NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang highlights a profound yet simple attribute shared by many successful individuals: the capacity to transcend past events, whether they be triumphs or setbacks, and to re-center attention on what lies ahead. This approach, which he likens to a "superpower," is essential for building resilience and enabling continuous progress, particularly in fast-evolving sectors.
During a 2023 presentation at the UC Berkeley Haas School of Business' Dean's Speaker Series, Huang drew a parallel between top performers and elite athletes. He explained that just as an athlete must clear their mind after each play—regardless of whether it was a game-winning score or a costly error—to prepare for the next, business leaders must similarly "forget the last moment." This detachment from past outcomes prevents individuals from being weighed down by failures or complacent with successes, thereby accelerating their ability to tackle new obstacles. Huang credits his own "incredible ability to forget" as instrumental in navigating NVIDIA through periods of technological disruption, strategic missteps, and fluctuating market conditions over several decades.
Huang’s philosophy of resilience has been a recurring theme in his public addresses. At Caltech's 2024 commencement, he emphasized that his capacity for enduring hardship and managing adversity were among his core strengths. Similarly, at Stanford’s 2024 SIEPR Economic Summit, he argued that "low expectations and high resilience" are pivotal, suggesting that remarkable achievements often originate from individuals who have overcome significant challenges. His personal journey—emigrating from Taiwan to the U.S. at age nine, experiencing bullying in Kentucky, and working as a dishwasher at Denny's as a teenager—underscores this belief. NVIDIA itself was conceived in a San Jose Denny's, a humble beginning for a company now valued at approximately $4.3 trillion, a testament to Huang’s unwavering focus and resilience.
This unwavering commitment to moving forward, unburdened by the past, not only fosters personal resilience but also cultivates a dynamic environment where innovation thrives. By embracing the mantra of letting "the past be the past," Huang illustrates how a forward-looking perspective, combined with a deep passion for one's work, empowers individuals and organizations to adapt, persevere, and ultimately achieve sustained greatness.