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How Richard Branson Became a BILLIONAIRE! - YouTube
Channel: Pablito's Way
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Billionaire Richard Branson never wanted to
make billions of dollars.
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But it still happened somehow.
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Letâs call it a side effect of his life
decisions.
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Just exactly what happened?
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Letâs dive right in!
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Early Life
Richard Branson was born in 1950 to an upper
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middle class family where he enjoyed a normal
and happy childhood.
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He was already lucky in the genetics lottery
in this regard, but this doesnât mean he
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was anywhere near being born rich.
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But he did have a leg up on his competition
because his parents were quite progressive.
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They considered their kids equals and they
often gave the kids challenges in an effort
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to make them self-reliant.
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That was most likely the seed that started
it all.
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Entrepreneurship was set deep in the Branson
kids.
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Branson's parents were supportive of Richardâs
ventures from an early age.
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One big reason might have been because Branson's
mom was an entrepreneur herself.
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Know Who You Are
Growing up, Branson had a lot of trouble with
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school, something thatâs isnât that unusual
with entrepreneurs.
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Many of Bransonâs teachers supposedly considered
him to be a bit slow and lazy, something that
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we all now know isnât true.
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What was going on was something else.
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He was actually dyslexic!
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Branson himself admits that by age 8 he still
couldnât read and he was hopeless in math
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and science.
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According to Branson, he was considered the
dumbest person at school!
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The headmaster of his school famously said
to him, âYouâll either go to prison or
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become a millionaireâ.
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Instead of feeling sorry for himself and seeing
himself as a big failure, Branson recognized
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his weaknesses.
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But he also recognized his strengths, which
was his ability to make things happen.
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Because he wasnât good with school, he realized
that he needed to channel his energy somewhere
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else.
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And that something else was monetizing his
interests.
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Bold moves
Branson got into his first business venture
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at the age of 16 with a magazine called Student.
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He was looking around for magazines that he
liked to read, and he found all of the magazines
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at that time to be boring.
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There werenât any magazines out writing
about anything he was interested in, so he
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decided to come up with a magazine of his
own!
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Student magazine covered all the topics that
major magazines didnât talk about.
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The magazine was started and run in his co-founderâs
parentsâ basement when he was just 16 years
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old with no money.
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That experience taught him the skills to start
running bigger things.
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Just a short time later, Branson started his
record business from the same basement where
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he ran the magazine.
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Whenever Branson saw a need for something
in the market that he was interested in, he
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asked himself why couldnât he do it?
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Virgin Records
Branson started advertising records for sale
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in Student magazine.
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And thatâs when he found another brand new
opportunity.
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That new business was an overnight success.
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Well, for selling records at least, and it
was the unofficial start of Virgin Records.
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How Branson beat the big guys at that time
was to sell records for considerably less
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than the traditional record stores.
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But the way he did it was completely illegal.
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Weâll get into this a bit later.
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And thatâs why the name "Virgin" was completely
appropriate for the company.
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It was suggested by one of Branson's early
employees because they were all new at business.
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Virgin Atlantic
Letâs fast forward a bit in Bransonâs
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life and look at a bigger example of his boldness.
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Branson's successful entry into the airline
industry happened only because of a trip to
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Puerto Rico.
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On the way back home, his flight was cancelled.
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So whatâd he do?
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He decided to charter his own plane the rest
of the way!
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BUT he also offered a ride to the rest of
the stranded passengers for $39 dollars a
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person in order to cover the cost.
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Long story short, he started doing research
into the business.
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He received a proposal to establish a transatlantic
service to compete with British Airways and
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he couldnât resist the opportunity.
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One little mishap gave Branson the vision
to start Virgin Atlantic Airways in 1984!
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Are you guys recognizing a pattern?
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Whenever Branson found an interesting situation,
he found a way to monetize it and make a profit!
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Against the advice of his advisers, he called
Boeing in Seattle and negotiated to lease
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a 747 for a year, just to see if the whole
idea could work.
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Virgin Atlantic was soon a reality, although
it almost never got off the ground!
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On their very first flight, a flock of birds
flew into one of the engines, ruining it at
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a cost of around 750,000 thousand dollars!
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And no, the plane wasnât insured!
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Having to get the engine fixed brought Virgin
over its credit line, and they came close
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to going bankrupt.
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Only an emergency influx of cash from Virginâs
overseas operations got everything through.
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Do it right
However, Bransonâs path to being a billionaire
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wasnât without failures.
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Letâs go into one example.
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Remember when we mentioned how Virgin sold
a lot of records, but it was done illegally?
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Although Virginâs chain of record shops
was growing, it actually wasnât profitable!
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In the spring of 1971, Virgin was losing money
as a discount music retailer.
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Its record shop on Londonâs Oxford Street
was popular and its mail-order business was
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growing.
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But because of rock-bottom prices, the company
was burning cash and digging itself deeply
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into debt.
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Branson accidentally found a solution to his
companyâs problems.
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And thatâs how he almost fulfilled the other
part of his headmasterâs prophecy of him
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in jail!
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The scheme was simple.
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Virgin could avoid paying purchase taxes by
pretending to export albums internationally
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that it actually sold in England.
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In Britain at the time, music retailers paid
a 33 percent tax on records they planned to
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sell domestically.
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But the tax didnât apply to records that
were sold internationally.
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Branson discovered that he could stop at customs
in Dover, England and get his export paperwork
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stamped.
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And then all he had to do was bring the cargo
back home to sell, that way the company just
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didnât have to pay any tax.
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He figured that after just a few of these
profitable trips, Virgin would be debt-free.
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However, after three trips of taking records
across the English Channel to imaginary buyers,
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his activities were discovered by UK Customs.
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To escape jail he had to pay back THREE times
the amount he was supposed to have paid in
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taxes!
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That experience taught him a valuable lesson.
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At the age of 21, he resolved to never do
anything illegal again.
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Branson learned at that moment, if he was
gonna do something, he was gonna do it right
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the first time.
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No copycats
But letâs take a step back and take a more
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detailed look at how Branson grew Virgin Records.
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The way they did business sold a lot of records,
but they were still having trouble generating
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good margins.
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So they decided to sign their own acts and
sell their own records, instead of doing it
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for other record companies.
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Branson recognized that ownership was important
to making a profit.
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He and his partners decided to buy a country
estate north of Oxford and they installed
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a residential recording studio.
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The first act Virgin signed was an unusual
choice for any record company, let alone a
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startup.
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A young musician named Mike Oldfield had spent
months perfecting a recording that had no
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vocals.
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It was basically a lot of bells and other
unusual instruments.
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It was a bizarre first choice for a company
that was intended as a rock music label.
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But it was a calculated gamble that paid off!
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Oldfieldâs album Tubular Bells was one of
the biggest selling records of the 1970s,
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and it helped to bankroll Virginâs early
years in the business.
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Virgin later signed controversial bands, such
as the Sex Pistols, a band that many other
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record companies were reluctant to sign.
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Branson saw opportunities where other people
could only see liabilities.
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Branson was willing to go against the convention
and do the complete opposite of what the trend
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was.
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Virgin Records would go on to sign other artists
such as the Rolling Stones, Peter Gabriel,
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Paula Abdul, and Culture Club.
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By the early 80s, Virgin had become an unconventional
big label to contend with.
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It was all because of Bransonâs willingness
to step outside the box with artists that
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many contemporary labels were afraid to sign.
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Big Ambitions
Letâs go forward in Bransonâs life again.
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You may know that Necker Island is a 74-acre
island in the British Virgin Islands thatâs
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owned by Branson.
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When he first bought the island, it was completely
uninhabited.
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He purchased Necker island when he was just
28, just six years after starting Virgin Group.
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The story behind the sale completely shows
Bransonâs bold attitude in life.
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He first became aware of the British Virgin
Islands in 1978 when he saw the island for
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sale.
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He had actually never heard of the âVirgin
Islandsâ, had no idea where they were located,
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or knew that the islands are actually called
the British Virgin Islands.
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At that time he and his partners were still
in the early days of Virgin Records.
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Branson by no means had the money to buy an
island.
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But, he was trying to impress a girl he liked,
so he called up the realtor and said he was
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interested!
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Luckily for Branson, the realtor didnât
know he couldnât afford it, so he offered
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him an all expenses paid trip to see the Islands.
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Branson agreed to go on one condition.
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Only if he could bring a guest!
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So he and his date were given a luxury villa
and they were flown around the British Virgin
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Islands by helicopter.
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The final island he saw was Necker Island.
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He was stunned by the view and the wildlife
on the island, and he decided there was no
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way he COULDNâT purchase the island.
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However, remember, Branson had no money to
buy the island.
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But he figured that he had nothing to lose.
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He made an offer with the max amount he figured
he could come up with from his bank.
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So he made a lowball offer of $100,000 for
an island that was advertised for $6 million
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dollars!
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The owner said no, and was so insulted, Branson
actually had to figure out a way off the island
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himself!
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But, the owner got over it.
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After a year, nobody else had made an offer
on Necker Island.
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By that time, the owner of the Island was
desperate to sell because he needed cash.
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And Virgin Records was in a much better position
financially than it had been a year before.
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So Branson quickly agreed to a purchase price
of only $180,000.
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The only condition was that Branson would
need to build a resort on the Island within
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four years.
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Itâs because of these negotiations skills
and his willingness to make bold moves thatâs
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put Richard Branson where he is in the business
world.
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Passions
Branson will be the first person to admit
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that he didnât go into his first business
to make money.
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He did it because it was something fun to
do and he was passionate about it.
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Even nowadays, Bransonâs main reasons for
entering a business is that it would be fun
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and exciting.
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For example, Branson got into Virgin Galactic
because it was fun and exciting to get into.
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Obviously thereâs also money to be made.
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Branson also has a number of achievements
that have nothing to do with business.
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For example, there were his various efforts
to break world records for hot air balloons.
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Branson is also well known for his different
way of thinking.
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According to Branson, most people in business
dress the same, and that contributes to them
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acting and thinking the same as most of their
coworkers.
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And thatâs why he has a distinct dislike
for ties!
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He often carries a pair of scissors with him
at all times, ready to cut off a tie off anyone
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at his company.
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He even owns a pillow on Necker Island thatâs
completely made up of a few of the ties heâs
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cut!
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To Branson, wearing a tie restricts new ideas
and innovative thoughts.
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Embracing change and having the ability to
adapt is the only way to move forward for
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anyone.
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Hereâs whatâs next!
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