The CEO of Dropbox shares his best advice for his 24-year-old self
About 10 years later, the file-sharing service has more than 500 million users, generates $1 billion-plus in annualized revenue, and was valued at about $10 billion in 2014.
Speaking with Business Insider US editor in chief Alyson Shontell on an episode of Business Insider's podcast "Success! How I Did It," he reflected on what he's learned about being CEO, and the advice that would have been a "relief" to his 24-year-old self.
"First, no one is born a CEO," he told Shontell. "This is an acquired skill set, and, furthermore, it's one that you learn on the job. So everyone is a first-time CEO by definition at some point."
Second, he said, "just about everything is learnable. I started out just on the engineering side. I had no real business experience. I literally went on Amazon and typed in 'sales' or 'marketing' or 'strategy,' and would just buy the couple top-rated books, and that's what I would do on the roof of the fraternity. I would just read."
He continued:
For that reason, he recommends starting early, and being "systematic" about learning. "So what that means in practice is, I've always found it valuable to ask myself, 'One year from now, two years from now, five years from now, what will I wish I had been learning today?'"