I'm not a business girl. I will never be a business girl, but I will say, for Anna Wintour, that I respect successful people; I like things that are success.
Success, they taught me, is built on the foundation of courage, hard-work and individual responsibility. Despite what some would have us believe, success is not built on resentment and fears.
I believe that great success is possible in any field - from music to mathematics to macro trading.
When I meet successful people I ask 100 questions as to what they attribute their success to. It is usually the same: persistence, hard work and hiring good people.
Past success is no guarantee of future success, so I have learned to be an entrepreneur. I began to produce and direct my own projects.
My biggest success is getting over the things that have tried to destroy and take me out of this life. Those are my biggest successes. It has nothing to do with work.
With the right mindset, you can turn a painful downfall into a setup for a great success story.
Success seems to be connected to action. Successful people keep moving. They make mistakes, but they don’t quit.
Maybe the secret to continued success is as simple as knowing that your past successes could be done so much better now.
Success is not worth having unless you have success at home. Don't compromise your base or your entire life's structure will be at risk.
The test of success is not what you do when you are on top. Success is how high you bounce when you hit the bottom.
For me success isn't about making or having money, success is defeating something you thought you couldn't do.
We were all born with a certain degree of power. The key to success is discovering this innate power and using it daily to deal with whatever challenges come our way.
My success is the team's success. It's one of those things to a certain degree that it's effort and ability but also how I benefit from what my teammates do, and then it is up to me to perform.
Success has a lot to do with luck, but it also involves a lot of real hard work. The thing about success is you really can't gauge things by album sales.
Success is so bad for everybody, period. Especially a certain kind of success, when people practically give up their identity. They forget who they are, how they are.
'The Simpsons' obviously is a huge success, and Fox has nothing to do with its success, with its creative success, and as a result they don't really like the show. They don't like 'The Simpsons' at Fox.
In certain businesses, I would say 10 failures to one success is a perfectly acceptable ratio. Because the failures die pretty quickly, they're not that expensive, and the successes can be really huge.
I love to be able to meet people who are successful, and I love them not because they're successful, but usually people who are successful have qualities that make them interesting to be around.
Success is not something I've wrapped my brain around. If people go to those movies, then yes, that's true, big-time success. If not, it's much ado about nothing.
If your success is not on your own terms, if it looks good to the world but does not feel good in your heart, it is not success at all.