I always knew I wanted to be an entrepreneur. I started my own software company in high school and went to college to study entrepreneurship.
Record companies are not necessarily interested in you realizing your artistic dream. The bottom line is that they got to sell records.
Managing a country is like managing a company in many ways. It maybe involves more complicated issues, but it's the same skills.
I don't think a true company - one that builds sustainable value - can ever only exist online or remotely.
If you love yourself, you will be happy because you will always have your own company and attention
Well it's because the record companies are pumping away with their commercial stuff. I think it's a shame.
The elimination of unnecessary collateral requirements on foreign insurers and reinsurers is not only beneficial for the individual companies, but for the industry as a whole.
Insurance companies sell what might happen tomorrow. Historians sell what certainly happened yesterday.
I'm pushing ahead on my own - you no longer need a large record company to make you a star.
We don't take a macro view... We'd look at every company to figure out if trade sanctions are helpful or hurtful.
Bankruptcy laws allow companies to smoothly reorganize, but not college graduates burdened by student loans.
Drug company payments to doctors are a small part of a much larger strategy by Big Pharma to clean our pockets.
This constant pressure from record companies to come up with a hit single or something like that, I find completely tiresome.
I don't think that a company should own a studio and the network, and program for their own network. It hurts the creativity - it is not a level playing field.
When you feel deep change in your heart, you must understand that there is a lack of an old and righteous company.
This is a bit like big-game hunting. You look for companies of a certain size that deserve to be public.
Jonah Peretti is one of the smartest web publishers out there. And Buzzfeed is an aggressive and dynamic company.
My first joke was about a company called Five Star Parking that was all over Philadelphia: 'Who's reviewing parking lots?'
If you're trying to create a company, it's like baking a cake. You have to have all the ingredients in the right proportion.
Only a couple of companies in the world have the experience of building these machines, although the market need, if RFID did take off, would be for about 1 million of the machines running in parallel.
In most parts of the world, starting a company that goes bust is dubbed a 'failure.' In Silicon Valley, we call this 'gaining experience.' We are willing to take the risks that are inherent for innovation.