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Just came across this story about Tong Wenhong and honestly it hits different. You know that narrative about someone being "deceived" into staying at a company for 14 years and it actually working out? Yeah, that's her.
So Tong Wenhong joined Alibaba at 30 with basically zero experience. Applied for admin assistant, got rejected, ended up at the reception desk. Most people would've dipped after a week when things got rough, but she didn't. Jack Ma gave her 0.2% of shares and said it'd be worth 100 million when they went public. Sounds like a dream, right?
Here's the thing though - Alibaba didn't go public for years. 2004 rolls around, she asks Jack Ma when it's happening. "Soon," he says. 2006, same question, same answer. You can imagine the frustration. But Tong Wenhong kept showing up, kept doing her job well, kept getting promoted. No complaints, no jumping ship.
Then 2014 happens. Alibaba IPO on NYSE, valued at $245.7 billion. That receptionist? Now Vice President with a net worth of $320 million. By 2015, Tong Wenhong was President of Cainiao, Alibaba's logistics division. Forbes listed her in 2017 as one of 25 global business leaders changing industries worldwide.
What actually gets me about Tong Wenhong's journey is how she didn't just accept being a receptionist. Yeah, she was careful with details - sending train schedules to colleagues, stocking cold drinks in summer, actually caring about customer questions. Small things. But those small things got her transferred to customer support within a year, then promoted to manager three months later. Six years in admin and she went from manager to VP.
The lesson here isn't really about getting rich or trusting your founder. It's about this - when you start somewhere, don't think "will this job pay me more?" or "is this in my job description?" That mindset keeps you stuck forever. Your age just keeps going up while your skills stay the same.
Tong Wenhong described herself as "stupid, naive, stubborn and persistent." That persistence is what changed everything. Not waiting for the perfect opportunity, but doing the current task so well that the next opportunity finds you. That's how you actually move forward in your career, not by complaining or job-hopping every six months.
The path to success isn't a straight line - it's winding. And you've gotta run that path with real effort, not just going through motions. That's what Tong Wenhong's story actually teaches us.