Illustration by Alicia Tatone
Some guys seem to have all the luck.
A perfect career, a perfect partner, a perfect life. When they’re not
sitting next to a book publisher on a flight, they’re discovering a vintage Burberry trench in the thrift store around the corner from your apartment. It’s unbelievable. It’s annoying.
Their luck seems random—and these
days, thanks to social media, it seems like everybody’s getting lucky
but you. But if you’re sitting around waiting for luck to hit you like a
benevolent lightning bolt, you’re thinking about it all wrong. Nobody’s
just born #blessed.
That’s because luck isn’t something that happens to you; it’s something that happens because of you. At least that’s what Tina Seelig (a professor of entrepreneurship at Stanford and best-selling author who's written seventeen
books at the time of this writing) would tell you. Luck is something
you can create for yourself and learn to control, she says, which means
that you can actually teach yourself to get luckier. Make a few tweaks
to the way you approach opportunities that arise in your daily life and
you too can become one of the savvy and brave people capable of making
their own lucky breaks happen.
Here, she gives you the tools to do
exactly that, and shares a few of the secrets that she’s used to unleash
good fortune on her everyday life. We wish you luck in applying them to
your own.
GQ: You’ve written that there is a “physics” to luck, since all of life is a matter of cause and effect. What do you mean by that?
Tina Seelig:
We live in a world where every single choice you make has consequences.
Many people don’t pay attention to the little things they do that have
an enormous impact. If you don’t actually think about the consequences,
you’re missing a huge opportunity—and they're often things you don’t
even notice you missed. You see other people having opportunities that
you don’t, and you can feel like, “Wow, how come everybody else has all
the luck?” But if you look carefully there are all these little things
they have done that end up essentially attracting luck their way.
So what are those behaviors you can practice to attract luck?
One
is showing appreciation. It doesn’t take very much time and yet it has a
huge impact on people. Most people are not appropriately appreciative
of what other people do for them, and they take it for granted.
Especially when you’re a kid, or a young person, and people have been
doing things for you your whole life, you just assume that’s the way the
world works. Showing appreciation results in a tremendous outpouring of
other opportunities.
The other is taking risks. Go up and
say hello to somebody you don’t know. Try a sport you haven’t tried. Go
somewhere you haven’t gone before. Each of these opens up the door to
possibilities. Think about people who are well-known athletes. If they
had never tried that sport, they never would have known that that was
their gift.
The other thing that I talk about is
embracing crazy ideas. There are so many things around us that on the
surface look unusual or crazy, but if you’re willing to embrace them?
It’s a little like improv, saying, “Yes, and…” Being able to look at
everything that comes to you as a gift and embracing it, as opposed to
reacting quickly with a no or with a negative response.
How do you make yourself more willing to open up to risk?
Tiny
little experiments. One of my favorite concepts comes from my colleague
Alberto Savoia [an Innovation Agitator Emeritus at Google, and
Innovation Lecturer at Stanford], who actually has a book coming out
about doing little tiny experiments. For example, if I get a chess
board, I don’t immediately sign up for the biggest tournament in my
neighborhood—I just play a game of chess. You don’t instantly sign up
for the World Series the first time you pick up a baseball bat. The key
is to do something little that gives you a little experience.
That seems like a way to get away from the paralysis of
choice: putting yourself in motion by saying I’m going to do this
thing—even if it’s little—to move myself in the direction of action.
Right.
I also think it’s really important to distinguish between fortune,
chance and luck. People don’t distinguish between them.
Fortune is things that are outside
of your control, things that happen to you. I’m fortunate to be raised
by a loving family. I’m fortunate to be born in this place and time. I’m
fortunate to have blue eyes. Chance is something you have to do; I have
to take a chance. It requires action on your part in the moment.
Buy a lottery ticket. Ask someone on a date. Apply to a job. Luck is
something where you have even more agency. You make your own luck by
identifying and developing opportunities in advance.
People conflate all three of those
things and as a result, they think things are much more random than they
are.
So the harder you work to prepare yourself to find and seize opportunities, the luckier you get.
Hard
work matters, but it’s also really important to think about resilience.
It makes you luckier. If you can extract the learnings from mistakes
and failures, you’re going to move forward much more quickly.
I can think of very specific people
who have one failure and then they don’t want to try anything else.
Whereas other people go, “Okay, I have a failure, I learned a lot, and
now I’m going to go do something different.” You practice being
resilient. You get better at recovering from failure.
You also mentioned changing your relationship to ideas,
or embracing something that sounds unusual or crazy. Are there specific
ways that you’d recommend to go about finding the good, even in bad
ideas?
Take a class in improv. The major rule of improv is
that you accept whatever is given to you. If someone gives you an idea
that doesn’t, on the surface, make any sense, you have to go with it.
That idea of embracing ideas even [if] on the surface they seem crazy is
a really powerful thing. It’s really hard to do.
I write and teach a lot about
brainstorming. Someone has an idea and you think it’s a really stupid
idea—it’s really hard not to say "that won’t work" or "that’s a stupid
idea." But it’s incredibly powerful if you can defer judgment for enough
time so you can explore. You’re not investing in it, you’re just going
to take a few minutes to see how this might work.
That can be dangerous, though, for a generation that was
constantly told to follow its passion. You can follow a bad idea too far
if you’re passionate about it. It sounds to me like you’re saying that
“follow your passion” is a good message—but an incomplete one.
People
tell you to follow your passion, that’s totally cop-out advice. It’s
like saying “think outside the box.” Or even “fortune favors the
prepared mind.” These things that people say don’t have enough meat on
the bone to give you anything to do with it. I am a firm believer that
passion follows engagement, not the other way around. The more engaged
you are in something, the more passionate you become with it. In fact,
there’s evidence the more time you spend with a person, the more you
like them.
Let’s imagine it was my job to
manage the sewer system of San Francisco. I don’t know anything about
that. But I could get passionate about that. It’s super important. We
would all be pretty miserable if it wasn’t working. I’m going to guess
there are a lot of nuances, and technology and challenges and
opportunities for improvement. You could pick anything.
You have to look at your passions,
as well as your skills, as well as the market. If I’m passionate about
something, and I’m not very good at it—let’s say I love music, but I
can’t carry a tune. I could be a good fan. I could play music, go to
concerts, maybe be the manager of a band. But if I’m good at it and
there’s a market for it, then that’s a job. You want an overlap in your
passion, skills and market, and that’s where your sweet spot is.
Now, you can always create a market.
Let’s say I’m an artist, and nobody has ever heard of my technique. I
can create a market if I’m talented and passionate. But a lot of people
don’t want to do that.
So by saying, “How can I engage with something that
increases my passion in areas where I can also grow skills that I’m
seeing are valuable in the market?"—that would help you build success
instead of waiting for it to be given to you.
The point is
having a sense of responsibility and agency. In a job, you might have
responsibility but no authority. But in your own life, you have the
responsibility and authority to do things to craft the life you want to
live. Most of us choose where we’re going to live, who we’re going to
spend time with, what kind of job we’re going to have. I think that so
many people limit themselves, they make a box around themselves that’s
much smaller than it needs to be. Then you read stories about people who
go off and live in interesting places and you say, “How did you do it?”
and they say, “I just did it.”
This interview has been edited and condensed.