Luck and Success
Written by Anthony Demangone
You've got to ask yourself one question: "Do I feel lucky?" Well, do ya punk?
  - Harry Callahan, played by Clint Eastwood in Dirty Harry
JCPenney recently sacked Ron Johnson after only 18 months on the job. Â He was brought in with trumpets and streamers after his work at Apple. Â But things simply went from bad to worse.Â
Daniel Gross wrote a nice piece (The Daily Beast) that puts it into perspective.  Here's what really caught my eye.
Sometimes people prosper and thrive because they happened to be at the right place at the right time. ThatâÂÂs not to say Johnson wasnâÂÂt a smart retail mind, or that anybody could have done what he did with Apple. Rather, a big chunk of his success may have lain in having the good fortune to run AppleâÂÂs retail chain in a period when the companyâÂÂs designers and engineers were cranking out a series of world-beating, irresistible products. And that wasnâÂÂt a skill Johnson could easily transfer to a listing middle-market department store chain.
It gets you thinking. Â How much of any one person's success is driven by luck? Â How much of my success is driven by forces and variables outside of my control?Â
I don't know if there's an easy way to answer that question, but I bet the answer would shock you.
Thoughts?
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You might be interested in the following:
- Was Steve Jobs lucky, successful, or both? (Musings)
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