This post is not intended to turn people to the dark side; it has no designs of transforming saints into sinners; no nefarious aims of having sensible, good-natured people suddenly worship at the altar of Darth Vader.
That disclosure aside, it bears repeating….don’t be Mr. Wonderful.
You might think that this admonition is a little out of character coming from a guy who has written extensively in The Power of Professionalism about people being their ‘best self’. Allow me to clarify.
Who, you ask, is Mr. Wonderful? He is Kevin O’Leary –a self-made Canadian gazillionaire who is one of the five well-heeled judges who star on the mega-hit television show Shark Tank. For those unfamiliar with Shark Tank, up-and-coming entrepreneurs pitch deals to the judges—hoping to raise desperately-needed capital for their fledgling companies.
Calling them ‘judges’ is really a misnomer—because their primary role is that of ‘potential investor’. They’re really looking to do a deal—that’s why they refer to each other as sharks. They hold the term as a badge of honor. If a shark likes what they hear and the parties come to terms, the shark’s equity stake is secured by writing a big check. They play for keeps; they’re investing their own money.
Naturally, both the sharks and entrepreneurs alike try to get the best deal they can. Each is trying to get the most out of their investment. Occasionally the sharks will compete strenuously amongst themselves when the entrepreneur has developed something ‘special’—an extraordinary product or service that the sharks’ sense will have extraordinary potential in the marketplace.
You can learn a tremendous amount about the sharks as they ‘wheel-and-deal’ and interact with each other. It’s interesting to see what the sharks ‘bite on’ and what causes them to ‘walk’. Most sharks are discerning about the deals they enter into, others less so.
With O’Leary, money borders on being an obsession. O’Leary, who has no shortage opinions when it comes to politics, said he’d run for office but there wasn’t any money in it. From his point-of-view, money is ‘the only thing that matters’. ‘Pursuing wealth and being an entrepreneur are the most noble endeavors on Earth’ according to O’Leary.
Certainly the other sharks enjoy making money too, but, when compared with O’Leary, they have limits. They exhibit self-imposed boundaries. Not so much with O’Leary. If he thinks the deal will make him money, he’s all over it.
“You’re dead to me” is a common retort O’Leary gives to entrepreneurs who rebuff his advances. His interrogations are relentless. The cold hard truth not only aptly describes how O’Leary deals with others but is the title of his 2011 book.
His aggressive, unrelenting nature, along with his brutal honesty, earned O’Leary the title ‘Mr. Wonderful’. The title originated from an off-handed, sarcastic comment born out of disgust from a fellow-shark who despised O’Leary’s approach. The title, one of derision, was one O’Leary liked—it stuck.
Consider:
1) it is common for an entrepreneur to reveal that, going in, they aspired to do a deal with a certain shark. Rarely, if ever, is Kevin’s name mentioned.
2) when Kevin is going head-to-head with a fellow shark for a deal, he loses far more than he wins. Simply put, entrepreneurs don’t pick him much.
3) of the deals where the sharks partner together, Kevin is treated regularly by his colleagues as the ‘shark of last resort’. In other words, his colleagues aren’t clamoring to partner with him.
These last three points are based solely on my observations as a regular viewer. In spite of the lack of statistically-based evidence, I believe these observations are fair representations.
I repeat….don’t be Mr. Wonderful.
In business, at the end of the day, it’s all about people. In the ‘Tank’, people have shown a reluctance to want to work with Kevin. Why?
***it appears that people are a means to an end with Kevin. Money is the end and people are the means. This dynamic typically ends badly.
***most people will have a serious values mismatch with someone like Kevin. For most, money is not ‘the only thing that matters’. NOTE: it is guys like O’Leary that give entrepreneurs a bad name.
***most people view nobility (and wealth creation) in a very different light than O’Leary. For most, nobility has far more to do with what one does with their money than merely accumulating it. Again, the potential for a serious values mismatch exists.
***most people can’t help but take O’Leary’s approach personally. It’s no fun going to work dreading how your business partner will ‘get to you’ today.
People have and will continue to work with Kevin—-but it appears they do so out of need, rather than desire. While business isn’t about winning popularity contests, it’s also important to point out the obvious—business is a lot more enjoyable, and frequently more profitable, when we’re working with someone we like and whose values we share. Everything else being equal, who would you rather work with—someone you enjoy working with or someone who ‘gets to you’?
For all I know O’Leary has a different (better?) persona and approach outside of the Shark Tank. If so, good for him. For now, what I do know is that when the key players on the show see Kevin coming they’re all-too-frequently putting on their shark repellant–hoping he will keep his distance.
My take: be someone whom people want to work with. Be disciplined, be tough, be demanding—just don’t be Mr. Wonderful.