*BusinessWeek*
*From Homeless to Multimillionaire*
Tuesday July 24, 8:08 am ET
By Carmine Gallo

It's not every day you get the chance to pick the brain of a man whose
real-life rags-to-riches story was turned into a Hollywood movie starring
one of America's top actors. But the other day I had the opportunity to
spend time with Chris Gardner, subject of the 2006 movie The Pursuit of
Happiness, in which Gardner was played by Will Smith.



While attending an unpaid internship program at Dean Witter Reynolds in
1981, Gardner spent a year on the streets with his two-year-old son. They
took refuge at night in a church shelter or the bathroom of a BART subway
station in Oakland, Calif. Nobody at work knew. Gardner eventually won a
position as a stockbroker at Dean Witter. Two years later he left for Bear
Stearns BSC), where he became a top earner. In 1987, he founded his own
brokerage firm, Gardner Rich,in Chicago. Today, Gardner is a
multimillionaire, a motivational speaker, a philanthropist, and an
international businessman who is about to launch a private equity fund that
will invest solely in South Africa. His partner in the fund? Nelson Mandela.
Not bad for a guy who, six years before founding his own brokerage firm, was
"fighting, scratching, and crawling my way out of the gutter with a baby on
my back."

"Passion is Everything"

Gardner is a magnificent speaker and has an engaging personality --
qualities all business professionals would crave. But what's behind his
success? What is the one thing -- the one secret -- that helped him change
his life? "It's passion," he told me. "Passion is everything. In fact,
you've got to be borderline fanatical about what you do." Gardner says he
was fortunate to find something he truly loved, something where he couldn't
wait for the sun to rise so he could do it again. His advice to
entrepreneurs and those seeking a career change? "Be bold enough to find the
one thing that you are passionate about. It might not be what you were
trained to do. But be bold enough to do the one thing. Nobody needs to dig
it but you."

Gardner wanted to be "world-class at something." For him, that something was
being a stockbroker. For you, finding something you are passionate about
will make the difference in how engaging you become as a communicator and as
a leader. If you love what you do, you'll eagerly share the story behind it
with boundless enthusiasm.

Passion is not teachable. As a communications coach, I can help clients
craft and deliver a powerful story, but I can't create passion. But it's
passion that separates the electrifying presenters from the average ones.
I'm absolutely convinced of it. As a former television journalist, I've
interviewed thousands of spokespeople and personally coached hundreds of
others in my current profession. Donald Trump once said: "Without passion,
you have no energy -- and without energy, you have nothing." Your listeners
want to be in the presence of someone with energy, a person who greets
people with a smile and an abundance of enthusiasm. Passion is not something
you necessarily verbalize, but it shows. When Gardner walked into Dean
Witter after having slept in a subway station the night before, he only
wanted to leave one impression on his co-workers. "All they needed to know
is that I would light it up day after day. Passion is not something you have
to talk about. People feel it. They see it just as clearly as the color of
your eyes, baby."

Coffee and Commitment

I have spent the last several years interviewing inspiring leaders, and I
can say without hesitation that passion is the No. 1 quality that sets them
apart. In many ways, my talk with Gardner reminds me of a conversation I
once had with Starbucks (NasdaqGS:SBUX <http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=sbux> -
News <http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=sbux>) Chairman Howard Schultz. Like
Gardner, Schultz used the word "passion" throughout our entire conversation.
But remarkably, the word "coffee" was rarely spoken. You see, for Schultz,
coffee is not his passion. Instead, Schultz says, he is passionate about
creating a workplace that "treats people with dignity and respect;" a
workplace environment that his father never had the opportunity to
experience. The coffee product offers the means to help Schultz fulfill his
passion. In much the same way, stock trading and commissions offered Gardner
the means to fulfill his passion, which was to give his son something he
never had -- a father.

Passion is the foundation of effective communication. Dig deep to discover
your core purpose, your true passion. Once you connect to it, use it as fuel
to build a rapport with your audience -- recruiters, managers, employees,
etc. Your presentations, pitches, speeches, and all forms of business
communication will be more engaging than ever. Nearly everyone has room to
increase what I call the "passion quotient" -- the level of passion you
exhibit as a speaker. The higher your passion quotient, the more likely you
are to connect with people. Chris Gardner's passion fueled his determination
in the face of overwhelming odds and obstacles. Take the time to imagine
where harnessing your passion can take you.

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