He began experimenting with the food product in 1958 behind his house in Ikeda, Japan.
7. Thomas Siebel co-founded Siebel
Systems at 41
For Thomas Siebel, it was his experience at
Oracle and the money he made as CEO Gain Technology that enabled him to
co-found Siebel Systems in 1993 with Patricia House, a former marketer for
Oracle.
During his years at Oracle, Siebel’s knack
for selling propelled him up the ranks. Recognizing inefficiencies within the
sales group, he developed a program dubbed Oasis in 1987 that streamlined
communication among the sales reps.
Two years later, he spoke to Oracle CEO
Larry Ellison about commercializing it externally; Ellison didn’t see the
potential.
Siebel took a leave of absence soon after and
never returned. His next role was as CEO of Gain Technology, a small multimedia
software company he quickly sold for $110 million in 1992. Netting $10 million
from the deal, he set up his own shop.
Siebel Systems would eventually become
synonymous with customer relationship management software. In 2005, it was
bought by for $5.8 billion.
8. Bernie Marcus co-founded Home
Depot at 50
The impetus to start a business comes in many
forms. For Bernie Marcus, co-founder of Home Depot, it was an abrupt firing
that sparked the fire.
In April 1978, Marcus and his future
co-founder, Arthur Blank, were let go from their executive roles during a corporate
power struggle at Handy Dan Home Improvement Centers, a now-defunct home
improvement chain.
The two were convinced by friend and business
colleague Ken Langone to open their own home improvement store. Langone arranged the financing and the rest is
history. The first two Home Depot stores opened in Atlanta in 1979.
Today, Home
Depot has nearly 2,300 locations and boasts annual sales of more than $80
billion.
9. Bill Porter started E*Trade at 54
An early player in the online investment
industry, Bill Porter used $15,000 to launch an electronic system for
stockbrokers called TradePlus in 1982.
In 1991, that company became E*Trade,
the $7 billion online trading giant for do-it-yourself investors.
While he is best known for that company,
Porter had a long legacy of inventing, holding 14 patents and developing more
than 20 products including a type of broadcast television camera.
After
founding E*Trade he went on to launch the International Securities Exchange
(ISE).
10. Robert Noyce co-founded Intel at
41
After earning his doctorate in physics from
MIT, Robert Noyce found work as a research engineer, eventually ending up at
Beckman Instruments.
In 1957, he and seven others left Beckman and founded the
Fairchild Semiconductor Corporation. While he enjoyed some success there, he
eventually left with Gordon Moore. Together, they founded Intel when Noyce
was 41.
Noyce was considered the visionary of
the company and treated staff like family. He declined the lavish benefits that
most CEOs received and kept the company less structured and more relaxed.
While
at Intel, he oversaw the invention of the microprocessor, an innovation
that revolutionized computer technology and forms the foundation of the
machines we still use today.
11. Ray Kroc spent his career as
a milkshake device
salesman before buying
McDonald's at age 52 in
1954. He grew it into the world's biggest fast-food
franchise.
12. Anna Mary Robertson Moses, better
known
as Grandma Moses began her prolific painting
career at
78.
In 2006, one of
her paintings sold for $1.2 million.
Previously, she was a housekeeper
and farm
labourer.
13. Harland Sanders, better known as Colonel
Sanders, was 62 when he franchised Kentucky
Fried Chicken in1952, which he sold
for $2 million
12 years later.
Before serving up
his renowned original recipe,
Sanders held several odd jobs including
country lawyer, gas station operator and railroad
worker.
Colonel. Sanders did not start out as anyone’s idea of a successful businessman. He
lost his father at an early age, quarrelled extensively with his stepfather and
was fired from multiple jobs, even losing his job as a lawyer after a courtroom
brawl with his own client. However, he was determined to never give up and
this trait led to his eventual success.
While working at a service station in Corbin,
Ky., Sanders gained local popularity for his delicious chicken recipe.
After
the Corbin station was destroyed by a fire, Sanders had the location rebuilt as
a motel and 140-seat restaurant.
In 1952, at the age of 62, Sanders franchised
his “Kentucky Fried Chicken” for the first time.
Today, KFC has over 18,800
outlets in 118 different countries and territories.
14. GEICO, or the Government Employee’s Insurance
Company, is now a well-known car insurance brand with well-known advertising
figures. But before the Gecko, the Caveman or Maxwell, GEICO was the idea
of Leo Goodwin.
Working as an accountant in San Antonio,
Texas, in the 1930’s, Leo Goodwin realized that insurance needed an
overhaul. Why weren’t companies just dealing with customers directly, saving
all the money that traditionally went to brokers? (He looked for a problem and sought how to solve it. This is what entrepreneurs do).
In 1936, at the age of 50, Leo founded GEICO
in Washington, D.C. In a departure from most businessmen of the day, he worked
closely with his wife Lillian in running the company.
By the end of the year,
GEICO had 12 people on staff and 3,700 policies in force. Today, GEICO
employs over 27,000 people and has over 14 million policyholders.
15. Surely a company like LinkedIn, a major
social network, was founded by a youngster, like Mark Zuzu, right? Not at all! Reid Hoffman
struggled with what to do after he graduated from Stanford.
He decided to work,
but to do so strategically, mapping out a plan of what he would need to learn
before he started his own company.
When he first started on his own, he founded
a networking site called Socialnet, believing that having a great matching
algorithm would guarantee success. He tried advertising his new site through
magazines and newspapers but never found traction with the idea.
In the end, he
left and joined PayPal before leaving his position with the company in
2002 to co-found LinkedIn. Hoffman was 35 when he founded the company and 43
when it went public.
16. If the thought of tomato-flavored ice cream
turns your stomach, you’re not alone.
Wally Blume had a successful 20-year
career but knew he had to move on when his boss decided to move forward with
that crazy idea.
In 1995, in his mid-50s, he started his own ice cream company,
Denali Flavors,
where he created the famous Moose Tracks flavor.
Today, this dairy treat brings in $80 million
a year alone through licensing agreements. Denali now has over 40 flavors and
Blume is still going strong at the age of 70.
17. When you’re 52, newly divorced,
broke and depressed, you’d think that the last thing on your mind would be
starting a company. Then again, it might be just what the doctor ordered.
After getting a dog at her therapist’s
recommendation, Carol Gardner won a local Christmas card contest with a picture
of the dog and a funny quip. The win inspired Gardner to start a greeting
card company, which she named after her dog, Zelda.
In 2010, Zelda Wisdom was valued at roughly
$50 million, showing that you truly never know where your next great idea might
come from.
18. Henry Ford started
Ford at the age of 40.
Despite his family’s
expectation that he would take over the family farm, Ford left home at 16 to get
a job as a machinist in Detroit.
This led him to becoming the godfather of the
modern era.
19. Born into a poor
family, he moved to Bangkok and began his own company, TC Pharmaceuticals.
Upon
meeting Austrian entrepreneur Dietrich Mateschictz, they decided to market Yoovidhya’s tonic drink internationally.
Chaleo Yoovidhya was 61 when he started his tonic business.
20. Gorden Bowker
founded Starbucks at the age of 51.
All these
entrepreneurs show that age is no barrier. In fact, age and the experience that
comes with it is a major part of their accomplishment.
So, relax and take a chill pill. For as long as there is life, there is surely hope.
Have faith.