money was
spent in Africa – and it’s about getting a balance.
Like getting into a bleeding competition with a blood bank.
I'm inquisitive.... and I love a new challenge... and if I feel that we
can do it better than it's been done by other people, we'll have a go.
Some people call that 'brand stretching' and say that this is not the
way business should be done, and in the Western world generally it's
not the way business is done. And I think to be perfectly frank the
reason it's not done that way is that most big companies are public...
they have fund managers who only specialise in one area... and so if
you go and stray outside that fund manager's arena, the company gets
criticised. Fortunately we're not a public company - we're a private
group of companies, and I can do what I want.
Business is giving people in their lifetime what they need and what
they want. And you know, I've had great fun turning quite a lot of
different industries on their head and making sure those industries
will never be the same again, because Virgin went in and took them on.
Occasionally we'll come unstuck and you know, we'll learn from our
mistakes but so far I think we've managed to get it right more often
than we've got it wrong.
I'm still.... maybe Peter Pan.... doesn't want to grow up.
Above all, you want to create something you are proud of.... That has
always been my philosophy of business. I can honestly say that I have
never gone into any business purely to make money. If that is the sole
motive, then I believe you are better off doing nothing.
All you have in life is your reputation: you may be very rich, but if
you lose your good name, then you'll never be happy. The thought will
always lurk at the back of your mind that people don't trust you. I had
never really focused on what a good name meant before, but that night
in prison made me understand.
My interest in life comes from setting myself huge, apparently unachievable challenges and trying to rise above them.
To be successful, you have to be out there, you have to hit the ground
running, and if you have a good team around you and more than a fair
share of luck, you might make something happen. But you certainly can't
guarantee it just by following someone else's formula.
I don't think of work as work and play as play. It's all living.
I had no interest whatsoever in running a company.
I was interested in creating — creating things that I could be proud of
and so, you know, I was interested in being an editor of a magazine,
things that I could be proud of, and so, you know, I was interested in
being an editor of a magazine, but in order to be an editor of a
magazine I had to become a publisher as well. I had to pay the bills. I
had to worry about the printing and the paper manufacturing and the
distribution of that magazine.
I want Virgin to be as well-known around the world as Coca-Cola.
I’ve had to create companies that I believe in 100%. These are
companies I feel will make a genuine difference. Then I have to be
willing to find the time myself to talk about them, promote them and
market them. I don’t want to spend my life doing something that I’m not
proud of.
As much as you need a strong personality to build a business from
scratch, you also must understand the art of delegation. I have to be
good at helping people run the individual businesses, and I have to be
willing to step back. The company must be set up so it can continue
without me.
If you’re good with people…and you really care, genuinely care about
people then I’m sure we could find a job for you at Virgin.
The companies that look after their people are the companies that do
really well. I’m sure we’d like a few other attributes, but that would
be the most important one.
A company is people…employees want to know…am I being listened to or am I a cog in the wheel? People really need to feel wanted.
In the beginning it was just about the business – now it’s about the brand.
Back then we would create a company based on frustration at other
people’s service and suddenly realized we had one of the most respected
brands in the world.
If you get your face and your name out there enough, people will start to recognize you.
Many people know the Virgin brand better than the names of the individual companies within the group.
Branding is everything. A young girl once came up to me and told me I
could be famous because I looked just like Richard Branson!
Clearly in the eyes of the consumer the brand has not been diluted, but we must guard against that happening at all costs.
Our model is to develop each business separately with its own
shareholder and management – this way we can concentrate on the job in
hand, rather than be part of some enormous and faceless conglomerate.
We don’t actually plan to launch new businesses over the next few
years, but we are planning to take the ones we have into new
territories.
Business opportunities are like buses, there's always another one coming.
Although my spelling is still sometimes poor, I have managed to
overcome the worst of my difficulties through training myself to
concentrate.
If you are trying to do something for the first time, it’s always an
enormous challenge, and there is no guarantee of success. You never
know with these things when you’re trying something new what can
happen. This is all experimental.
We’ve got an engaging, edgy, vibrant, fun product. It may or may not work, but we’re going to give it our best shot.
We’re going where no one has gone before. There’s no model to follow, nothing to copy. That is what makes this so exciting.
If I was a businessman, or saw myself as a businessman, I would have never gone into the airline business.
My interest in life comes from setting myself huge, apparently unachievable challenges and trying to rise above them.
To be successful, you have to be out there, you have to hit the ground
running, and if you have a good team around you and more than a fair
share of luck, you might make something happen. But you certainly can't
guarantee it just by following someone else's formula.
A business has to be involving, it has to be fun, and it has to exercise your creative instincts.
Some 80% of your life is spent working. You want to have fun at home; why shouldn’t you have fun at work?
If a chairman of a company visits Seattle, that chairman should take
all the staff out in the evening and have a few drinks together, talk
together and party together and not be embarrassed about the staff
seeing the weaker side of you.
I never get the accountants in before I start up a business. It’s done
on gut feeling, especially if I can see that they are taking the mickey
out of the consumer.
I believe in benevolent dictatorship provided I am the dictator.
It has been like hitting up against a solid brick wall. All day and all night long, we battled to get through it.
We'd love to be involved with the creation of something very special, something quite large and something quite exciting.
Fortunately we're not a public company - we're a private group of companies, and I can do what I want.
Because I don’t see Virgin as a company but as a way of life and I fully enjoy it, I don’t think I’ll ever retire.
I was never, ever interested in becoming a businessman or an entrepreneur.