logo
The No. 1 worst career advice billionaires give, says bestselling author: Anyone who says it is 'already rich'

The No. 1 worst career advice billionaires give, says bestselling author: Anyone who says it is 'already rich'

CNBC19-07-2025
Billionaires tend to give one bad piece of career advice, according to self-made millionaire and bestselling author Scott Galloway: Follow your passion.
"The worst advice the billionaires give is 'follow your passion,'" Galloway, a serial entrepreneur and New York University marketing professor, told LinkedIn's "The Path" video series in an episode that published on June 3. "Anyone who tells you to follow your passion is already rich."
Born in Los Angeles to a single mother, Galloway said that his family's income never exceeded $40,000 during his childhood, and that he thought his passion for athletics would bring him financial freedom. After discovering that professional sports weren't in his future, he graduated from UCLA and got an analyst job at Morgan Stanley.
He quickly realized, 'I don't have the skills for this," he said. He started to workshop different ideas and decided that he'd be better suited for entrepreneurship than as an employee at a big company. In 1992, he co-founded marketing firm Prophet, ultimately selling it in 2002 for $33 million, according to LinkedIn.
Galloway later co-founded a research firm called L2 in 2010, which was acquired in 2017 for a reported sum of more than $130 million. His career journey indicates that success isn't about blindly following passion or going into a field that's stereotypically lucrative. Instead, combine what you're good at with what can make you money, and embrace opportunities to pivot.
"I applied for 29 jobs [after graduation]. I got one offer," said Galloway. "The key to my success is rejection, or specifically my ability to endure it. Because if you don't get to 'no' a lot of times, you're never going to get to wonderful 'yeses.'"
Galloway's sentiment echoes similar comments from Mastercard CEO Michael Miebach, who often tells young people to look beyond what their passionate about when choosing a career. He realized early in his career that he had a knack for leadership and enjoyed helping others, leading to a slew of board member roles at companies like IBM and The Metropolitan Opera, and almost 16 years at Mastercard.
"I love the fact that you're following your passion, but you should also just look at what are you really good at? What differentiates you?" Miebach tells interns, he said in a recent interview with LinkedIn editor-in-chief Daniel Roth. "Figure out, where's the intersection point of what is your passion, what actually matters, and what could you be good at? Bring that together."
Finding your strengths doesn't happen overnight and can take a bit of refining, and even failure. Say you're a news producer who recently got laid off, so you started filming and editing documentaries to stay active. Now, you've learned that your strength is actually longform content and storytelling, not hard news and short packages.
You can turn difficult setbacks into learning opportunities by adopting a growth mindset, or the idea that you can always be refining your skills, according to Yale University psychologist and happiness expert Laurie Santos. That way, if you face failure or rejection again, you know what steps to take, and to avoid, to keep moving forward in your life and career, she told CNBC Make It in 2023.
"That allows us to learn more about how to do better in the future," said Santos.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

AI in Africa to Top $16.5B by 2030: Mastercard Explores Path for Continued Digital Transformation
AI in Africa to Top $16.5B by 2030: Mastercard Explores Path for Continued Digital Transformation

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

AI in Africa to Top $16.5B by 2030: Mastercard Explores Path for Continued Digital Transformation

Key insights from Kenya, South Africa, Nigeria and Morocco demonstrate AI's potential to drive financial inclusion, job creation and innovation. Up to 230 million digital jobs projected in Sub-Saharan Africa by 2030 – but infrastructure, regulation and local talent remain critical gaps. NAIROBI, Kenya, August 06, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Mastercard has today released its latest whitepaper, Harnessing the transformative power of AI in Africa, a pan-African study of the continent's readiness, opportunity and roadmap for responsible artificial intelligence (AI) adoption. The whitepaper provides detailed insights into how AI—if deployed responsibly and inclusively—can unlock transformative outcomes across the continent's major industries, including agriculture, healthcare, education, energy and finance. With Africa's AI market projected to grow from USD 4.5 billion in 2025 to USD 16.5 billion by 2030 according to a recent report from Statista, the paper presents a clear case for multi-stakeholder collaboration and investment. It highlights how Africa's unique demographics, mobile-first infrastructure and entrepreneurial spirit position it as an active architect of the future. Mark Elliott, division president, Africa at Mastercard, commented: "Africa's engagement with AI is already reshaping lives — not just in labs, but in farms, clinics and classrooms. To unlock its full potential, we need investment in infrastructure, data, talent, and policy. At Mastercard, we believe responsible, locally rooted AI can drive inclusive growth and connect more people to opportunity." The whitepaper outlines the potential positive impact of AI on digital infrastructure, policy and governance, research and development, local language processing and investment into Africa. It also explores how AI can accelerate job creation, with up to 230 million digital jobs projected by 2030, and increase access to formal finance through AI-enabled credit scoring and fraud prevention. Greg Ulrich, chief AI and data officer, Mastercard, said: "AI is only as powerful as the trust behind it. At Mastercard, we're committed to building AI that's responsible, inclusive, and built to bring value to our customers, partners and employees. This isn't just innovation—it's innovation with integrity." Regional highlights covered in the whitepaper include: South Africa: South Africa attracted USD 610 million in AI-focused venture capital in 2023, with total AI investment expected to reach USD 3.7 billion by 2030. With the highest data and infrastructure readiness in Africa, the country is solidifying its role as a continental leader in AI research and application. It is home to the Artificial Intelligence Institute of South Africa which serves as a gateway for students and professionals to access world-class education, research and industry news. National plans aim to develop up to 300 AI start-ups and train 5,000 AI professionals by 2030, creating the foundation for a vibrant, homegrown AI ecosystem. Kenya: An emerging leader in AI innovation, Kenya has leveraged its "Silicon Savannah" status to securely deploy AI across sectors. Platforms like Tala use mobile data for credit scoring, while Jacaranda Health's UlizaLlama, an AI-powered chatbot, provides maternal health support in five local languages. The newly launched National AI Strategy (2025–2030) outlines the government's commitment to positioning Kenya as a regional leader in AI research and development, innovation and commercialization for socioeconomic development. Nigeria: Nigeria ranks second in the number of AI startups in Africa and secured USD 218 million in VC investment in 2023. As one of Africa's most dynamic AI ecosystems, Nigeria is using AI to personalize learning (Rising Academies), deliver microfinance via and strengthen governance with AI tools that monitor public fund allocation. With a $1.4 billion projected AI market size by 2025, the government's proactive approach, combined with growing private-sector innovation, suggests promising growth in AI applications. Morocco: An emerging AI hub in North Africa, Morocco is advancing AI adoption across healthcare, energy, agriculture, and finance. Institutions such as Mohammed VI Polytechnic University and DeepEcho are driving local innovation, while the MoroccoAI Annual Conference is shaping national dialogue on the future of AI. Under its Digital 2030 strategy, Morocco aims to attract USD 1.1 billion in investment and create 240,000 digital jobs by 2030. Despite this progress, the whitepaper warns that data fragmentation, language exclusion and regulatory inconsistency could deepen the digital divide. Harnessing the potential of AI in Africa will be instrumental in accelerating financial inclusion and driving the continent's digital and economic growth. Strategic collaborations between governments, fintechs, and global partners will be key to unlocking AI's full impact. Mastercard's whitepaper draws on insights from leading African technologists, policymakers, academics and entrepreneurs, including interviews with UNESCO, the African Center for Economic Transformation, and fintech leaders across the region. To download the full whitepaper, click Editor's Note 'Harnessing the transformative power of AI in Africa' has been written by White Paper Media Consulting (WPM) in partnership with the Mastercard EEMEA team. The findings and outcomes presented in this paper are based on interviews of various key stakeholders named in the report. These were put into perspective with contextual research by WPM. Markets covered include Kenya, Morocco, Nigeria and South Africa. Infographic and report design is by WPM. About Mastercard Mastercard powers economies and empowers people in 200+ countries and territories worldwide. Together with our customers, we're building a resilient economy where everyone can prosper. We support a wide range of digital payments choices, making transactions secure, simple, smart and accessible. Our technology and innovation, partnerships and networks combine to deliver a unique set of products and services that help people, businesses and governments realize their greatest potential. *Source: AETOSWire View source version on Contacts Kanyi Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

When will you be able to buy a pizza with stablecoin?
When will you be able to buy a pizza with stablecoin?

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

When will you be able to buy a pizza with stablecoin?

This story was originally published on Payments Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Payments Dive newsletter. Stablecoins have drawn headlines following President Donald Trump's signing of the Genius Act last month. Use of digital assets, including stablecoins, have grown steadily for cross-border transactions due to lower costs, less friction and faster settlements, with transaction volume of nearly $28 trillion last year, more than the combined volume of Visa and Mastercard, according to a June 2025 digital payments report from industry consulting firm The Strawhecker Group. Unlike some other cryptocurrencies, such as bitcoin, stablecoins are typically tied to the value of a fiat currency, like the dollar, to reduce their price volatility. They've evolved from 'a niche digital currency' the Strawhecker report said, as 'stablecoins power a growing share of global crypto trading, enable low-cost remittances, streamline merchant payouts, support underbanked countries, and offer a way for people in regions with volatile currencies to preserve value in dollars.' Stablecoins' acceleration into the mainstream is likely to quicken as U.S. regulators begin implementing the Genius law's policy framework, counteracting stricter crypto policies during the Biden administration. For example, PayPal Holdings touted a new 'Pay with Crypto' tool on July 28 that allows 'instant crypto to stablecoin or fiat conversion' and supports '100+ crypto currencies and wallets,' according to a press release. The company debuted its dollar-denominated stablecoin, PayPal USD, two years ago. The earliest use cases for stablecoin have been to settle cross-border transactions, facilitate lower-cost remittances and to store value for people in nations afflicted with severe inflation. But most of these stablecoin transactions occur far from the daily lives of ordinary consumers in America, many of whom are perhaps puzzled about digital currencies. That raises the question: Will stablecoins become a payment choice at local shops and gas stations for millions of smartphone-carrying U.S. consumers? Payments Dive asked payments and digital asset industry professionals for their thoughts on how, and when, stablecoins might filter down to consumer-level payments. Comments have been edited for clarity and brevity. Alexandra 'Lexy' Prodromos Neochordia Consulting Payments, product and emerging technology consultant (Former Discover Financial Services innovation and strategic product manager) What the Genius Act does, especially with the permitted payment stablecoin issuer registration, it allows there to be a more level playing field for companies or banks and payment networks if they want to issue their own stable points. There's this standardization across the board, which I think will make them more easy to regulate, and I think allow greater access. If you're able to use stablecoins and basically extend the value of the U.S. dollar to other markets in the world, and for consumers especially to be able to have this other option where they can basically use the same technology that makes cryptocurrencies interesting, but then have the price stability of the U.S. dollar, I think that opens up so many more avenues for smaller merchants and the ability for them to conduct their businesses with consumers overseas. So, I think that this is something that is really going to explode. Kirill Gertman Conduit Technology CEO, Founder For stablecoins to be an actual daily payment method, you need a convergence from both sides. From the consumer side, where we're not there yet, we're getting there step by step by step. We're getting payroll now, we're getting e-commerce. And then from the merchant side, the economics just make sense. So, we will probably see at least the largest ones issue their own coins. For large merchants doing a lot of these cross-border (transactions), those are extremely expensive. And they can make money on this. If they're issuing a stablecoin … they're actually making money on (holding) the underlying Treasuries, the short-term stuff. And so now, on one hand, they can save money. On the other hand, if they're big enough, they can actually make money. So, as a large enough merchant, why wouldn't you? I think the merchants will want this. What I think is going to happen and maybe create a problem here is that, imagine a scenario where every freaking merchant has its own stablecoin. Amazon has a coin. Walmart has a coin and Starbucks has a coin. And now as a consumer you're walking into Starbucks, and you're like, 'Oh sh–, I have Amazon coin in my mobile wallet, I don't have Starbucks coin. What am I going to do with this?' That's going to create a problem, that's going to create friction, essentially there will be a need for a clearing house. Like we have the clearing house on fiat transactions, we're going to need to have something like that on stablecoins as well. And then if it works really well, and if it's really seamless, the consumer doesn't notice it. They pay with a Starbucks coin for Amazon or the Walmart coin for whatever, then it'll work. If it's not seamless enough, it's not going to work. So that's the opportunity, but that's also the challenge.' Corey Frayer Consumer Federation of America Director of Investor Protection (Former Securities and Exchange Commission crypto policy advisor under Biden) You'll see mainstream adoption of stablecoins not because people want them but because companies want to give them to their customers. You're seeing forced adoption and regulatory favoritism as the impetus for adoption of crypto, not some value in the underlying technology. When you deregulate something as large as the payments ecosystem, you can guarantee that the money will start flowing through it almost instantly. My prediction is that within 18 months it's going to be relatively common for people to be moved into what is being described as stablecoin payment systems. Because the functional difference between a stablecoin and a current digital payment is minute. And the deregulatory benefit is enormous, and so we'll see people move to that quickly. Amanda Fischer Better Markets Policy Director, Chief Operating Officer (Former SEC chief of staff under Biden administration) I think that [stablecoins] may become an emerging form of payments, but I don't think that that's because they offer a superior payments experience. I think it's more because of the favorable provisions in legislation and the lobbying and the hype and the marketing, rather than their actual use case. It's incredibly risky and it's bad for consumers and the financial system. But for [merchants, they] get out of interchange, they get people to keep their money in your ecosystem. The more money they keep in their ecosystem, the more interest that they can earn for basically free. Ben Weiss CoinFlip CEO We, as a company, already see a bunch of people in countries outside the U.S. buying stablecoins because they want access to the dollar. So stablecoins also basically dollarize the world. We think stablecoins solve a lot of international payments issues, but could also solve payment issues in the U.S. I know many merchants aren't happy about the interchange fee they're paying [for acceptance of cards]. That being said, nothing happens overnight, right? There are people in the U.S. who still write checks. Lynne Marek contributed to this story. Recommended Reading Stablecoins emerge as alternative: Amex CEO

AI in Africa to Top $16.5B by 2030: Mastercard Explores Path for Continued Digital Transformation
AI in Africa to Top $16.5B by 2030: Mastercard Explores Path for Continued Digital Transformation

Business Wire

time2 hours ago

  • Business Wire

AI in Africa to Top $16.5B by 2030: Mastercard Explores Path for Continued Digital Transformation

NAIROBI, Kenya--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Mastercard has today released its latest whitepaper, Harnessing the transformative power of AI in Africa, a pan-African study of the continent's readiness, opportunity and roadmap for responsible artificial intelligence (AI) adoption. The whitepaper provides detailed insights into how AI—if deployed responsibly and inclusively—can unlock transformative outcomes across the continent's major industries, including agriculture, healthcare, education, energy and finance. With Africa's AI market projected to grow from USD 4.5 billion in 2025 to USD 16.5 billion by 2030 according to a recent report from Statista, the paper presents a clear case for multi-stakeholder collaboration and investment. It highlights how Africa's unique demographics, mobile-first infrastructure and entrepreneurial spirit position it as an active architect of the future. Mark Elliott, division president, Africa at Mastercard, commented: 'Africa's engagement with AI is already reshaping lives — not just in labs, but in farms, clinics and classrooms. To unlock its full potential, we need investment in infrastructure, data, talent, and policy. At Mastercard, we believe responsible, locally rooted AI can drive inclusive growth and connect more people to opportunity.' The whitepaper outlines the potential positive impact of AI on digital infrastructure, policy and governance, research and development, local language processing and investment into Africa. It also explores how AI can accelerate job creation, with up to 230 million digital jobs projected by 2030, and increase access to formal finance through AI-enabled credit scoring and fraud prevention. Greg Ulrich, chief AI and data officer, Mastercard, said: 'AI is only as powerful as the trust behind it. At Mastercard, we're committed to building AI that's responsible, inclusive, and built to bring value to our customers, partners and employees. This isn't just innovation—it's innovation with integrity.' Regional highlights covered in the whitepaper include: South Africa: South Africa attracted USD 610 million in AI-focused venture capital in 2023, with total AI investment expected to reach USD 3.7 billion by 2030. With the highest data and infrastructure readiness in Africa, the country is solidifying its role as a continental leader in AI research and application. It is home to the Artificial Intelligence Institute of South Africa which serves as a gateway for students and professionals to access world-class education, research and industry news. National plans aim to develop up to 300 AI start-ups and train 5,000 AI professionals by 2030, creating the foundation for a vibrant, homegrown AI ecosystem. Kenya: An emerging leader in AI innovation, Kenya has leveraged its 'Silicon Savannah' status to securely deploy AI across sectors. Platforms like Tala use mobile data for credit scoring, while Jacaranda Health's UlizaLlama, an AI-powered chatbot, provides maternal health support in five local languages. The newly launched National AI Strategy (2025–2030) outlines the government's commitment to positioning Kenya as a regional leader in AI research and development, innovation and commercialization for socioeconomic development. Nigeria: Nigeria ranks second in the number of AI startups in Africa and secured USD 218 million in VC investment in 2023. As one of Africa's most dynamic AI ecosystems, Nigeria is using AI to personalize learning (Rising Academies), deliver microfinance via and strengthen governance with AI tools that monitor public fund allocation. With a $1.4 billion projected AI market size by 2025, the government's proactive approach, combined with growing private-sector innovation, suggests promising growth in AI applications. Morocco: An emerging AI hub in North Africa, Morocco is advancing AI adoption across healthcare, energy, agriculture, and finance. Institutions such as Mohammed VI Polytechnic University and DeepEcho are driving local innovation, while the MoroccoAI Annual Conference is shaping national dialogue on the future of AI. Under its Digital 2030 strategy, Morocco aims to attract USD 1.1 billion in investment and create 240,000 digital jobs by 2030. Despite this progress, the whitepaper warns that data fragmentation, language exclusion and regulatory inconsistency could deepen the digital divide. Harnessing the potential of AI in Africa will be instrumental in accelerating financial inclusion and driving the continent's digital and economic growth. Strategic collaborations between governments, fintechs, and global partners will be key to unlocking AI's full impact. Mastercard's whitepaper draws on insights from leading African technologists, policymakers, academics and entrepreneurs, including interviews with UNESCO, the African Center for Economic Transformation, and fintech leaders across the region. To download the full whitepaper, click Editor's Note 'Harnessing the transformative power of AI in Africa' has been written by White Paper Media Consulting (WPM) in partnership with the Mastercard EEMEA team. The findings and outcomes presented in this paper are based on interviews of various key stakeholders named in the report. These were put into perspective with contextual research by WPM. Markets covered include Kenya, Morocco, Nigeria and South Africa. Infographic and report design is by WPM. About Mastercard Mastercard powers economies and empowers people in 200+ countries and territories worldwide. Together with our customers, we're building a resilient economy where everyone can prosper. We support a wide range of digital payments choices, making transactions secure, simple, smart and accessible. Our technology and innovation, partnerships and networks combine to deliver a unique set of products and services that help people, businesses and governments realize their greatest potential.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store