Adopted from the following great insight shared by Seth Godin
“The cost of being wrong is less than the cost of doing nothing.”
Adopted from the following great insight shared by Seth Godin
“The cost of being wrong is less than the cost of doing nothing.”
Adopted from the following great insight shared by Seth Godin
“If you are deliberately trying to create a future that feels safe, you will willfully ignore the future that is likely.”
Adopted from the following great insight shared by Seth Godin
“How dare you settle for less when the world has made it so easy for you to be remarkable?”
Adopted from the following great insight shared by Simon Sinek
“One of the best paradoxes of leadership is a leader’s need to be both stubborn and open-minded. A leader must insist on sticking to the vision and stay on course to the destination. But he must be open-minded during the process. “
Adopted from the following great insight shared by Simon Sinek
“A leader’s job is not to do the work for others, it’s to help others figure out how to do it themselves, to get things done, and to succeed beyond what they thought possible.”
Adopted from the following great insight shared by Simon Sinek
“Mergers are like marriages. They are the bringing together of two individuals. If you wouldn’t marry someone for the ‘operational efficiencies’ they offer in the running of a household, then why would you combine two companies with unique cultures and identities for that reason?”
Adopted from the following great insight shared by Simon Sinek
“If you want to be a great leader, remember to treat all people with respect at all times. For one, because you never know when you’ll need their help. And two, because it’s a sign you respect people, which all great leaders do.”
Adopted from the following great insight shared by Simon Sinek
“There is a difference between vulnerability and telling people everything about yourself. Vulnerability is a feeling. Telling everyone about yourself is just facts and details. “
Adopted from the following great insight shared by Cal Newport
“Network tools are distracting us from work that requires unbroken concentration, while simultaneously degrading our capacity to remain focused.”
Adopted from the following great insight shared by Cal Newport
“If you want to love what you do, abandon the passion mindset (“what can the world offer me?”) and instead adopt the craftsman mindset (“what can I offer the world?”)”