Warren Buffett Says True Success in Life Comes Down to Just 12 Key Decisions. Here’s Your Checklist
‘Develop your eccentricities when young.’
Warren Buffett. Photo: Getty Images
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‘Develop your eccentricities when young.’
Warren Buffett. Photo: Getty Images
Ralph Tendai Mupita is one of Africa’s most experienced and respected telecoms executives, serving as MTN President and Group CEO since September 2020.
Larry Ellison, the founder of Oracle, was a pioneer of the US tech scene in the 1970s. The AI boom has given him a new lease of life.
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When Steve Ballmer joined Microsoft he didn’t get a single company share. But now, his skyrocketing Microsoft holdings have made him richer than the company’s founder. Fortune· Ramin Talaie—Corbis/Getty Images
Oracle’s founder and largest shareholder, Larry Ellison, has jumped two spots on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index after the tech behemoth posted a bumper outlook this week.
Fortune· Phillip Faraone—Getty Images
The co-founder and former CEO of Apple knew how to get big ideas across to consumers and investors. Jobs used three public speaking power moves to make an impact with his last presentation, and anyone who hopes to improve their own communication skills
Google executives Demis Hassabis and Sundar Pichai open the annual I/O developers conference this week. Searching now returns a blancmange of content in special pull-out boxes, apps and features, some of it artificially generated. Credit: Getty
Google cofounders Larry Page and Sergey Brin met at Stanford. They may have only taken salaries of $1 during their time at Google, but they’re still two of the richest people in the world. James Leynse/Corbis via Getty Images
Amenawon Esezobor has worked for some of Africa’s most prestigious companies like Flutterwave, Stanbic IBTC, and Kobo360. Today, she’s a software engineer at Gallagher Re, one of the largest global reinsurance brokers.
Bill Gates and Andy Grove saw their companies follow very different trajectories after they each stepped down..Steve Jobs wasn’t accustomed to hearing “no.” But that was the answer from Paul Otellini, CEO of Intel.