Denis O'Brien receives the Honorary Doctorate from UWI Chancellor Professor Sir George Alleyne |
Good evening and thank you for inviting
me to speak today at this magnificent Commencement ceremony. It is a wonderful honour for me and my
family to receive this honorary law doctorate from the University of the West
Indies. Thank you.
Your university has an incredibly
illustrious history and a vital present Your national hero, Marcus Garvey,
captured this perfectly when he said; “Show me a prosperous nation and I’ll
show you an educated people.”
From the day I walked through Kingston
airport back in 2000, little did I know that I would find a home away from
home. Places like Irish Town and Dublin Castle in the cool hills of St. Andrew
– Irish Pen and Sligoville in St. Catherine.
I have travelled Leinster Road, Leitrim
Road, Sackville Road all in Kingston and St. Andrew. If I close my eyes I hear
melodic accents similar to what I find back home.
Luck played a role in all our lives and
it was luck that in 1655 - Admiral Penn and General Venables failed miserably
at taking Santa Domingo in Hispanola and, not wanting to return empty handed,
proceeded to turn their attention to Jamaica where the Spanish settlers could
only put up token resistance.
Along the way, these Spanish settlers
freed many African slaves who took to the hills and became “Maroons”. The
English quickly captured Spanish Town but they lacked workers to exploit their
conquest. Records show that the vast majority of the first wave was made up of
young Irish men and women - bonded slaves. Or trouble makers from Ireland
vanquished by Oliver Cromwell.
These people created the unique bond
between Jamaica and Ireland that exists to this day.
I believe these early bonded slaves from
Ireland created the DNA that ultimately made us as a foreign direct investor
coming from Ireland so welcome. That makes me an accidental Jamirishman
– having sold my business in Ireland in 2000. I was out of a job, had no office
to go to and my wife sent me out of the door each morning at 7.30am.
For days and months afterwards, I was
like a zombie drinking endless cups of coffee and reading the newspapers while
all of my friends were out at work. It is a great example of money not buying happiness.
Luck came to my rescue and one morning I
spotted a small box ad in the Financial Times where the Government of Jamaica
was inviting people to bid for a mobile phone licence. It was my light bulb
moment.I had never been to Jamaica before but I
asked a colleague to go to the auction, somehow get their hands on a phone –
and bid and when the hammer came down, I was the proud owner of a Jamaican
mobile phone licence for US$ 47.5 million.
To be truthful, during the auction, I
was in a bar in Dublin drinking Appleton’s rum and we kept on going on the rum
into the night. The next morning, I woke with empty pockets and a rising
feeling of panic “What have I done?!”
Three days later, we sent a team down to
Jamaica under Seamus Lynch – our first Jamaican employee was Lisa Lewis, a
proud UWI graduate, and quickly after Harry Smith became our chief strategist
and marketing director, followed by Keith Smith, Donel Miller, Earl Manning and
Michelle Williams.
The proudest part of all of that we have
achieved over the years is that, as a company, we have our roots here in
Jamaica. Without hesitation, Jamaica is the cornerstone of Digicel growth and
development of all our 32 countries.
But life is not all about ups. I have
also had to face failure. My first business was a TV shopping channel in the UK
and in its first month of operations, it generated revenue of 12,000 pounds and
a loss of 500,000 pounds.
My enthusiasm for the business idea was
way ahead of consumer demand. Ultimately this business failed in a major way.
It was a dent to my pride, a blow to my own perceived abilities. My father
always said to me: the truth will set you free. I had to face my financial
backers and admit to my shortcomings.
It was probably the best business lesson
I ever had because it made me more discerning in looking at my next great idea
and the next time I focused heavily on sales revenue and having the cheapest
cost base.
Well…you may ask how the hell did this
guy get from there to where I am today? Well, luck definitely played a part.
But it was also about finding a business idea to grab hold of and grasping every
opportunity.
I’ve always devoured information –
Forbes, Fortune, Wall Street Journal – any newspaper or news website – and in
the ether, you see ideas and say to yourself: will this work in Ireland or that
could work in Jamaica.
All of us need to continuously look at opportunities
globally and find ways to bring those to a Jamaican context. Jamaica has more
unfulfilled economic potential than nearly all of the other Caribbean countries
combined. For the first time in the history of this country, you have two
balanced budgets and the green shoots of economic reinvigoration.
There is no better time to be joining
the workforce. If your Government sticks to its fiscal reform policies,
economic growth will surge and over the next five years, this country will rock
and roll.
For those of you who have an
entrepreneurial sniff, you have to think of an idea or a business that you can
develop in Jamaica but whose products and services you can also sell
overseas.
And for those of you who did not study
business in this great university, it does not mean that you can’t be a success
in business. For my part, I studied history and politics – why? Because I
couldn’t pass the equivalent of your maths C-SEC qualification that I needed to
get into business school – in fact I failed it three times – which was a world
record
But the reality is that if you can count
to ten, you can be a successful business entrepreneur.
Succeeding in any walk of life means
committing to a cycle of life-long learning and continuous self-development.
Obtaining your degree is not a watershed moment but the start of a journey to
learn and learn and keep learning.
Also, for those of you who have had a
bumpy academic career….don’t worry, you’re more likely to be successful!
At the start of every year, I sit and
write down 12 to 15 objectives for myself – broken into personal learning,
personal reinvention – and a number of business goals.
We all have to keep reinventing
ourselves to stay relevant and be successful in the job we are in.
If you have that piece of paper in your
back pocket and you get it out every month and review it and your performance
against it – it’s like having a compass in the middle of the Pacific in a
cyclone.
One category of people that I really
admire are mavericks – because they are different to the norm. They look at
things with different eyes, see solutions no one else can and extraordinary
opportunities in what others see as ordinary.
Many UWI graduates who joined Digicel
have become mavericks – people like Fabian Williams, Jackie James and Sean
Latty.
If you are one of those people – stay
that way. Don’t conform – and don’t let anyone try to force you.
Entrepreneurs and, leaders all have a
special chip in their brains that makes them what they are – Butch Stewart is a
perfect Jamaican example of this, PB Scott from Facey, Chris Blackwell - and
Kimala Bennett with her Production Lab and Young Entrepreneur Handbooks is up
and coming – and of course there are many many others. Emotional Intelligence
is another vital ingredient.
In looking to develop yourselves – no
matter what walk of life you choose – be it business, politics, education, not
for profit – you need to find a way to stand out.
Many of you will be looking at me and
thinking that I am a rabid capitalist – but maybe that reading needs some
correction.
My mother is a serial protestor. She
took issue with President Reagan’s foreign policy towards Nicaragua in the
1980s. On the very day I sold my business in Ireland in 2000, my mother ordered
me down to the Russian embassy to protest against the treatment of the
Chechens.
As a child, she taught me about Africa
and the developing world and, because of her, my siblings and I felt a bond
with those less fortunate which saw us in the 70s out with our tins collecting
money for the missionaries - like every other child in Ireland.
This philosophy has travelled with me to
this very day – as far as I am concerned, capitalism is broken. The greed that
led to the Wall Street crash of 2008 reinforced that.
95% of multinationals do nothing to give
back to the developing world where they make their profits.
I find myself thinking about mortality
more and more these days – when I die, I do not want to be called a
conquistador.
If the truth be known, I admire social
entrepreneurs far more than entrepreneurs – because they make the biggest
impact on society. Looking after the people who in our busy lives we can’t look
after, is surely the noblest cause.
In this country, you are blessed with a
rich seam of social entrepreneurs – people like Father Gregory from Mustard
Seed, Michael Barnett from New Horizon Outreach Ministries and Jason Henzell of Jakes Holdings.
Denis O'Brien with fellow honouree Jamaica's Poet Laureate Mervyn Morris |
So tomorrow, when you wake up after a
night of well-deserved celebrating and
partying, take out that piece of paper and map out your plan for the next
three, six and 12 years.
In doing so, you will be mapping out
your path to happiness - and that is not a path that someone else should
dictate.
But for right now, this is your time.
And what a fantastic, exciting time it
is; stepping into the unknown, leaving behind the comfort blanket of this university.
Now it’s your time to turn all your
ideas and thoughts and enthusiasm and knowledge into something great; something
that will positively change your life and, hopefully, a resurging and newly
vibrant Jamaica.
So I encourage you to dream big, work
hard, follow your passion and grab every opportunity with both hands.
Give generously and receive graciously.
Meet failure head on, learn from it and
move on quickly - and always remember to come back to that piece of paper in
your back pocket and check your progress against your plan.
And maybe some day in the
future, I will be lucky enough to have the pleasure of seeing some of you
presenting at a Digicel board meeting.
I would like to leave you today with a
quote from Irish writer, Samuel Beckett; "Ever tried. Ever failed. No
matter. Try Again. Fail again. Fail better."
Thank you all for your kindness. Congratulations
to you all and God bless.