
Kevin O’Leary is prominently featured in this week’s issue of Ami Magazine.
The millionaire businessman gained notoriety after selling his software business.
The Learning Company, to Mattel for $4.2 billion in 1999.
He is best known for his longtime appearance on Shark Tank.
O’Learly talked about managing his businesses and investments during the interview.
He said his “amazing, cohesive team of people around him” were to thank for it, and he added that his “personal assistant chops his day up into 30-minute increments.”
Entrepreneurship has nothing to do with greed, according to O’Leary.
Instead, it’s about understanding the worth of time and freedom.
You’re looking for personal freedom, he said.
You free yourself and your family if you are a successful entrepreneur.
Doing what you want with your time is the most crucial form of freedom.
For instance, I wouldn’t take part in this interview if I didn’t want to because I’m not required to.
I decided to do this because I have a sincere connection to the place and because I want to motivate others.
O’Leary claimed that delegation played a significant role in his ability to scale businesses.
He responded, “I figured that out very early on by hiring great people,” when prompted to elaborate.
We had a very strong crew that was completely aware of their lanes, and as a result, we were able to develop in geometric leaps and bounds.
O’Leary talked about his own difficulties.
He was only seven years old when his father passed away at an early age.
He also talked about how he has a special bond with Jews and Judaism.
As he put it, “in a sense, I was raised by the family of my friend Andrew Tany, who lived across the street with his baby.” O’Leary discussed the principles of the Torah, which he regards highly. I consider myself to be an honorary Jew and admire the Jewish ideals that haven’t changed over the course of thousands of years because I was raised in a Jewish setting.
An elderly person is honored, especially in the Jewish faith, and that’s how it should be everywhere.
He also attended school with a student who later became a rabbi. Nesanel Gantz, the interviewer, clarified that he had a distinct purpose from other interviews.
“Educate and motivate,” he says. He continued, “In addition to his business guidance, I was interested in learning how a successful entrepreneur balances it all.
We talked about that and a lot of other things across several discussions.

JOIN US ON WHAT'SAPP, TO GET INSTANT STATUS UPDATES AND BE IN THE KNOW.
CLICK HERE