My father used to beg me to read the newspaper. “You have to know what is happening in the world, my son,” he would say. For years, I felt guilty and irresponsible for not heeding his advice, but as I have grown older I have realised that newspapers and TV news broadcasts are not the best source of information or truth.
If you really want to know what is going on in the world, if you want to understand what is truly happening, and if you want to know what tomorrow holds, then you should spend your time reading novels and watching movies, not stressing yourself out on the daily news.
Inspiration in Fiction
Most business people are all too familiar with the bookstores at airport, but many spend their time in front of the magazine rack looking for trade journals or in the business section choosing the latest Malcolm Gladwell book.
Now don’t get me wrong, I enjoy Malcolm Gladwell’s writing as much as the next frequent flyer, but I do try to mix it up a bit, turning to good literary fiction when looking for inspiration rather than fooling myself into believing that non-fiction books are filled with the truth.
The Creative CEO
Many people still think that corporations should be managed by accountants; people who deal with facts and figures, who dress in pinstriped suits and read their daily newspaper each morning at breakfast. But this stereotypical idea of a CEO went out thirty years ago when entrepreneurs like Steve Jobs began to change the world with their creativity.
We live in an era defined by creative destruction, where our ability to imagine the future is more important than our obsession with measuring the past.
Being a business leader or entrepreneur today requires vision and foresight, which doesn’t necessarily come from following the stock market, politics, or current affairs.
While this kind of transient knowledge is certainly useful, being a visionary requires empathy and a deep intuitive understanding of human beings.
In the end, we live in a world made up of people. They are critical to your business and understanding their needs is the single most important factor in your success. Whether they are your customers, your employees or your partners, understanding and servicing their needs will mean the difference between success and failure.
Dream Merchants
Now, you could turn to The Times for a deeper understanding of these people, but in truth, the greatest human insights are to be found in literature, not in newspapers.
It is Shakespeare and Dickens with their archetypical characters that have surfaced the greatest human truths of our time, and Spielberg and Lucas and J.K Rowling.
They are the dream merchants of our era and they have pondered and distilled and made sense of things that current affairs can only report on. The news might tell you what has happened, but fiction has the power to explain why.