"Do what you do best, and you will succeed"
About this Quote
Spetalen’s line sounds like the kind of clean, motivational mantra you’d expect on a conference lanyard. Coming from a hard-nosed Norwegian businessman, that simplicity is the point - and the tell. “Do what you do best” isn’t a kumbaya ode to self-fulfillment; it’s a stripped-down theory of competitive advantage dressed up as personal advice. In business, “best” isn’t a feeling. It’s measurable edge: information, timing, networks, nerve, and the willingness to specialize when everyone else is chasing the same shiny opportunity.
The subtext is more demanding than it appears. It nudges you toward brutal self-audit: what are you actually better at than other people, and can you prove it when the market turns? It’s also a quiet rebuttal to the contemporary cult of reinvention. The modern career story is often “pivot early, pivot often.” Spetalen’s worldview is closer to “compound your asymmetry.” Stick to what you uniquely understand, and let repetition - not reinvention - do the heavy lifting.
There’s an implicit hierarchy hiding in “you will succeed,” too: success isn’t framed as communal or ethical; it’s framed as outcome. That’s the businessman’s bias toward results over narrative. The risk, of course, is that “best” can become an excuse to stay comfortable, to confuse competence with growth. But in a culture addicted to hustle cosplay and broad ambition, the quote works because it’s almost offensively practical: reduce the noise, find your edge, double down.
The subtext is more demanding than it appears. It nudges you toward brutal self-audit: what are you actually better at than other people, and can you prove it when the market turns? It’s also a quiet rebuttal to the contemporary cult of reinvention. The modern career story is often “pivot early, pivot often.” Spetalen’s worldview is closer to “compound your asymmetry.” Stick to what you uniquely understand, and let repetition - not reinvention - do the heavy lifting.
There’s an implicit hierarchy hiding in “you will succeed,” too: success isn’t framed as communal or ethical; it’s framed as outcome. That’s the businessman’s bias toward results over narrative. The risk, of course, is that “best” can become an excuse to stay comfortable, to confuse competence with growth. But in a culture addicted to hustle cosplay and broad ambition, the quote works because it’s almost offensively practical: reduce the noise, find your edge, double down.
Quote Details
| Topic | Motivational |
|---|---|
| Featured | This quote was our Quote of the Day on March 15, 2023 |
More Quotes by Øystein
Add to List














