“I have noticed in every campaign that I have fought-that there is a key segment of time, somewhere between 13 and 15 minutes in which the battle is won or lost. I focus on that segment of time, and I win.” WinningLostFocusMinutesKeysBattleCampaigns Author:Napoleon Bonaparte
“I've been reading and researching various aspects of history - Dickens' London, Nelson's sea battles, Magellan's nautical explorations, the weapons and battles and key figures of the American Civil War - for most of my life. I pick up a book here or there or see a documentary or talk with an expert in the subject, and my curiosity about the one area of study and discovery always leads to another.” BookWarReadingStudySeaSubjectsFiguresKeysBattleWeaponsPicksDiscoveryAreasAspectCuriosityVariousLondonExpertsCivil WarExplorationDocumentariesAmerican Civil WarNelsonDickensNauticalMagellan Author:Gary Paulsen
“Having some retail experience is key. It really is where the battle is won or lost.” LostKeysBattleRetail Author:Joseph Abboud
“The key thing for a CEO to keep their head in the game is recognize that there's turbulent times, plan for, you know, bad luck as well as good luck, keep people focused on what the key, you know, business wins are, and you know, provide the energy that people always need in order to, you know, to go into battle because, you know, work is hard and go into work and do that well. And provide a good leadership beacon for that. In other words, it's the same thing that makes good leadership in any other time.” PeopleKnowsNeedsWellsHardOrderGamesWinningEnergyPlansKeysBattleLuckFocusedCeoGood LuckBad LuckGood LeaderBeaconsGood LeadershipKey ThingsTurbulent Times Author:Reid Hoffman
“There is an immutable conflict at work in life and in business, a constant battle between peace and chaos. Neither can be mastered, but both can be influenced. How you go about that is the key to success.” LifeSuccessChangeWorkKeysBattleConflictConstantChaosKey To Success Author:Phil Knight