Business tycoon McDan has dropped some serious life advice for young people who feel lost about their future. The McDan Group boss told his social media followers on Thursday that kids should stop trying to figure out everything alone. He says smart youngsters need to find successful people they actually want to be like and copy their moves. The millionaire businessman believes young folks should hunt down mentors who have already achieved the exact type of success they want.
McDan warns against following random successful people who might not match what you really want from life. He wants young people to seek out individuals whose values and lifestyles actually align with their personal goals and dreams. The entrepreneur insists that getting close to the right people can completely change someone's entire life path. He tells youngsters to be brave enough to ask tough questions and humble enough to actually listen to the answers.
The business mogul believes the world has become way too noisy and confusing for generic advice to work properly. McDan says specific guidance from real experts beats vague tips every single time. He suggests that wannabe creative entrepreneurs should track down successful creative types and study how they think and work. The same rule applies to engineers or software developers who want to learn from people already walking that exact road.
McDan warns against following random successful people who might not match what you really want from life. He wants young people to seek out individuals whose values and lifestyles actually align with their personal goals and dreams. The entrepreneur insists that getting close to the right people can completely change someone's entire life path. He tells youngsters to be brave enough to ask tough questions and humble enough to actually listen to the answers.
The business mogul believes the world has become way too noisy and confusing for generic advice to work properly. McDan says specific guidance from real experts beats vague tips every single time. He suggests that wannabe creative entrepreneurs should track down successful creative types and study how they think and work. The same rule applies to engineers or software developers who want to learn from people already walking that exact road.