The New Genius
Channeling the best minds of our time
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2000/january/18748.html
Sometimes brilliance sheds new light on common experience.
Following are six skills you use every day in growing your
business: campaigning, energy, intelligence, promotion, vision and
determination. We've spotlighted six people who elevate these
abilities to new levels. In the process, they aren't simply
illustrating these virtues, they're redefining them. What will
it take to succeed in the 21st century? All this, and more . .
.
After 13 years of interviewing entrepreneurs,
Entrepreneur freelancer Gayle Sato Stodder is a great believer
in the presence of everyday genius.
The Blair Witch Team: Eduardo Sanchez & Daniel
Myrick
You would have laughed. Two years ago, had anyone proposed to
you that a no-name movie shot entirely by handheld camera on a
$30,000 budget would take Hollywood by storm in the summer of 1999,
you would have chuckled in disbelief. Admit it. A conference with
the Blair Witch herself couldn't have convinced you
otherwise.
Now, needless to say, it's the creative and marketing teams
behind The Blair Witch Project that are having the last
laugh. Although this movie is remarkable on many levels, the buzz
it generated was nothing short of supernatural. Not only did it lay
waste to the Hollywood mythology that equates monster budgets with
success, it also laid to rest any lingering notions that
word-of-mouth happens by accident.
Consider the dilemma. Blair Witch writer-directors Daniel
Myrick, 35, and Eduardo Sanchez, 30, not only had to figure out how
to scare up an audience for their film, but also had to generate
considerable buzz just to get their film released into movie
theaters. Marketing began in June 1998--a full year before the film
was released--with the launch of a Web site that told the
"back story" of Burkittsville, Maryland's fictional
witch.
It cast a spell. What began as an e-mail list to a few dozen
friends quickly transformed into 1,700 hard-core believers--many of
whom didn't realize the mythology wasn't real. Fan pages
went up, hypertext links lit up like Christmas lights, and a cult
was born. By the time the movie hit the Sundance Film Festival in
January 1999, Blair Witch was no longer a no-name
player.
"The buzz at Sundance was certainly stronger because of our
site," says Sanchez, who built the original Web site. "A
lot of people tell us they spend hours exploring the world
we've created around the Blair Witch. They get excited not only
about the movie, but about the mythology as well."
Artisan Entertainment, the marketing and distribution company
that signed The Blair Witch Project at Sundance, picked up
where the unbudgeted Sanchez and Myrick left off. It poured money
into the Web site, creating regularly staged events, such as the
release of outtakes from a "discovered" film reel. The
haul: more than 100 million hits and counting. College campuses
were plastered with "Missing Persons" posters bemoaning
the plight of Blair Witch's ill-fated characters. The
movie's first trailer was leaked to selected Web sites
(including Ain't-It-Cool-News). And in July, just before the
movie's release, cable TV's Sci-Fi Channel aired a
"mockumentary" detailing enough of the Blair Witch legend
to start up a scare.
And what a scare it was. Gross receipts for Blair Witch
topped $139 million, which just might make it the most profitable
movie ever, considering its low initial budget. Though its success
will be hard to duplicate, the gritty, cutting-edge techniques used
to promote this film have themselves become the stuff of
legends.
"The public is like a swarm of bees--it's an organic
entity that exists apart from the behavior and characteristics of
each individual," muses Robert J. Dowling, editor in chief and
publisher of the The Hollywood Reporter. "Blair
Witch hooked into that organism. People got caught up in
it.
"You talk to any waiter in L.A., and they'll tell you
it's impossible to break into this business. Well, these guys
proved it's possible. I mean, who were they? Who knew them?
They made a movie that a lot of people either didn't like or
walked out of, and still they had everybody talking."
That's not myth. That's reality.
Tiger Woods
He was still in the crib when the sight of his father knocking
golf balls into a net fascinated him. At 2, he putted with Bob Hope
on the Mike Douglas Show. At 3, he shot a 48 for nine holes. He was
not an ordinary kid with an interest in golf. He was a natural, a
prodigy.
He was Tiger Woods.
At 23, Tiger Woods is the top-rated golfer in the world, and he
leads the PGA in scoring and all-around play. He doesn't always
win, but he's invariably the one to watch. With Woods, you
always feel there's the possibility of something remarkable
happening--a soaring drive, a miraculous save, some brilliant and
unexpected stroke that causes you to rethink the laws of physics.
Woods plays golf the way Mozart made music: as if on a divine
mission.
"I believe Tiger was blessed with a God-given gift,"
says Golf Digest senior writer Pete McDaniel, who has been
covering Woods since 1994 and who co-wrote Training a Tiger: A
Father's Guide to Raising a Winner in Both Golf and Life
(HarperCollins) with Earl Woods. "I admit to being somewhat
biased," McDaniel continues, "but I also happen to think
I'm right.
"Tiger's creativity as a golfer is unbelievable,"
says McDaniel. "He has a mind's eye like no one else. And
not only is he able to see how to make a difficult shot, but he
also has the ability to pull it off. Time and again, I've seen
him extricate himself from a situation that looked simply
impossible. He also has enormous faith in his abilities. Tiger will
learn a new shot one day and have the courage to attempt it in
competition the next."
Yet Woods is more than a guy with an uncanny knack. From the
beginning, he seems to have understood the weight of his
predicament. He's never been just a good golfer--or even a
really, really good golfer. He's a standout, a
breakaway, an exception to the rule. Not just young, but amazingly
young. Not just a talented kid, but a person of
color . . . in a traditionally uncolored
sport.
Which raises the question, What do you do when the odds are
against you, the pressure is on, and all you really want to do is
play through? If you're Woods, you go to work. Instead of
relying on sheer genius to carry him forward, Woods has been
tireless about improving his game. "I'm not saying his
[brilliance] is all hard work," says McDaniel. "I could
train forever and never even approach his level of ability. But he
works very hard to perfect the gifts and talents he's been
given. He doesn't take anything for granted."
And Woods accepts that genius is more than a gift or a tool;
it's also a responsibility. In 1996, he established the Tiger
Woods Foundation to get inner-city kids involved in the game of
golf, to support educational and employment opportunities for
disadvantaged communities, promote parental involvement in
children's lives, and advocate racial harmony and
inclusiveness.
This work is obviously important, but perhaps no more important
than Woods' continuing determination to play out his own
success. Whatever rewards that success brings--celebrity, money,
status--maybe none of it matters more than what Woods personifies:
Accepting the gifts, life's gifts. And doing everything in your
considerable power to honor them.
Daniel DiLorenzo
Daniel DiLorenzo was so busy studying for his MBA, his Ph.D. and
his MD that he apparently never got the message that one of these
careers would have been enough. Even his father suggested he might
choose: Be a hotshot entrepreneur or an MIT-trained engineering
Ph.D. or even a Harvard/MIT-educated neurosurgeon. Pick any one,
son, because they're all fine.
If only DiLorenzo, 33, had listened. Then MIT might not have
singled him out as one of the most promising young inventors in the
nation. Last year, DiLorenzo won the $30,000 Lemelson-MIT Student
Prize for being an innovator and a role model for young inventors.
His work centers on medical electronic devices that help people
with neurological problems function more effectively. One project
he worked on at MIT, for example, involved implantable
microelectrodes that enable artificial limbs to communicate with
nerves in the arms of amputees.
Hence the need for the triple-threat education: "Each part
of my background has been important to understanding how the pieces
intersect," says DiLorenzo. "From the medical side,
I'm learning a great deal about everything from patient
concerns to surgical issues. From the engineering side, I've
learned how to approach and solve problems. And from my business
training, I understand the importance of issues such as
reimbursability." Without a certain depth of education,
DiLorenzo maintains, "there are a lot of failure
modes."
As DiLorenzo completes his first year of neurosurgical residency
at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City, he admits his path
hasn't been the shortest route to success. "I have friends
who are worth tens of millions of dollars because of
entrepreneurial ventures they've already formed," he
reports. But if DiLorenzo stays on track, he'll collect
dividends as well.
"I believe that if you're addressing a big problem,
there's going to be a financial payoff," he says.
"And if this work results in viable and efficacious treatments
for people with spinal cord injuries and other neurological
problems, the personal payoff will be huge."
DiLorenzo's course of study isn't in the cards for most
entrepreneurs. But he believes his approach to learning and
innovating can be. "By far, persistence is the most important
factor to achieving your goals," he says. "One should
sense a destiny and relentlessly pursue its realization, despite
its perceived impossibility." What seems unlikely may be
nothing more than living up to your potential. Hey, it's
business, engineering and neurosurgery--not rocket science.
Tina Brown
It's a waste of four letters. Naming Tina Brown's new
magazine Talk is an extraneous effort. "Most people I know are
simply calling it `Tina Brown's new magazine,' "
reports public relations expert Anthony Mora, CEO of Anthony Mora
Communications in Los Angeles and author of The Alchemy of
Success: Marketing Your Company/Career Through the Power of the
Media (Dunhill). "[In the film business,] that's the
kind of billing usually reserved for big stars and major directors.
Somehow, she's managed to get her name above the
title."
In fact, 45-year-old Brown's name belongs above the title.
Nowhere else in the kingdom of magazines is an editor's profile
as significantly--and profitably--tied to her product. Tina Brown
isn't simply a genius at branding. Tina Brown is the brand.
How big an accomplishment is that? Just try naming a half-dozen
other magazine editors off the top of your head.
Brown's editorial talent is undeniable. Although she's
drawn plenty of fire for being a provocateur (think Demi Moore
naked and pregnant on the cover of Vanity Fair--vintage
Brown), she never throws a party to which nobody comes. Her
four-year stint at Britain's Tatler--begun in 1979 when
Brown was only 25 years old--saw a 300 percent rise in circulation.
During the eight years she held court at Vanity Fair--from
1983 to 1992--circulation at the magazine quadrupled.
But it was as editor of the New Yorker that Brown found
her groove. "Not everyone liked what she did at the New
Yorker, but she created a lot of furor," says Mora.
"And that translated into a very high profile. She was quite
visible as editor of Vanity Fair, but she developed a very
clear persona as editor of the New Yorker."
In her new incarnation, as chair and editor in chief of
Talk, the mystique has only intensified. Brown is the center
of everything current, stylish, literate and fresh. "It's
not just that she goes to the right places," says Mora.
"It's that a place becomes the right place because she is
there."
If it were possible to deconstruct that magic and to distill
that formula, everyone could be prom queen. Until then,
entrepreneurs can take a page out of Brown's book. "In the
new millennium, the cult of personality will be more important than
ever," says Mora. "People who can create a buzz for
themselves--in addition to their products or practices--will have
two areas they can promote," with potentially potent results.
Talk's premier issue sold out of its initial 1 million
copies and had to return to press for an additional run of
300,000--evidence that "Tina Brown's new magazine"
really is more than just Talk, Talk, Talk.
George Lucas
It's not just that George Lucas is the imaginative force
behind an entire galaxy of fantastic characters, planets and
adventures. Nor is it that these worlds seem to spring forth from
Lucas' imagination fully formed, like Athena from the head of
Zeus. It is that Lucas' vision is so pure, so intense, that it
defies the absurdities of the movie business, the technical limits
of filmmaking, indeed the very boundaries of reality.
As a writer, director, producer and movie-industry entrepreneur,
Lucas has lent his particular brand of magic to a variety of
films--ranging from the Indiana Jones trilogy to American
Graffiti. But his defining work, clearly, is Star Wars.
Here is a universe entirely of Lucas' creation--a statement
easily made but not at all easily realized.
Consider the creativity required to dream up brave new worlds of
larger-than-life humans, fanciful aliens, robots with personality,
other-planetary landscapes and intergalactic vehicles. Formidable,
right?
Now consider the challenges involved in translating those images
onto film, from the grand questions of plot and setting to the
millions of details that go into each frame: What should Princess
Leia's opening line be? What sound should a ship's engines
make? Lucas' sense of what his universe should look and sound
like was so intense that he deviated very little in production from
his original storyboards and script.
Still not impressed? Then look a little deeper. Ultimately, the
technology Lucas needed--and therefore developed--to make Star
Wars and its various sequels and prequels' ever-improving
phenomena has simultaneously given rise to an empire of
enterprises: Industrial Light & Magic, the premier maker of
visual effects worldwide; Skywalker Sound, which provides
cutting-edge post-production sound; THX, delivering high-quality
sound systems to both movie and home theaters; interactive software
maker Lucas Learning Ltd.; video game producer LucasArts
Entertainment Co.; Lucasfilm Ltd. and Lucas Licensing Ltd. While
most mortals would be happy just to count the dollars these
various companies have made, Lucas has used a sizeable portion of
his profits to fund his projects and secure his creative
independence.
At every turn, what would have been an ordinary person's
life's work was only one piece of the larger puzzle for Lucas.
In retrospect, it's difficult to know which was the greater
accomplishment: summoning the dream itself or sustaining that
vision with perfect clarity while constructing it brick by
innovative brick. Yet, Lucas' epic tale is at root no different
from any entrepreneur's. He had a dream. And he made it come
true.
Or, in the words of Lucas' friend and colleague Steven
Spielberg, "The only explanation I can offer [for Lucas'
genius] is this: One day, in a brilliant flash of white light, he
saw the future, and he has spent the past 20 years showing it to
us."
Lance Armstrong
Lance Armstrong didn't get it. Metastatic cancer. If
ever there was an excuse to throw in the towel on the incredible
rigors of competitive cycling, he had it. But this guy was not
suggestible.
Armstrong, then 25, announced his diagnosis--testicular cancer,
which had spread to his lungs and brain--in October 1996. Doctors
gave him just a 50/50 chance for recovery. Treatment was
aggressive--the removal of a testicle, six hours of brain surgery,
three months of toxic chemotherapy. It was enough to lay anyone
low.
So why was Armstrong back in the saddle five months after his
diagnosis?
Call it denial, call it force of habit, but there was something
stubborn about Armstrong's decision to return to cycling.
Surely, he knew the odds and felt the sheer impossibility of
it. But here was a guy who had devoted his entire life to riding a
bicycle--who won his first triathlon at 13, became a professional
triathlete at 16, cycled in the 1992 Barcelona Olympics and went on
to become one of the world's top riders. For Armstrong, getting
back on the bike was more than a recuperative gesture. It was an
act of will.
And then it was serious. In May 1998, Armstrong put himself back
on the competitive map by winning the Sprint 56K Criterium. Soon
after, he landed a place on the U.S. Postal Service team--the only
team that would take him. The world seemed skeptical about his
ability to reclaim his position as cycling's golden boy.
Sponsorship offers and endorsement deals weren't exactly
streaming in; still, Armstrong remained dogged.
"I guess I can react one of two ways," he told
Bicycling magazine in 1998. "I can say `Hey, listen,
I've raced bikes for five or six years; I've been
successful' and just move on. Or I can say `I'm pissed, and
I'm gonna find a ride somewhere and make everybody look like
fools.' "
By now, you know which route he took--the one that led to his
1999 victory in the Tour de France. That he also beat his bout with
cancer makes his success even sweeter. He made fools of his
detractors, but, more important, he made believers of us all. Fate
can throw some nasty twists into your life, but the outcome--as far
as Armstrong is concerned--isn't simply a question of which
course you take. It's more in the strength of your ride.
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