"Business opportunities are like buses, there's always another one coming"
About this Quote
Branson’s line sells a kind of entrepreneurial serenity: don’t sprint after every shiny deal like it’s the last lifeboat. The bus image does a lot of work. It’s urban, ordinary, and mildly comic - opportunity isn’t a rare comet; it’s public transit. That framing quietly demotes the mythology of the “once-in-a-lifetime” break, the pitch-deck panic that says you must grab this partnership, this market, this investor, right now or you’re dead. Branson is offering permission to miss a bus on purpose.
The subtext is also brand management. As the Virgin founder, he’s long marketed risk as playful rather than desperate. “There’s always another one coming” turns failure into scheduling, not identity. You didn’t blow it; you just didn’t catch that route. That’s emotionally useful for founders, and strategically useful for a mogul who benefits when entrepreneurs keep taking swings instead of collapsing after one miss.
But it’s not purely soothing; it’s a subtle warning against low-quality hustle. If opportunities are abundant, then selectivity becomes the real skill. Patience reads as discipline, not laziness. The line also hints at leverage: people who believe in scarcity negotiate like hostages; people who believe another bus is coming can walk away.
Of course, the metaphor is aspirational - in many industries, buses don’t run all night. Networks, capital, and timing still matter. That tension is the point: Branson’s optimism isn’t naïve, it’s tactical, a mindset designed to keep you moving when the timetable looks hostile.
The subtext is also brand management. As the Virgin founder, he’s long marketed risk as playful rather than desperate. “There’s always another one coming” turns failure into scheduling, not identity. You didn’t blow it; you just didn’t catch that route. That’s emotionally useful for founders, and strategically useful for a mogul who benefits when entrepreneurs keep taking swings instead of collapsing after one miss.
But it’s not purely soothing; it’s a subtle warning against low-quality hustle. If opportunities are abundant, then selectivity becomes the real skill. Patience reads as discipline, not laziness. The line also hints at leverage: people who believe in scarcity negotiate like hostages; people who believe another bus is coming can walk away.
Of course, the metaphor is aspirational - in many industries, buses don’t run all night. Networks, capital, and timing still matter. That tension is the point: Branson’s optimism isn’t naïve, it’s tactical, a mindset designed to keep you moving when the timetable looks hostile.
Quote Details
| Topic | Entrepreneur |
|---|---|
| Source | Later attribution: Business Opportunities (Francis D. (Doug) Tuggle, Chad T. Ber..., 2021) modern compilationISBN: 9781527579675 · ID: lnVjEAAAQBAJ
Evidence: ... Business opportunities are like buses ; there's always another one coming . " Richard Branson ( English business magnate , investor , author and philanthropist ; founder of the Virgin Group ; born 1950 ) While this quote may seem to ... Other candidates (1) Richard Branson (Richard Branson) compilation32.6% o business not to make money but because i think i can do it better than its been done |
| Featured | This quote was our Quote of the Day on October 24, 2025 |
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