The Kaizen Philosophy assumes that our way of life – be it our working life, our social life, or our home life – deserves to be constantly improved.
You’ve got to get up every morning with determination if you’re going to go to bed with satisfaction.
It is not important to be better than someone else, but to be better than yesterday.
Being a professional means doing your job on the days you don’t want to do it.
Work hard. Think big. Listen well.
Self-awareness gives you the capacity to learn from your mistakes as well as your successes. It enables you to keep growing.
Networking is the No. 1 unwritten rule of success in business.
If you’re not moving forward, you’re falling back.
The price of success: hard work, patience, and a few sacrifices.
Set a goal to achieve something that is so big, so exhilarating that it excites you and scares you at the same time.
Success is built sequentially. It’s one thing at a time.
Great leaders don’t succeed because they are great. They succeed because they bring out the greatness in others.
When you know your WHY, you’ll know your WAY.
Just start. Don’t wait for perfection. Just start and let the work teach you.
Most people only work enough so that it feels like work, whereas successful people work at a pace that gets such satisfying results that work is a reward. Truly successful people don’t even call it work; for them, it’s a passion. Why? Because they do enough to win!
Do what others refuse to do.
Average leaders raise the bar on themselves; good leaders raise the bar for others; great leaders inspire others to raise their own bar.
Lifelong learning is no longer a luxury but a necessity for employment.
True leadership lies in guiding others to success. In ensuring that everyone is performing at their best, doing the work they are pledged to do and doing it well.
If we look at those who are the most successful in the world, persistence is the common denominator.