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7 Business Leaders Share the Best and Worst Advice They've Heard Pros share what advice is worth taking and what advice you can ignore.

By Grant Davis

1. Jason Fass, CEO, Zepp

Best advice: "Make sure you're building products and experiences that everyone in the company can relate to as passionate users and prospective customers."

Worst advice: "Do some focus groups to figure out what the market wants."

2. Sonny Vu, CEO, Misfit

Best advice: "Trust your gut." (When running your second and third companies.)

Worst advice: "Trust your gut." (When running your first company.)

3. Chris Allen, CEO, iDevices

Best advice: "Surround yourself with great people, and everything else will fall into place."

Worst advice: "You should let go of your highest-paid people in order to save money."

4. Greg Sullivan, CEO, Global Velocity

Best advice: "Celebrate successes along the way."

Worst advice: "Don't do business with the federal government."

5. Zeev Farbman, CEO, Lightricks

Best advice: "Trust yourself in your area of expertise; trust other people in their area of expertise."

Worst advice: "No one will pay money for it; launch it for free."

6. Jasper Eisenberg, director of product management, Motrr

Best advice: "If you don't do it now, it won't get done."

Worst advice: "If it's good enough, it's good enough."

7. Martin Källström, CEO, Narrative

Best advice: "Don't try to do more than three things at once; not even Apple can do more than three things at the same time."

Worst advice: "Stay in school—it's important to get a degree."

Grant Davis

Entrepreneur Staff

Managing Editor

Grant Davis is the managing editor of Entrepreneur magazine.

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