by Tom Stilp JD, MBA/MM, LLM, MSC, DBA, January 6th, 2026
After taking over 150 cases to trial, and handling hundreds of business matters, I have developed a short list of sayings. I have liberally borrowed from others, but where I recollect, I’ve given credit or some attribution.
Experience is random and inconsistent, as are my 40 tips. Yet, the following Dadnots, which I gave to my family, might be useful to you (and like life, the advice is in no particular order):
On Experience:
- A wise man learns from experience, but the wisest learns from the experience of others.
- Learn from the past, but don’t live there.
- Experience teaches with the test first, then the lesson.
- If you do what you’ve already done, you’ll always be where you’ve already been.
- When your plans get ruined, plan again.
- Professor Paynter said that we can’t let the difficulties of our situation determine the limits of our abilities. (Northwestern Professor of Bands, John P. Paynter, wrote a letter of recommendation for me to get into Northwestern.)
- Knowing what you know when you are 25 will look very different than what you know when you are 55.
- To paraphrase Mark Twain, be careful to get out of experience only what you are told and stop there, lest you be like the cat that sits down on a hot stove lid. The cat will never sit down on a hot lid again, but it will never sit down on a cold one either.
- If an idiot would do that thing, do not do that thing – don’t be an idiot. (Dwight Schrute a/k/a Rainn Wilson)
On Getting Things Done:
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There is no reason ever to have the same thought twice unless you like having that thought.
- Don’t procrastinate – the “you a year from now” will be the same you.
- Every day, there are urgent but unimportant things, and important but not urgent things. Find time for the important things.
- Only a few people think strategically. Everyone has “ideas” in the form of goals, mission statements and targets. Ideas are easy; implementing them is not. As corporate guru Michael Porter says, strategy is a race to “the ideal position.” Everyone hopes to do well in the race, but hope is not an effective strategy.
- The product of your success today is the result of your thinking in the past. The product of your success in the future is the result of your thinking today.
- Thinking vs. Doing. The ultimate pleasure of procrastination. The more you think, the better you believe you are doing, but the truth is that nothing has actually changed.
On Business:
- Buy Land! They ain’t making any more of it. (Will Rogers)
- No matter the business structure, always own at least 50%.
- If you “sell” 1%, remember the person you trust can be the swing vote later leaving you with 49% against 51%, and you lose.
- Don’t lose. It will cost you more than money.
- If you only follow Polonius’ advice in Hamlet about borrowing (“neither a borrower nor a lender be,” Act 1, Scene 3), you might have to wait a very long time to buy anything big, and then you might be too old to use it!
- Don’t borrow at a high rate of interest – although sometimes it works, it usually doesn’t – see debt hell.
- Avoid debt-hell. Don’t pay too much. Once you’re in debt hell, it is very difficult to get out.
- Generally, be vigilant about lenders; the lender may be your friend, but that will change when the bank is acquired by a different bank which suddenly doesn’t like you as a borrower, your property as collateral, and then, you become just another liability.
- We are operating at our best when we are all going in the same direction. We might not be correct, but at least we are not confused. (Jeff Miller, CEO Documentum).
- On networking, it’s not only what you know, but who you know, and more importantly, it’s who you know that knows who. (Based on aphorisms on networking, Prof. Noshir Contractor, Northwestern Univ.)
- When you enter a conference room, sit at the head of the table – that way, you will look important.
- First in a meeting, don’t say anything – just listen. You’ll sound smart (as other people like to hear their own ideas).
- Dad liked to say about tough business situations: “Better to remain quiet and let the world think you are fool than open your mouth and remove all doubt.”
- To avoid “us vs. them,” don’t have all your people sit on the same side of the table; instead, sit across from people on the other side and with people – mix it up.
Generally:
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Perception is reality.
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It’s not what you know; it’s what others think you know.
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When you start believing your own BS, you’re in trouble. (Ed Chester’s Dad)
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Do the things now that other people won’t and, later, you will be able to do the things that other people can’t.
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Opera is when a guy gets stabbed in the back and, instead of dying, sings.
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Just because you believe in something doesn’t mean it’s true, but if you don’t believe in anything, nothing will ever happen.
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Advice may not work at all, but as Justice Antonin Scalia said, take advice and use what is “condign for the circumstances.”
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Seek mentors; avoid miners of talent (Northwestern B-School Professor, Leon Kendall telling me 30+ years ago when I was doing a job search).
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Seek the “average” – being average is not bad, but the most probable, likely thing to happen.
Don’t look for grand-slam profits, but average profits. Buy 10 companies with average profits, and you’ll be a millionaire.
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Dad always said that titles and degrees confer neither intelligence nor understanding (yes, I recognize the irony that I have a bunch of degrees).
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With formal education, you get a job. With self-education, you’ll get a fortune.
If you found any of these tips helpful, please feel free to take and make them your own for 2026 – Happy New Year!


