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Burberry CEO Angela Ahrendts.
The most successful people in the world didn't make it on their own.That's why LinkedIn asked over 90 leaders across a variety of industries to share the best advice they've ever received and continue using to this day.
Many recalled something that their parents, teachers, or career mentors taught them that has never left their hearts and minds.
These bits of wisdom inspired them to stay focused, compassionate, and driven, and continue to motivate them.
Scroll down to read the most influential advice used by some of the business world's top minds.
Deepak Chopra learned how to use his "complete brain."
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Chopra, the renowned leadership guru, adopted a new worldview from psychiatrist Dr. Dan Siegel. Siegel saw the brain as a tool that needs daily upkeep, and prescribed a "healthy mind platter" of sleep time, physical time, focus time, time in (self-reflection), down time, play time, and — most importantly — connecting time.
Jacki Zehner learned to invest in relationships in all directions.
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Zehner, CEO of Women Moving Millions, received her favorite piece of advice not from a person but a system: Goldman Sachs' partner selection process. Its main message was that you don't choose to manage up or down, but rather build relationships in all directions. To Zehner, this means dedicating time and energy not just to the higher-ups, but to temporary interns, people from other departments, and clients that initially said "no."
Jennifer Openshaw learned the importance of adding walking breaks to her day.
Openshaw, president of Finect and a columnist for The Wall Street Journal, got a sage piece of advice from Husein Enan, CEO of Insweb: "Be sure you take time for walks." When her company, Women's Financial Network, was facing severe difficulties, she remembered Enan's bit of advice. By regularly removing herself from the office, she could relax her mind and eventually determined how to save her business during one of these reflective strolls.
Jon Steinberg was taught that there's a difference between intelligence and knowledge.
Steinberg, president and COO of BuzzFeed, was a 16-year-old intern at Disney Imagineering when he visited the offices of Silicon Graphics with his team. When his boss noticed that he wanted to ask the SG executives questions but was too scared to, his boss told him, "Jonathan, these people are not smarter than you, they just know things that you don't yet know." Steinberg said that even if that wasn't completely true, it made him recognize the difference between intelligence and knowledge, which is necessary to grow in any business.
Steve Rubel found that success often comes from collaborating with other smart people.
Rubel, chief content strategist at Edelman, got his favorite piece of advice indirectly, and from an unusual source — the Latin rapper Pitbull. Rubel learned that since 2005, Pitbull has been featured on more than twice as many singles as his own. And though Rubel chose a lighthearted example, he said that learning to value the success of collaborations as much as the success of your own projects will lead to stronger, more beneficial business relationships.
Bill McComb was taught that leaders must always remember an entire team relies on them.
When McComb, CEO of Fifth and Pacific Companies Inc., succeeded a vice president at a prominent company earlier in his career, his predecessor left him a motivational note. It caught him up to speed on his role, but it also contained a piece of advice he still remembers: "Never forget, you spin the fly wheel. It's all on you." McComb said that it is easier than some may think to forget that a company's energy and drive rests on its leader, and he does his best to keep the wheel spinning.