Skip to main content

The dirty secret about success

New post

The dirty secret about success 



Very often, the most successful people are moderately talented but very lucky.'
We’re often reluctant to credit our good fortune purely to luck. We’d much rather put a material gain or positive outcome down to our brilliant intelligence, smarts, skills or hard work.
But if success is directly correlated to our ability, why do there seem to be so many rich people with mediocre talent? And why aren’t the smartest people in the world also the wealthiest?
A new paper authored by a team of Italian researchers, physicists Alessandro Pluchino and Andrea Raspisarda and economist Alessio Biondo, used a computer simulation of success defined by financial wealth to show that the most successful people in the world aren’t necessarily the most talented. They are the luckiest.
Good things happen to mediocre people
The researchers created an imaginary world, filled with 1,000 individuals with varying levels of talent in random positions who were exposed to random lucky and unlucky events.
Each person started with the same amount (10 units) of capital. Their level of talent (characteristics like intelligence, skill or effort) influenced the probability that they would be able to turn a lucky opportunity into more capital. After a simulation of 40 years, meant to represent a person’s career, the distribution of wealth looked an awful like it does in the real world, with a small percentage of people obtaining the most capital.
Very often, the most successful people are moderately talented but very lucky - Alessandro Pluchino
“Were the most successful people also the most talented ones? That’s what we would expect… if we assume that we reward the most successful people because they are more talented or intelligent than other people, says physicist Pluchino.
“But we discovered that this is not the case. Instead, very often, the most successful people are moderately talented but very lucky.
“We discovered a strict correlation between luck and success. Encountering a series of lucky events was responsible for incredible success even if their individual talent was lower than super talented people.
“This is what we usually see around us in the real world. There are plenty of instances of people who we don’t consider particularly smart but in some way they reach a high level of wealth and success.”
Of course, you need a certain level of talent be able exploit those lucky opportunities, the researchers say, and this "talent" can be anything from capacity for hard work to intelligence, to actually being hard working.
But talent alone is not enough. In the simulation, the people who had the highest level of talent only made up a small portion of successful people.
Share the wealth
These results could have implications for the way policy makers and funding agencies distribute opportunities, such as handing out financial grants for academic research. And this could mean that the most talented people – the people most likely to progress innovation forward – get a better chance to shine through.
The team found several alternatives that could change the way we currently reward people who are already successful.
For instance, instead of handing out bonuses for already high-performing sales people, one strategy could be giving a small amount of money to everyone, which was more effective than the meritocratic system in the computer simulation.
Even giving money to 25% of people at random (regardless of their past performance) led to a higher percentage of the most talented people in the computer model who achieved success than rewarding the most successful people, since as we know, success was largely a proxy for luck.
But past performance is no guarantee of future performance, warns Biondo. “If you value merit exclusively by means of past results, once you realise your past results can be generated not only by talent, but also because of fortunate events, then you are rewarding luck, not merit.”
By exposing people to more fortunate events, you provide more opportunities for hidden talent to emerge in society - Andrea Raspisarda
This has interesting implications for society as a whole and could creating more opportunities for everyone across the board. “It means improving education, healthcare, all of this is part of the project,” says Raspisarda. “By exposing people, especially at a young age, to more fortunate events, you provide more opportunities for hidden talent to emerge in society.”
The rich get richer
Other than informing policy on a macro-economic level, there are individual benefits to understanding the role of luck – for example being born in a developed country, or to wealthy parents – in our fortunes.
We remember when we overcome barriers, but often overlook the advantages we’re given to reach a goal
We tend to pay special attention to the factors in our lives that we see holding us back from success, and forget about all the factors that help us. A 2016 studylabelled our tendency to overlook luck as a headwinds/tailwinds asymmetry: we remember when we overcome barriers (working against a headwind), but often overlook the advantages we’re given to reach a goal (like a tailwind).
Luck can also make us more generous. Another study, by author of Success and Luck Richard Frank, demonstrated that when people realised they were lucky or fortunate, they were more likely to give money to charity.
In the study, three groups were asked to recount a positive event. One group was asked to list personal traits that caused the event, another was asked to list external causes, and a control group just recounted the positive experience. They were all given a monetary bonus and opportunity to donate it. Participants who listed external causes donated 25% more to charity.
“It’s hard to get people to think about external forces and events,” says Frank. “But we find that if you prompt them to think about it – by asking about a time when they were lucky, rather than telling them they were lucky – the more generous people become and more willing to contribute to the common good.”
By definition, lucky events – where you are born, what family you are born into, who you meet – are largely out of your control and up to random chance. But even the Italian researchers believe there are things we can do to try to increase our luck.
“Expose yourself to as many casual interactions and opportunities as possible,” says Pluchino. “It’s also true that if you will still need luck.
“But you probably won’t find lucky opportunities if you stay locked in your room.”
--
To comment on this story or anything else you have seen on BBC Capital, please head over to our Facebook page or message us on Twitter.
If you liked this story, sign up for the weekly bbc.com features newsletter called "If You Only Read 6 Things This Week". A handpicked selection of stories from BBC Future, Culture, Capital and Travel, delivered to your inbox every Friday.

Comments

TRENDING

How To Prepare Coconut-Dill Salmon With Green Beans and Corn

Falafel Pita Sandwich

ELANGA SIGNS A 5years contract with Manchester United

New symptoms of omicron virus

Rachael Ostovich Stuns on Beach in Tiny Red Bikini

Drake vs Chris Brown dance challenge

Bella Shmurda honors Mohbad with ‘KPK’ performance in UK

Khloé Kardashian Finally caught Tristan’s cheating on her with ex

Popular posts from this blog

How To Prepare Coconut-Dill Salmon With Green Beans and Corn

  Coconut-Dill Salmon With Green Beans and Corn Time : 40 minutes  A fillet of salmon is foil-wrapped and placed on a hot grill to steam in its own juices after being bathed in a fragrant mixture of coconut cream, lemon, and dill. The fish is served with a light salad of fresh corn, tomatoes, green beans, and a sprinkling of feathery dill. The outcome, either warm or cold, is an excellent low-lift dish for a large gathering or a supper that can be prepared ahead of time. INGREDIENTS Yield : 6 to 8 servings 1(2-pound) salmon fillet (skin on or off) 2tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon olive oil Coarse kosher salt (such as Morton) and black pepper 1cup unsweetened coconut cream or coconut milk 2tablespoons dark brown sugar 1tablespoon sherry vinegar 1teaspoon Dijon mustard 1lemon 1cup chopped fresh dill 8ounces green beans, trimmed and halved crosswise 1cup fresh corn kernels (from 1 to 2 ears corn) 1pint cherry tomatoes, lightly crushed open or sliced into halves PREPARATION Step 1 Hea...

Falafel Pita Sandwich

  Falafel is generally a scrumptious vegetarian choice, and it makes a good fundamental filling for a pita sandwich. Throw in a few new veggies and tahini sauce and you have a feast. Falafel can be delighted in at room temperature or warmed prior to appreciating. RECIPES    1 tablespoon olive oil 6 pita bread loaves 18 cooked falafel balls, from homemade or store-bought falafel mix 2 medium tomatoes, diced 1 medium cucumber, unpeeled and diced 1 medium white or red onion, thinly sliced 1/4 cup finely chopped fresh parsley 3 sandwich pickles, sliced, optional Tahini sauce, homemade or store-bought, to taste. PREPARATION    STEP 1 Gather the ingredients. STEP 2 Heat a large nonstick skillet or griddle to medium-high heat. Coat with olive oil and heat a pita round for 2 minutes on each side. The pita may begin to brown a little. Repeat with the remaining pita rounds, making sure to cut the top part to reveal the pocket after heating. STEP 3 Stuff each pita round wi...

ELANGA SIGNS A 5years contract with Manchester United

ELANGA SIGNS A  5years contract with Manchester United  Manchester United is enchanted to report that Anthony Elanga has marked another agreement, which will keep him at the club until June 2026, with the choice to reach out for a further year. Elanga, 19, joined United's Academy at 12 years old and has shown up for the principal group up until this point. The Sweden Under-21 worldwide significantly scored on his subsequent Premier League start, in last season's 2-1 triumph over Wolverhampton Wanderers Anthony Elanga said: "My definitive desire has forever been to play for Manchester United. The standard is very high, however this agreement is one more significant second in my excursion. This is the ideal climate to make the following stride, with elite players and mentors to gain from each day. I'm excited that the Club has shown such confidence in my turn of events, and I need to thank my family and all of the staff for their continuous help. I realize that with diff...

New symptoms of omicron virus

The omicron variation side effects you could confront dependent on your COVID antibody status The omicron variation of the novel Covid has turned into the prevailing strain in the United States. Presently, more reports of the omicron variation side effects have begun to rise out of bleeding edge laborers. Dr. Craig Spencer, a trauma center specialist in New York, as of late shared some episodic data regarding what's been found in the trauma center with regards to COVID-19. This is what he found: Each quiet who got a third promoter COVID-19 immunization shot had gentle manifestations. This included sore throat, exhaustion and muscle torment. Patients who had two dosages of Pfizer or Moderna COVID-19 antibodies had gentle side effects however more than the people who had three portions. He said there was more weariness, seriously hacking and more hopeless manifestations by and large. The individuals who had one portion of Johnson and Johnson were more awful, feeling terrible with a f...