Fortune | FORTUNE 4小时前
A Gen Xer sold his company for $1.6 billion. He kept less than $100 million and gave the rest away because he doesn’t ‘believe in billionaires’
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本文讲述了科技创业家Brian O’Kelley在成功出售公司后,选择将绝大部分财富捐赠给慈善事业,而非追求奢华生活的故事。他认为巨额财富会使人脱离现实,失去选择的意义和与普通人生活的联系。O’Kelley希望通过限制个人财富,保持与现实的连接,并避免子女过度奢侈,让他们体验奋斗的价值。他批评了挥霍无度的亿万富翁行为,强调了保持谦逊和对社会责任的承担。

💰 **限制财富,保持初心**: Brian O’Kelley在公司被AT&T以16亿美元收购后,选择将大部分财富捐赠出去,自己仅保留不到1亿美元。他认为“没有必要拥有数十亿甚至数百亿美元”,并表示即使未来的公司取得巨大成功,也会将财富回馈社会,以此保持对生活的清晰认知和选择的自由,避免“无所不能”的脱离现实。

👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 **不愿溺爱子女,传承奋斗精神**: O’Kelley担心子女因巨额财富而变得娇生惯养,希望他们也能体验到自己曾经经历过的“奋斗”,从而理解生活的价值。他以自己为了舒适而选择商务舱,但却不愿意让孩子习惯这种奢华生活为例,强调了“不宠坏孩子”的教育理念。

💎 **警惕“炫富”文化,保持与现实的连接**: O’Kelley对当前一些科技巨头公开展示的奢侈生活方式(如私人飞机、游艇、巨额珠宝)表示批评,认为这种“招摇”的行为是“令人讨厌”的,并且会使人与现实生活中的限制和后果脱节。他坚信保持与普通生活的连接至关重要,避免因拥有过多财富而失去问责和反思的能力。

🌍 **财富的社会责任与“异化”**: O’Kelley认为,在世界上许多人仍面临困境的情况下,巨额财富的挥霍是一种“荒谬的浪费”。同时,他指出成为亿万富翁本身也可能带来一种“异化”,使人与构成正常生活的界限和后果隔离开来。他宁愿在需要资金时向风险投资家寻求帮助,以此保持一种“问责制”。

What would you do if you became an overnight multimillionaire? That’s exactly what happened to Brian O’Kelley in 2018, when he sold his ad-tech company, AppNexus, to AT&T for $1.6 billion.

But instead of buying a yacht or a fleet of sports cars, O’Kelley sat down with his wife for what he calls a “really interesting conversation” about how much was enough—and everything else went to causes they care about. 

“I don’t believe in billionaires. I think it’s just ridiculous,” the serial entrepreneur exclusively told Fortune, adding that he kept less than $100 million from his 10% stake in the startup after it was acquired.

“We just figured out a number that we thought was enough money—to be able to buy a house and things like that—and then we doubled it, and we gave the rest away.”

The 48-year-old is now building his third startup, a supply-chain emissions data company called Scope3. Still, he claims you’ll never catch him joining the billionaires club. “I will never be that wealthy. Even if Scope3 is immensely successful, we will give that money away.” 

Why the self-made millionaire refuses to cross the billion-dollar line

For O’Kelley, the decision to cap his wealth isn’t just about generosity. “We never wanted to have so much money we didn’t have to make choices. It’s meant that we can’t be completely ridiculous about our life,” the Gen X CEO said. “We have an amazing life, we can do almost everything we want. But we can’t quite do anything we want—we have to talk about our budget like anybody else does.”

“I don’t get why you need $200 billion, $500 billion, or even $1 billion. The joy of appreciating what we have and making those hard choices is really foundation.”

Part of Brian O’Kelley’s philosophy comes down to not wanting his kids to become spoiled. “I feel terrible because they get to fly business,” he says, adding that at 6-foot-5, he does it for the comfort, but is uneasy about his children becoming accustomed to a life of luxury.

“I’ve flown all around the world in coach so many times, this is me spoiling myself, but I don’t want to spoil my kids,” O’Kelley adds. “And a lot of this comes back to me thinking about how life looks from their eyes. I want them to have a bit of that struggle that I had.” 

He says amassing billions—and flaunting it—only keeps leaders further removed from reality.

Billionaires with helicopters, superyachts and islands to their name are ‘obnoxious’

A record-breaking 3,028 people are now billionaires. Together, they hold more wealth than every country in the world except the U.S. and China—and the number of people to join that list keeps growing at a record pace as experts predict AI could welcome in an era of trillionaires

And they’re no longer being “stealth” about their wealth. At the start of the year, tech titans and CEOs (with a combined wealth of over $1 trillion) gathered for Donald Trump’s inauguration, dripping in diamonds and designer gear. Most recently, Jeff Bezos’ $46 million wedding to Lauren Sanchez in Venice was a lavish display of excess, complete with private jets, super yachts, and an estimated 745 carats’ worth of jewellery.

“I wish more folks would ask the question of, why do I want the lifestyle that Jeff Bezos has?” O’Kelley says. “You can’t have a yacht and a helicopter and an island, and a big building with your name on it and all these things, because then you’re just sort of obnoxious. No human can actually truly appreciate that.” 

O’Kelley’s says billionaires represent “such an incredibly ludicrous waste of money in a world where there’s so many people who don’t have that,” but he says actually being one is also “othering”—separating you from the limits and consequences that define normal life.

“There’s something about keeping connected to normalcy that is really, really important,” the entrepreneur explains. “I don’t want a yacht and I don’t ever want to be able to be without consequences. I think that’s the biggest risk, is, how can we be accountable when we have so much money we can buy anything?”

“Look, there’s days where I am like, ‘man, I wish I had some money,’ because my company could use an infusion of cash. That would be great if I didn’t have to ask VCs. But you know what that is? That’s accountability.”

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创业家 财富观 慈善 社会责任 生活哲学
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