My friend had just taken his company public. He was worth a fortune (think: winning the lottery every week for a year).
I wanted to know the details, so I said, “You had a big 
vision. You fought for it every day. Naysayers lined your path. Yet you 
never gave up. And now you’re the CEO of a publicly traded company that 
has pioneered an entire industry. 
How does it feel to have achieved such
 success?”
I was stunned by his answer. It was not at all what I was expecting.
He replied, “I don’t judge my success based on our stock
 price or how much money I have in the bank—or even what I leave to my 
kids. I judge my success based on how many of my employees leave our 
company to start their own business.”
Say whaaat?!
He continued, “The biggest mark I can leave is not the 
amount of wealth I create for myself, but how I teach and inspire my 
employees to create their own wealth.”
I found this shocking, not only because if I were in his
 shoes I’d at least get one fancy car, but also because his company is 
consistently rated a Best Place to Work in the entire state of Texas—and
 that’s a big state. Yet here he is saying that success to him was all 
about empowering his own employees to leave his company and start their own entrepreneurial journey.
The more I thought about my own definition of 
success—which over time has changed from a fast car to quality time at 
the park with my 3-year-old daughter—the more I realize success is never
 achieved. It’s a journey of personal growth.
When we help others achieve their goals, like starting a company or a nonprofit, we give our employees the opportunity to re-create the same scenario with their own employees. The cycle continues, and generations benefit from it.
If you’re a business owner yourself, you may be wondering, “But what about retention?”
Encouraging employees to leave their jobs to start their own businesses flies in the face of an all-important employee metric: retention.
 But as my friend shared with me, the more he helps his employees 
develop the skill set and mindset needed to start their own businesses, 
the more talented employees he attracts to his own company.
I recently saw the cycle firsthand.
One of my friend’s former employees sent me an email 
about his new startup. His company is getting all kinds of media 
attention and attracting talented employees from across the country—just
 like my friend’s did.
I finally got it.
Success is not buying a sports car, taking your company 
public for $500 million or retiring early, but rather helping others to 
pave their own paths so they can impact the world in their own positive 
ways. Wealth is what we give to others to pass on through their own 
actions, lives and journeys.
And that is why I keep that old Corvette poster from eighth grade in 
my garage—to remind me that how we define success changes as we do. (And
 maybe, just maybe, my daughter will want that poster someday. That, or 
she’ll think it’s cool I have a picture of an antique hanging on the 
wall!)
(Author: Jason Dorsey in Success Magazine) 
 
 
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