Not exact matches
Successful people don't see money solely as a personal reward; they see money as a way to grow a business, reward and develop employees, give back to the community... in short, not just to make their own
lives better but to improve the
lives of other people, too.
When Patrick Dilascia ditched his
successful New York career to
live his dream as the owner of his eponymous clothing brand, he didn't realize it would fast become a nightmare.
Successful people don't have less stress in their
lives.
Regardless of their age and experience, no founders of
successful startups just woke up one day, decided to call themselves entrepreneurs, then sat around trying to figure out what they were going to
do to
live up to the label they fabricated.
You can make a
living if you're willing to offer your time and skills to help improve the
lives of others — or tell others how you
do what you
do to be
successful.
Don't allow your
successful business to keep you from having a
successful life.
In one sense, he points out, the characteristics that make people like him
successful in business really
do translate easily to their charitable
lives.
We all have the potential to be as
successful as we dream of being, so what separates those who actually
live out their potential from those who don't?
You must
live and breathe what you
do to be
successful in franchising.
It may help to know that the most
successful people in
life generally didn't pick their passion off a shelf.
«The intent was to learn what we could
do to be
successful in a world where virtual and augmented reality aren't just cool but part of everyday
life.»
When I was
doing «Outliers» I was struck by how often when
successful people described their
lives, they would talk about the things that went wrong or the things that were hard, as opposed to the things that were easy or went right.
How
do you expect to be
successful, productive, and happy in
life if you're always running on empty?
He concludes, like Newport, that «before passionate (and
successful) people find their true
life's passion, they are passionate about
doing great work — whatever that work entails.
You have to let it go and be
done with it; worrying about what - ifs is no way to
live, or for your company to be
successful.
It regularly tests these abilities and, if you
do well, you are promised to get into a good college, have a
successful career and
live a happy, prosperous
life.
Without taking the time to think carefully about where your notions of achievement and purpose come from and what success means to you, you're in a terrible position to decide if this week's hot «how to be
successful» advice applies to you or only to someone who thinks the point of
life is something you actually don't value much at all.
They also value a healthy work -
life balance and don't believe in working 24/7 to be
successful.
Everything we
do in
life revolves around relationships — and the happiest, most
successful ones are grounded in trust.
Consider these five tips for making a graceful exit from Bill McBean, author of the recent book The Facts of Business
Life: What Every
Successful Business Owner Knows That You Don't, published by Wiley.
About how to cultivate the positive influences in your
life (Listen to people who are more
successful than you; negative people are usually those who are fearful and who haven't
done much).
I don't know whether a president is calling and asking that question, but I would feel that Joe would not only help my kid hit his potential in football, he'd help him be
successful in
life.
[00:08] Introduction [02:50] Tony introduces Ray Dalio [05:30] Ray's upbringing and early
life [06:00] The first stock he bought [07:00] Getting hooked on the market [07:30] Why he wants to share his secrets now [08:15] The three stages of
life [08:45] Finding joy in helping others achieve success [09:15] Creating principles in
life [09:45] Why his new book is a recipe book [10:45] The two things you need to be
successful [11:10] You have to stress test your ideas [11:50] The power of making mistakes [14:00] Public humiliation in 1982 [15:30] The most painful experience became the most powerful [15:50] Learning to ask: «How
do I know I'm right?»
[16:00] Pain + reflection = progress [16:30] Creating a meritocracy to draw the best out of everybody [18:30] How to raise your probability of being right [18:50] Why we are conditioned to need to be right [19:30] The neuroscience factor [19:50] The habitual and environmental factor [20:20] How to get to the other side [21:20] Great collective decision - making [21:50] The 5 things you need to be
successful [21:55] Create audacious goals [22:15] Why you need problems [22:25] Diagnose the problems to determine the root causes [22:50] Determine the design for what you will
do about the root causes [23:00] Decide to work with people who are strong where you are weak [23:15] Push through to results [23:20] The loop of success [24:15] Ray's new instinctual approach to failure [24:40] Tony's ritual after every event [25:30] The review that changed Ray's outlook on leadership [27:30] Creating new policies based on fairness and truth [28:00] What people are missing about Ray's culture [29:30] Creating meaningful work and meaningful relationships [30:15] The importance of radical honesty [30:50] Thoughtful disagreement [32:10] Why it was the relationships that changed Ray's
life [33:10] Ray's biggest weakness and how he overcame it [34:30] The jungle metaphor [36:00] The dot collector — deciding what to listen to [40:15] The wanting of meritocratic decision - making [41:40] How to see bubbles and busts [42:40] Productivity [43:00] Where we are in the cycle [43:40] What the Fed will
do [44:05] We are late in the long - term debt cycle [44:30] Long - term debt is going to be squeezing us [45:00] We have 2 economies [45:30] This year is very similar to 1937 [46:10] The top tenth of the top 1 % of wealth = bottom 90 % combined [46:25] How this creates populism [47:00] The economy for the bottom 60 % isn't growing [48:20] If you look at averages, the country is in a bind [49:10] What are the overarching principles that bind us together?
And all this avalanche was caused by a not very
successful attempt by a porn actress Stormy Daniel to make a photo robot of a man who allegedly threatened her and her daughter if she
did not give up attempts to cancel the agreement between her and Donald Trump, forbidding her to publish memories of their not quite platonic relationships, at the time in his
life, when he could not imagine himself as President of the United States even in his worst nightmare.
Well, one of the differences is our proposal around C - 32 had to
do with recognizing the work of Canadian artists and the creativity and finding a way in a post-CD world to actually encourage creators of content to make a
living off of it and the supposed iPod tax was one way of looking at perhaps making sure that we have Canadian artists celebrated and
successful the way we managed to celebrate last night with the Junos.
Through stories of people who've made dramatic gains in self - awareness, she offers surprising secrets, techniques and strategies to help readers
do the same — and how to use this insight to be more fulfilled, confident, and
successful in
life and in work.
«To be a
successful youth brand, you must be able to
do at least one of three things: make young people's
lives easier, more fun or save them money,» said Simon Eder, the founder of Voxburner.
If I can
do that, then I feel that's a
successful life for me.»
If you attend an International
Living conference or two and you don't have the information you need to make a
successful move, then you're just not paying attention.
What
do many of the most
successful (and richest) hedge fund managers have in common with a
life - long homeless person?
Perhaps one of the reasons why self help books are so
successful is that in the West we
do largely have the luxury of being able to control our own success and future, but so many people feel they are not able to wield that control or manage to get the things out of
life they want despite unparalleled levels of opportunity.
Many
successful atheist writers
lived long
lives without violent deaths: Arthur C. Clark — 91 yrs.; Kurt Vonnegut — 85; Robert Heinlein — 82; James Randi, still going at 82; and many others that I don't have time to look up right now.
If I need to be
successful in my
life, and taking from you is the fastest and surest means of
doing so, why should I be hindered?
In most people, there is a drive to be noticed, popular and
successful, and if that doesn't happen in our own
lives, or even if it was a reality in the past, we can attempt to
live vicariously through our children.
Naturally, all us have to make a
living and
do something on the side to pay the rent and the leaders of the church are no different and usually come from the ranks of
successful and talented business people who have a lot to contribute to the Kingdom of God.
It is commonly said that when apparently
successful young people — honor students, athletes, class leaders — take their own
lives, they
do so because they feel enormous pressure to
live up to the expectations of those around them.
And then, when, like most of the kids in the youth groups or Bible colleges, we found ourselves in a rather usual sort of
life, surprisingly not preaching to thousands on a weeknight, we were left feeling like failures, like somehow we weren't measuring up, we weren't serving God effectively, we must have missed it because isn't our
life supposed to be about
doing big,
successful things for God?
at the same time the parable of the talents came to mind and having grown up in Brazil, with parents who were peasants in pre-communist Russia, it was ingrained in me to become an engineer to be
successful which I became after i came to the «land of milk and honney, where money grows on trees» and many foreigners aspire to
do the same to come and
live here, the good ol USA...
Much of what we call
successful Christianity and
successful worship and
successful congregations has nothing to
do with
living and sharing the Good News.
politicians try to pass laws according to the bible for non-christians, have been
successful so far on keeping evolution out of the classroom, etc. non-christians don't want to
live by christian law.
Isn't it ironic that a man can be known as a
successful pastor, speaker and Christian — even if his
life doesn't resemble Christ's?
These days, pantheism rarely defines a whole way of
life (which is what any true theology should
do, and
does do for a real Socratic or a real Buddhist), but it's a kind of stress relief from the competitive marketplace that is so much of most
successful lives.
Occurring as it
does in the context of a review of one of the most spectacularly
successful empirical historical investigations in the whole field of
life of Christ research, it is clear evidence of a tendency of the «new hermeneutic» to blur the distinction between statements possible on the basis of academic historical research and statements possible only on the basis of faith.
It really didn't matter exactly what I
did with my
life: I didn't have to be
successful, make a lot of money, try to make myself happy — it was all about this relationship.
This important step makes
life in the kitchen not only quicker and easier, but more
successful and enjoyable too since you don't have to stop during the cooking process to
do anything other than add the next ingredient.
«I can not have a
successful restaurant and feel like a
successful chef knowing we are not at least
doing something to improve the
lives of others, even if we don't know them,» he says to podcast hosts Adam Rapoport and Andrew Knowlton.
Of all that the Gardiners have
done to break it up and make it a less intimidating
living room, nothing has been more
successful than their having produced Lilla, now 2, to run around half naked and hide under the chairs.
Bilic could ill - afford to have him dampen the atmosphere at the club and effect his teammates, and with new recruits arriving this month, he'll be confident that they've
done enough to enjoy a
successful life without Payet.
Bob Lilly didn't make millions but he got his degree from TCU played for the Cowboys and because of those relationships he has had a very
successful life.