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After the OPEC crisis vaporized demand for his new supertankers, Chung refused to halt production. Instead, he completed the unwanted ships and created Hyundai Merchant Marine to be their buyer. He then lobbied the government to mandate Korean vessels for oil imports, turning a potential catastrophe into a vertically integrated, world-leading shipping business.
Instead of testing the unproven Pony car in one market, Chung Ju Young exported it to multiple countries with diverse, harsh climates. The resulting failures—peeling roofs in Nigeria, faded paint in Saudi Arabia—provided rapid, invaluable feedback. He embraced temporary international embarrassment to accelerate learning and build a more robust product.
After observing bedbugs relentlessly find a way to reach their target by climbing walls and dropping from the ceiling, Chung Ju Young adopted their "never quit" mentality. This mindset of overcoming any obstacle, no matter how unconventional the solution, became his lifelong operational principle.
Chung Ju Young treated contracts with the US Army and German engineers not just as jobs, but as classrooms. He deliberately rotated his workers through joint projects to systematically absorb advanced techniques and standards. This turned every client engagement into a strategic learning opportunity, rapidly closing his company's capability gap.
While Chung Ju Young was nicknamed "The Bulldozer" for his rapid, seemingly impulsive execution, he called himself "the thinking bulldozer." He spent enormous time and effort on detailed upfront planning. This intensive preparation is what enabled his famous speed, proving that true agility comes from deep analysis, not just a bias for action.
To avoid being bankrupted by loan interest before launching a single vessel, Chung Ju Young made the high-risk decision to build his first supertankers at the same time as the shipyard itself. This unconventional, parallel-path approach compressed a five-year timeline, demonstrating his acute understanding that for capital-intensive projects, time is the greatest enemy.
Pressured by government officials to hire their sons, Chung Ju Young devised a clever workaround. He had his hiring team administer a particularly difficult English test that was essentially guaranteed to be failed. This allowed him to reject the candidates on merit, satisfying Confucian respect for examination systems without damaging crucial government relationships.
Facing catastrophic losses from hyperinflation on a fixed-price government bridge contract, Chung Ju Young refused to quit. He sold personal and family assets to finish the job. This act of honoring his commitment, despite the financial ruin, earned Hyundai the highest trust rating, securing a pipeline of future government contracts.
In a politically chaotic Korea where new regimes purged allies of the old, Chung Ju Young made Hyundai "regime-proof." Instead of relying on patronage, he focused relentlessly on delivering projects cheaper and faster than anyone else. This made Hyundai's value proposition so compelling that no government could afford to stop working with them.
After Barclays Bank rejected his loan application based on logic, Chung Ju Young pulled out a 500-won note depicting a 400-year-old Korean ironclad warship. This single act shifted the negotiation from a financial risk assessment to a story about national pride and overlooked history, creating the emotional conviction needed to secure the loan.
Chung Ju Young's pitch to build a world-class shipyard involved showing potential buyers a photo of a beach and blueprints. He secured a purchase order for two tankers from a Greek magnate before the shipyard was built and, crucially, before Hyundai even owned the land, buying it only after the deposit came through.