Danh ngôn của Kevin O'Leary

Working 24 hours a day isn't enough anymore. You have to be willing to sacrifice everything to be successful, including your personal life, your family life, maybe more. If people think it's any less, they're wrong, and they will fail.
Working 24 hours a day isn't enough anymore. You have to be willing to sacrifice everything to be successful, including your personal life, your family life, maybe more. If people think it's any less, they're wrong, and they will fail.
Làm việc 24 giờ một ngày không còn đủ nữa. Bạn phải sẵn sàng hy sinh mọi thứ để có được thành công, kể cả cuộc sống cá nhân, cuộc sống gia đình, có thể hơn thế nữa. Nếu mọi người nghĩ rằng nó ít hơn thì họ đã sai và họ sẽ thất bại.
Tác giả: Kevin O'Leary | Chuyên mục: Family | Sứ mệnh: [2]
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Các câu danh ngôn khác của cùng tác giả: Kevin O'Leary
- Here's how I think of my money - as soldiers - I send them out to war everyday. I want them to take prisoners and come home, so there's more of them.
- I'm not trying to make friends, I'm trying to make money.
- Money equals freedom.
- Business is war. I go out there, I want to kill the competitors. I want to make their lives miserable. I want to steal their market share. I want them to fear me and I want everyone on my team thinking we're going to win.
- If you put a woman in prison for four years when she's young and make her pay her time in a horrible place and she wants to come out and work, and become a mother and be a contributor to society and pay taxes and you never give her that chance. There is something un-Canadian about that.
Các câu danh ngôn khác của cùng chuyên mục: Family
- I've gotten to learn what's important in life and what's not important, and what to spend energy on and what not to. I don't have a family like some of my teammates, but I have a lot of things pulling at me that I have to put my energy into.
- My family background was deeply Christian.
- By the grace of God, my parents were fantastic. We were a very normal family, and we have had a very middle-class Indian upbringing. We were never made to realise who we were or that my father and mother were huge stars - it was a very normal house, and I'd like my daughter to have the same thing.
- It would astonish if not amuse the older citizens to learn that I (a strange, friendless, uneducated, penniless boy, working at ten dollars per month) have been put down as the candidate of pride, wealth, and aristocratic family distinction.
- As a kid we moved around a fair bit as a family. It was difficult to make friends but sport helped. Once people saw you kick a football it broke down barriers. Instead of being the new skinny black kid you were the kid everyone wanted on their team.