Seeing What Doesn't Exist Yet
Before Nvidia (NVDA) became the AI powerhouse everyone knows today, Jensen Huang could already see the company's future playing out in his mind. That ability to visualize what didn't yet exist helped him stay committed when things got tough.
"Manifest your belief as deeply as you can," Huang told an audience at the University of Cambridge on Nov. 4, reflecting on how he maintained conviction during the startup's early days.
Having that clear vision made sticking with the company easier, and Huang believes solidifying those beliefs was crucial to Nvidia's eventual success. "We believe what we believe," he said at the Cambridge Union Debating Center.
His team operated on assumptions and principles that remained unshakable by outside forces. Nvidia didn't pivot because of what other people thought. But Huang wasn't blindly stubborn either.
Daily Reality Checks
"Every single day, I gut check the assumptions I made," he explained. If certain assumptions and principles no longer served the startup, he'd course-correct. The key difference? He made the final call instead of letting outside voices influence his beliefs.
This approach helped Huang become a recipient of the Professor Stephen Hawking Fellowship Award, which he received just before the interview. The program, established in 2017 to honor the late professor, recognizes individuals who have made "a significant impact on science, technology, and its communication, with an emphasis on impacts affecting the younger generation," according to the Cambridge Union.
Flexibility Wins Long-Term
Huang stressed the importance of staying adaptable as a founder and being willing to challenge previous ideas. Adaptability means adjusting as market conditions shift and learning from mistakes.
"I am constantly learning through failure," he said at Cambridge Union.
Remaining flexible becomes especially critical when setting ambitious goals and building a large company. Huang shared details about how Nvidia had to create an entirely new industry that now positions it as an AI leader.
"We invented a new product category, the GPU," Huang said. "We invented, in fact, a new form of computing, called CUDA, accelerated computing. Along the way, we created the instrument of scientists, artists, designers, dreamers, and most importantly, we sparked a new industrial revolution, the AI industrial revolution."
What Being CEO Actually Means
Huang also discussed what it truly means to lead a startup as CEO. He described the role as "a lifetime of sacrifice" that puts you "in service of the company."
"It's mostly about sacrifice," he said. "It's about strategy. Strategy is not just about choosing what to do. It's about choosing what not to do, which is sacrifice, and the determination, the conviction, the pain and suffering that goes along with overcoming obstacles."
Being a CEO "is not about fame and glory," Huang emphasized, instead highlighting the "pain and suffering" that happens behind the scenes.
"You're creating conditions for other people to do their life's work," he said. "You're inspiring through example."
Why This Mindset Matters
That philosophy explains why Huang kept building Nvidia and pushed through the inevitable challenges. The company still faces plenty of obstacles today, including competitors developing custom AI chips and trade war risks that nearly reached a tipping point in Q1. Huang's ability to navigate these challenges while staying true to his vision gives his company a real edge.
The lesson for founders? Hold your beliefs deeply enough to weather doubt, but stay flexible enough to admit when you're wrong. It's the combination of conviction and adaptability that separates companies that survive from those that thrive.