NYU Commencement Speech 2016

NYU Engineering Commencement Speech

Thank you for the opportunity to address you on your graduation from this esteemed engineering school. I’m honored to help you celebrate this important milestone.NYU commencement speech

If you can’t see the video click here

Your life is already full of milestones: Your first steps, your first kiss, passing a driving test, this graduation. And there are more to come: your first job, getting married, buying a house, having a child, becoming a manager, starting a company, retirement – and eventually commencement speaker 🙂

In 33% of the commencement speeches this year, 2.8 million graduates are going to hear advice about “follow your own path.” Or “Learn from others”. Or the perennial favorite, “you can make a difference.”

All of this is great advice. In fact, I’m going to give you exactly the same advice. But in very few of these speeches does anyone let you in on why we’re telling you this with such passion and urgency.

So today as we celebrate your graduation I’m going to tell you why.

—–

When I was young, I learned a quote in Sunday school, that has stayed with me throughout my life. It said, “teach us to number our days that we gain a heart of wisdom”. Since then I’ve had a series of interesting careers: technician in the Air Force, tech writer, marketer, entrepreneur, CEO and now educator and mentor.

But this idea has never been far from my mind: That most of us will wake up 28,762 days- and then one day – we won’t.

That means you have about 21,000 days left –  and about 14,000 of them for your career.  So herein lies the urgency.

In every startup I did, every new course I created, and everything I’ve taught, the phrase “make every day count” took on new meaning when I knew how many were left.

So how do you live a life making the most of each day?

That’s the challenge we all face – and we all make different choices on how we do it. But this morning I’d like to share three short stories – about how I made my days count and gained some wisdom from others.

­_________

So my first story is about Taking Risks and Pushing Boundaries

As you enter the working world, you’ll hear things like, “That’s not how we do things here.”  “It’s never been done that way before.”  and “The rules say you can’t do this.”

Some of these rules will keep you from killing yourself on the job. Some are required for you to gain the skills to perform your job. But most everything else people will tell you about rules is wrong.  Not kind of wrong, but spectacularly wrong. It’s ironic because ignoring the rules is what drives innovation and invention. While most visionaries turn out to be hallucinating, the few who are right push the human race further along.

Let me give you an example.

When I retired after 21 years working in 8 startups, I was invited to be a guest lecturer at the business school at the University of California Berkeley. They thought I could tell good stories about what it was like to start a company. Soon I began to pester the head of the department about this new idea I had… that startups are not smaller versions of large companies.

Actually they’re entirely different.

Established businesses execute business models while startups search for them.

Yet everyone – investors, entrepreneurs, academics — expected new startups to follow the same practices that worked for large companies – write a business plan, forecast 5-year sales projections and build the product without ever talking to customers.

I was a lone voice inside one of the country’s leading business schools challenging the conventional wisdom of the last 40 years, proposing that everything we were teaching about starting companies was wrong.

I can’t tell you the number of very smart professors and venture capitalists who laughed in my face. But I didn’t give upBecause I knew the clock was running and I was determined to make every day count.

I saw something that they didn’t and to their credit…Berkeley’s Business School and then Stanford’s Engineering School let me write and teach a new course based on my ideas.

Five years later the U.S. National Science Foundation adopted this class, now called the Innovation Corps, as the basis of commercializing science in the Unites States. This unorthodox idea has become a movement …called The Lean Startup –  and has led to entirely new ways to start companies, commercialize science, and think about innovation.

How did this happen?  Innovation comes from those who see things that others don’t. It comes from people who not only question the status quo But keep persisting in the face of all the naysayers.

Because your time here is limited.

­_________

My second story is about Mentors and gaining the heart of the wisdom

Questioning dogma doesn’t mean rejecting all advice and guidance from others who’ve come before you.

In fact, your career and life can take on a very different trajectory if you find mentors and use that time to learn from their experience.

As an entrepreneur in my 20’s and 30’s, I was lucky to have two extraordinary mentors, each brilliant in his own field. One, Ben Wegbreit taught me how to think – Ben reviewed my first datasheet and returned it with entire paragraphs circled in red labeled “CFP” – I finally got enough nerve to ask him what CFP meant and he said, “Content Free Paragraph”. While Ben taught me how to think, Gordon Bell taught me what to think about. Gordon had the uncanny ability to see the future trajectory of computer and chip technology way before I even understood the problem.

I had no idea I was being mentored and never asked for it. But I sought out these really smart people, because I wanted to know what they knew.

In hindsight I realize that what made these brilliant engineers put up with me was that I was giving as good as I was getting. While I was learning from them – and their years of experience and expertise – what I was giving back was equally important. I brought fresh insights and new perspectives to their thinking.

In hindsight I realize now that mentorship is a two-way street.

Finding a mentor can change your life – this is where you can gain a heart of wisdom.

So if someone takes an interest in your work and career, be open to their advice.  And think about what you can bring to the relationship.

Teach us to number our days that we gain a heart of wisdom.

­_________

My last story is about serendipity and making the days count

Some of you may think you have a clear sense of where your career is headed.  Others of you may still have no idea. But either way, while the days count down, none of you should be worrying about what you will be doing 10 or 20 years from now. Because none of it will happen as you expect.

While your education has prepared you to master the facts, the other half of your brain needs to learn to trust in serendipity. By the way, the engineering definition of serendipity is, that life is too unpredictable to pre-compute. Serendipity is when it all comes together and you put all the days of your life into what becomes that of heart of wisdom.

Here’s the latest way Serendipity changed my life.

Over the last decade I’ve watched the Lean Startup approach to entrepreneurship take off. The National Science Foundation adopted it.  The Lean LaunchPad class is now taught around the world – and VC’s expect entrepreneurs to talk about not just their technology but their customer development findings.

It was amazing to see the movement I started grow and thrive.

Just recently serendipity sent me down a new road that connected dots from 40 years ago to today.

When I was 18 I served in the Air Force during the Vietnam War.

After hanging up my uniform I had little interaction with the military until four decades later, when a group in the Department of Defense invited me to give a talk about Lean methods. Shortly after that, I met Pete Newell, the retired head of the Army’s Rapid Equipping Force – one of the best Lean and agile organizations in the military – and I met Joe Felter an ex Special Forces Colonel. As I spent time with Pete, Joe and the Department of Defense, two things struck me –

Serendipity had just brought together my military experience of 40 years ago and the tools and techniques I spent the last decade building for Lean Startups.

I asked: What if we could teach students how use Lean methods to solve the most challenging national security problems? A new class – Hacking for Defense – was born.

Together with Pete and Joe and support from many others, we just taught this class for the first time – and hopefully will soon teach it here.

We plan to scale the class across the country and create a new opportunity for students to engage in national service—solving problems to keep Americans safe at home and abroad.

How did this happen?  Showing up a lot, and being open to new seemingly unconnected experiences, helped me create something that never existed before.

For me, knowing I was counting the days made me choose to work on things that pushed boundaries and made us collectively smarter.

So what do these stories mean for you?

  1. Take risks and push boundaries
  2. Learn from wise people who may know more than you do
  3. And let serendipity happen.

Of course only you can decide what you will do with the 14,000 days in your career.

But as engineers trained here at NYU you have a distinct advantage. As graduates you’ve been given the tools to design and build things to help people live better lives. You can solve major challenges the world faces.  You can create something that never existed.

Congratulations class of 2016.

My challenge to you – make every day ahead mean something.

Teach us to number our days that we gain a heart of wisdom

Make all the days of your life matter.

If you can’t see the clip, click here

15 Responses

  1. Steve,

    Thank you for taking the time to prepare these thoughts. They were wise and well written. May we all grow in grace and wisdom as we work together seeking to use our giftedness and time in ways that matter!

  2. Thank you for a great story, Steve! I will include you challenge in my tagline; “Learn something new and make every day of you life matter”.
    I am taking a startup to NYC in June and will also go to San Fransisco for “The Global Entrepreneurship Summit”. I would love to get 30 min of your life and meet you, but I suppose and respect that you are an extremely busy guy.
    Warm regards,
    Berg

  3. Awesome speech! Great advice, well delivered. You certainly made commencement day count. Keep it up!

  4. nice

  5. Steve,
    Thanks for sharing your speech. Excellent thoughts, well expressed.

    Those of us in transition to be mentors, salute your insight and appreciate your sharing. Having had some mentors along the way. I too have been moving my career in that direction. I get a kick out of it when someone I help succeeds.
    All the best
    <>

  6. Steve, nicely done! I love how you focused on three stories and really get them to connect. -Jin

  7. Steve, As always you are spot-on. Carpe diem

  8. Great job. I added it to my list of all time favorites and distributed it to my growing list of friends and my students who annually receive links to the best of the best commencement speeches.

    My favorites: Steve Jobs at Stanford, Admiral William H McRaven at University of Texas, Austin, Jim Carrey at Maharishi University (Yes, Jim Carrey; the speech blew me away) and Steve Blank at NYU School of Engineering.

    Marianne Dunklin, PhD Fresno City College Business Division 559.442.8490 559.259.3155 cell marianne.dunklin@fresnocitycollege.edu Sent from my iPhone

  9. Wonderful speech! Students were really into it!

  10. Steve,

    I feel like I know you even though we have never met! There are many projects that I have been involved with in my career that you have touched! Some of these include the following:

    1. I worked on the Original Burroughs qualification of the Convergent Technologies computer that became the B20.

    2. I have worked on DoD systems that you are now working on with “Hacking for Defense” at Stanford.

    3. My son will be graduating from Stanford in June, too bad that you are not the commencement speaker for 2016! It would have been great to meet you!

    Wishing you continued success with all that you do!

    Regards,

    Steve

  11. Hello Mr. Blank,

    I met you when I visited California with the Hawken School. What is your opinion on this piece? Why do you think this happens or does it?

    http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/vcs-arent-funding-women-led-startups/

    [cid:image007.jpg@01D1B5FA.55D5C720]

    I appreciate your Blog, and all else you publish,
    Diane Walker
    Mathematics
    Girls Preparatory School |423.424.0524

    Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.

    [cid:image001.jpg@01D0EBD3.21A32070]

  12. Steve;

    I appreciate your kindness to share your story. I was most impressed with the early days of your journey (U.S. Air Force Technician) and the legacy your creating. Here… here from another U.S. Air Force Technician. All the best.

  13. I found your commencement speech to be very inspiring, and I believe it to be one that many youth today need to hear! I thought it was brilliant to put an actual tangible number to how many career days individuals have left, pushing the people to take risks and push boundaries. I can’t help but sympathize with your stories where a choice ultimately led you to a destination and unknown opportunities prevailed from where there seemed to be nothing. In your opinion, do you think the youth today are at an advantage in starting their own business compared to when you did? I’d love to hear back from you and in the meantime I’m going to retweet this post.

  14. Hey Steve,

    You can teach these students to become successful but teaching happiness is far harder. I was one of them many years ago, I graduated in 80s in computer science and began my career working for the military designing visual mission planning systems. Later I became a consultant and finally started a successful tech company. I discovered along the way that accomplishment only goes so far. My wife died a few years back from cancer and I realized that all that time I spent “accomplishing” stuff was really just lost time being with the ones I love. I now let other people build this world and realize that it’s the people in my life that matter. When I look back on my past successes, it’s always the people I remember. I now incorporate all of these thoughts in how I lead teams today. I want to know about them and their families. I want to see pictures on their desk. I realized making their life better is more important than the product. It always was!

  15. Thanks for all the guidance and advice that you’ve given over the years to people you’ve never met nor probably never will. Those of us who have business careers and also teach try to pass on the same messages to our students on your behalf.

    You are like the Care Bears saying “just the right thing… at just the right time”. They help us all!

    Lou

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