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The lessons Walt Disney learnt that can
still be used today
By Stephen Schochet
Contrary to popular belief, Walt Disney spent more time as a
struggler than a success. Described at a various times as a
visionary and a genius there were actually many occasions he
could not foresee the results of his ideas, and they nearly
brought him to financial ruin. Yet the lessons he learned
through the years are useful and timeless.
1) Ownership is key: Early in his career, Walt created a
character on behalf of Universal Studios named Oswald the
Rabbit. When he tried to negotiate better payments for himself,
Walt was informed that Universal had the copyright on the
character and he was entitled to no compensation. From then on
Walt owned everything he created.
2) Have passion for your product: Walt worked three long years
on Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs which was originally budgeted
at a $500,000 an extraordinary amount considering the average
cartoon in the 1930s cost $10,000. His competitors, his wife and
his brother all predicted Disney would be ruined. During the
filming, Walt was plagued with both health and financial
problems as Snow White ran way over budget. Needing an
additional half million to complete the picture, he acted out
the story in front of a tough-minded banker and got the loan he
needed. The result was a classic that made $8,000,000 at a time
when movie tickets cost 25 cents for adults and a dime for kids.
3) Make timeless products: Pinocchio, Fantasia and Bambi all
failed in their first releases. World War II cut off
international distribution. The national mood turned away from
public sentiment. Disney plunged four million into debt and it
looked like Bank Of America would cut off his line of credit. In
a dramatic meeting, the founder of the bank, A.P. Giannini stood
up and told the board members that Disney made great movies and
that the war would not last forever. They voted unanimously to
keep Disney afloat after the old man's speech. He was proven
right years later when all three films became profitable
classics.
4) Test market: Walt could not get distribution on his first
nature film Seal Island. After several frustrating months
watching it sit on the shelf, he found one movie theater in
Pasadena willing to show it. Seal Island, achieved full
distribution, won the academy award for best short subject and
led to a series of highly popular nature films.
5) Sometimes you need to pull the plug: Walt was determined to
have a circus at Disneyland despite his staff's advice not to.
The idea failed. A pretty trapeze artist lost her top while
performing in front of the kiddies helpless to prevent it. The
camels kept spitting into the crowd. The llamas got loose and
ran down Main Street scattering customers every which way. More
than one performance of this poorly attended venture ended with
Walt burying his face in his hands. He decided to kill it.
By learning lessons from each of his entrepreneurial attempts,
Walt always moved forward, which is a timeless business model.
Stephen Schochet is the author and narrator of the audiobooks
Fascinating Walt Disney and Tales Of Hollywood. The Saint Louis
Post Dispatch says," these two elaborate productions are
exceptionally entertaining." Hear realaudio samples of these
great, unique gifts at
http://www.hollywoodstories.com.
You can reprint this article (if not stated otherwise above) on
your website or publication with notice and a link to http://www.zongoo.com
"Reprinted from Zongoo.com Daily Press & Consumer Information"
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