By Deepa Seetharaman and Sarah E. Needleman
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- Mark Zuckerberg returned to Harvard
University to give advice to students who differed from him in one
noteworthy way.
They graduated.
The Facebook Inc. chief executive, who dropped out of Harvard in
2005, came back to deliver the commencement address on Thursday. He
finally got a diploma, an honorary degree.
"If I get through this speech," Mr. Zuckerberg, 33 years old,
told the assembled, who huddled under umbrellas as it rained,
"it'll be the first time I actually finish something at
Harvard."
Apple Inc.'s late co-founder Steve Jobs, a Reed College dropout,
took to Stanford University's podium in 2005. Oracle Corp.
co-founder Larry Ellison, who left University of Illinois and
University of Chicago , donned cap and gown at University of
Southern California in 2016.
Ellen DeGeneres addressed Tulane University in 2009, telling
grads she didn't go to college. Kanye West, who titled his debut
studio album "College Dropout," spoke at the School of the Art
Institute of Chicago in 2015.
"Ironically, dropouts do give some of the best speeches," said
Cristina Negrut, creator of Graduation Wisdom, a website that
archives graduation speeches.
Dropouts often take risks, she said, which makes for better
stories. At least 10% of the roughly 200 graduation speeches on her
site were by people with no college degree.
Microsoft Corp. co-founder and Harvard dropout Bill Gates gave
the Harvard commencement address 10 years ago. Mr. Zuckerberg's
college girlfriend Priscilla Chan, now his wife, collected her
degree that year.
Dropping out to launch a startup has gained even more allure in
the tech industry since then. Snap Inc. co-founder Evan Spiegel, in
a 2015 commencement speech at USC's Marshall School of Business,
said he left Stanford without completing requirements for a
diploma. Billionaire investor and Facebook board member Peter
Thiel, who has Stanford degrees, started a fellowship in 2011 that
pays $100,000 to prodigies who have dropped out of school and work
on startups.
"The next world-changer could be that annoying student in the
back row and working on her laptop -- you just don't know," said
Harry Lewis, a Harvard computer-science professor who taught
Messrs. Gates and Zuckerberg. One of Mr. Lewis's daughters -- a
Harvard graduate -- now works for Facebook.
It's a message acknowledged by fresh Harvard grads such as Jair
Olivares. "Ideally here nobody graduates and everyone makes it
big," said the 22-year-old history major from Chicago. "It would've
been nice to drop out and make it big too. Now I will have to work
harder."
Some parents attending the Harvard ceremony were grateful their
children didn't follow Mr. Zuckerberg's dropout footsteps. "If he
can do so well as a dropout, my son can do much better as a
graduate," said Lily Hugh, mother of Danny Hugh, 31, who received a
liberal-arts and management degree from Harvard Extension
School.
Many dropout speakers treat the irony with humor, including Ms.
DeGeneres, who told Tulane grads: "I'm not saying you wasted your
time or money, but look at me, I'm a huge celebrity."
Mr. Gates told Harvard grads: "If I had spoken at your
orientation, fewer of you might be here today."
Matt Damon, addressing Massachusetts Institute of Technology's
2016 graduates, said he attended commencement at Harvard after
studying there but didn't get a degree. "So yes, today, for the
second time in my life, I am fake graduating from a college in my
hometown."
Students prize fame and gravitas over a degree in a commencement
speaker, said Julie Lythcott-Haims, Stanford's dean of freshmen
until 2012 and now an author. Stanford students were "thrilled,"
she said, when Mr. Jobs spoke to 2005 graduates -- she was on the
stage -- and told them that dropping out of Reed was "one of the
best decisions I ever made."
Ms. Lythcott-Haims recalls some students bristled at Doonesbury
creator Garry Trudeau's being named commencement speaker when she
graduated from Stanford in 1989, because they felt he wasn't
prestigious enough despite his college degree.
Mr. Zuckerberg, whom Facebook declined to make available for
comment, left Harvard nearly two years after starting Facebook,
which today is valued at more than $430 billion.
"I don't know, maybe the choice of not getting a degree was the
right one," said Instagram co-founder and CEO Kevin Systrom, who
graduated from Stanford and sold his photo-sharing app to Facebook
for $1 billion in 2012.
Mr. Zuckerberg sought advice on the speech from Mr. Gates, who
had brainstormed with his friend Warren Buffett a decade earlier
about his own speech. When Mr. Gates dropped by Facebook's Menlo
Park, Calif., headquarters earlier this year, Mr. Zuckerberg
pressed him for tips. "They know we actually didn't graduate,
right?" he asked in a video posted to his Facebook page. Mr. Gates
responded: "That is the best part -- they actually give you a
degree."
Mr. Zuckerberg, returning to campus Tuesday, visited his former
dorm, where as a sophomore in 2004 he started the social network.
In a live Facebook video, he reminisced about scheming to pass a
Roman history class, which he said he didn't attend because he was
too busy coding Facebook.
He joked about a classmate who promised his father he wouldn't
work with Mr. Zuckerberg after they built Facemash, a predecessor
to Facebook that compared students' pictures and let people pick
the "hottest." The classmate turned down Mr. Zuckerberg's offer to
help run Facebook, he said.
On Thursday morning, Mr. Zuckerberg, dressed in a crimson robe,
was one of 10 recipients of honorary degrees, along with actors
James Earl Jones and Judi Dench.
Mr. Zuckerberg opened his afternoon commencement speech with a
few jokes and then urged graduates to "create a world where every
single person has a sense of purpose" at a time when jobs are
declining due to automation and social safety nets are wearing
thin.
Today's great struggle, he said, is between the "forces of
freedom, openness and global community against the forces of
authoritarianism, isolationism and nationalism."
Mr. Zuckerberg that day posed with his beaming parents for a
photo with his new diploma and immediately updated his Facebook
page to say that he holds a Harvard degree.
"Mom," he wrote, "I always told you I'd come back and get my
degree."
Write to Deepa Seetharaman at Deepa.Seetharaman@wsj.com and
Sarah E. Needleman at sarah.needleman@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 26, 2017 09:54 ET (13:54 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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