"A man can succeed at almost anything for which he has unlimited enthusiasm"
About this Quote
Schwab’s line reads like a rallying cry, but it’s really a management philosophy disguised as self-help. “Unlimited enthusiasm” isn’t just a mood here; it’s a renewable fuel source meant to outlast fatigue, doubt, and the drag of other people’s skepticism. In the early 20th-century industrial boom Schwab helped engineer at U.S. Steel and Bethlehem Steel, enthusiasm wasn’t optional charisma. It was a tool of scale: the ability to keep workers producing, investors believing, and organizations moving in lockstep when the work was monotonous, dangerous, and politically charged.
The subtext is pointedly pragmatic. Schwab isn’t praising talent or genius; he’s elevating intensity of commitment as the closest thing to a universal advantage. That’s an appealing democratization - anyone can be “enthusiastic” - while also serving the boss’s needs. If success hinges on enthusiasm, then structural obstacles (capital access, class, labor conditions, discrimination) fade into the background, and failure can be framed as a personal deficit of energy rather than a rigged playing field. It’s motivational, but it’s also convenient.
The phrasing “almost anything” quietly hedges, acknowledging limits without naming them. Schwab’s genius is selling the ethic of relentless drive in a sentence that flatters both the striver and the system: believe hard enough, work hard enough, and the machine will reward you. In the corporate age he helped build, that belief was itself a form of labor.
The subtext is pointedly pragmatic. Schwab isn’t praising talent or genius; he’s elevating intensity of commitment as the closest thing to a universal advantage. That’s an appealing democratization - anyone can be “enthusiastic” - while also serving the boss’s needs. If success hinges on enthusiasm, then structural obstacles (capital access, class, labor conditions, discrimination) fade into the background, and failure can be framed as a personal deficit of energy rather than a rigged playing field. It’s motivational, but it’s also convenient.
The phrasing “almost anything” quietly hedges, acknowledging limits without naming them. Schwab’s genius is selling the ethic of relentless drive in a sentence that flatters both the striver and the system: believe hard enough, work hard enough, and the machine will reward you. In the corporate age he helped build, that belief was itself a form of labor.
Quote Details
| Topic | Motivational |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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