It’s rare that successful people have a smooth run.
In fact, you could argue that one of the prerequisites for success is some hurdles along the way that help you build strength, resilience and intestinal fortitude.
Then when you do achieve the success you’ve been seeking, it will be all the more enjoyable.
(a) WALT DISNEY
Did you know he was fired from the Kansas city because his editor felt he “lacked” imagination and had no good ideas?
Did you know that Walt formed his first animation company in Kansas City in 1921 and made a deal with a distribution company in which he would ship them his cartoons in New York and get paid six months later?
Unsurprisingly, he was forced to dissolve his company because he could not pay his rent and was (reportedly) surviving on dog food.
Needless to say, he went on to be nominated for 59 Academy Awards and is the great animator of our time.
(b) BILL GATES
Bill Gates, one of the world’s wealthiest men now, struggled to find his niche early on.
He started Traf-O-Data, a business that created reports for roadway engineers from raw traffic data, with two other businessmen.
The company did achieve a measure of success by generating some income, but allegedly the machine they had built to process the data tanked when they tried to present it to a Seattle County traffic employee.
This didn’t stop, Bill, and the lessons he learned from the traffic data company helped him found one of the world’s biggest companies.
(c) STEPHEN KING
Whether you’re a horror fan or not, there’s no denying the success of Stephen King.
But it wasn’t always this way.
One of his most successful books, Carrie, was rejected by 30 publishers, one of whom told him that “negative utopias” do not sell.
After so many rejections, King reportedly gave up and threw the manuscript in the bin. Luckily, his wife retrieved it and urged him to have another go.
He eventually published Carrie, and the rest is history.
(d) JK ROWLING
The author of the hugely successful Harry Potter series has had anything but a smooth ride.
By the time she had finished the first of the Harry Potter books she was divorced, on welfare and with a child to support.
Furthermore, all 12 major publishers rejected the Harry Potter manuscript.
Finally, a year later Bloomsbury accepted it and extended a very small £1500 advance.
No doubt, it was one of the best decisions the publishing house has ever made.
(e) COLONEL SANDERS
It’s never too late to start a fast food empire. Just look at Colonel Sanders.
It wasn’t until the age of 62 that Sanders, with a $105 social security check in hand, pitched his chicken recipe to restaurants.
According to reports, some 1,009 people rejected him.
Instead of giving up, he hit the road and began trying to sell his franchise-model chicken restaurant, eventually finding success with a restaurant outside of Utah.
It became the first Kentucky Fried Chicken, and the restaurant tripled sales in a year, mostly from the colonel’s chicken.