How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big: Kind of the Story of My Life
Rate it:
4%
Flag icon
You’re the best judge of what works for you, as long as you acquire that wisdom through pattern recognition, trial, and observation.
4%
Flag icon
You’re the best judge of what works for you, as long as you acquire that wisdom through pattern recognition, trial, and observation.
5%
Flag icon
Sometimes the only real difference between crazy people and artists is that artists write down what they imagine seeing.
5%
Flag icon
Sometimes the only real difference between crazy people and artists is that artists write down what they imagine seeing.
5%
Flag icon
Research shows that loneliness damages the body in much the same way as aging.
5%
Flag icon
Research shows that loneliness damages the body in much the same way as aging.
7%
Flag icon
Passionate people who fail don’t get a chance to offer their advice to the rest of us. But successful passionate people are writing books and answering interview questions about their secrets for success every day.
7%
Flag icon
Naturally those successful people want you to believe that success is a product of their awesomeness, but they also want to retain some humility. You can’t be humble and say, “I succeeded because I am far smarter than the average person.” But you can say your passion was a key to your success, because everyone can be passionate about something or other. Passion sounds more accessible.
7%
Flag icon
It’s easy to be passionate about things that are working out, and that distorts our impression of the importance of passion.
7%
Flag icon
It’s easy to be passionate about things that are working out, and that distorts our impression of the importance of passion.
7%
Flag icon
easy to be passionate about things that are working out, and that distorts our impression of the importance of passion.
7%
Flag icon
Success caused passion more than passion caused success.
7%
Flag icon
Success caused passion more than passion caused success.
7%
Flag icon
sometimes passion is simply a by-product of knowing you will be good at something.
7%
Flag icon
forget about passion when you’re planning your path to success.
7%
Flag icon
forget about passion when you’re planning your path to success.
8%
Flag icon
failure is where success likes to hide in plain sight. Everything you want out of life is in that huge, bubbling vat of failure. The trick is to get the good stuff out.
8%
Flag icon
failure is where success likes to hide in plain sight. Everything you want out of life is in that huge, bubbling vat of failure. The trick is to get the good stuff out.
8%
Flag icon
failure as a tool, not an outcome.
8%
Flag icon
failure as a tool, not an outcome.
Mauricio Chirino
Failure IS a tool, not an outcome
8%
Flag icon
failure as a tool, not an outcome.
Mauricio Chirino
Failure IS a tool
8%
Flag icon
Good ideas have no value because the world already has too many of them. The market rewards execution, not ideas.
8%
Flag icon
Good ideas have no value because the world already has too many of them. The market rewards execution, not ideas.
8%
Flag icon
what is selling, I asked rhetorically, if not a form of arguing with customers until you win?
8%
Flag icon
what is selling, I asked rhetorically, if not a form of arguing with customers until you win?
Mauricio Chirino
Be VERY careful with your presumptions. They might make you look like a fool when you’re ignorant and arrogant
8%
Flag icon
what is selling, I asked rhetorically, if not a form of arguing with customers until you win?
Mauricio Chirino
Be VERY careful with your presumptions. They might make you look like a fool when you’re ignorant and arrogant
10%
Flag icon
timing is often the biggest component of success. And since timing is often hard to get right unless you are psychic, it makes sense to try different things until you get the timing right by luck.
10%
Flag icon
timing is often the biggest component of success. And since timing is often hard to get right unless you are psychic, it makes sense to try different things until you get the timing right by luck.
13%
Flag icon
job seeking was not something one did when necessary. It was an ongoing process. This makes perfect sense if you do the math. Chances are the best job for you won’t become available at precisely the time you declare yourself ready.
14%
Flag icon
goal-oriented people exist in a state of nearly continuous failure that they hope will be temporary. That feeling wears on you. In time, it becomes heavy and uncomfortable.
14%
Flag icon
Goal-oriented people exist in a state of continuous presuccess failure at best, and permanent failure at worst if things never work out. Systems people succeed every time they apply their systems, in the sense that they did what they intended to do.
14%
Flag icon
In the world of dieting, losing twenty pounds is a goal, but eating right is a system. In the exercise realm, running a marathon in under four hours is a goal, but exercising daily is a system. In business, making a million dollars is a goal, but being a serial entrepreneur is a system.
Mauricio Chirino
A goal is the destinstion but a system is the journey
14%
Flag icon
When goal-oriented people succeed in big ways, it makes news, and it makes an interesting story. That gives you a distorted view of how often goal-driven people succeed.
Mauricio Chirino
Careful with statistical biased
15%
Flag icon
people who pursued extraordinarily unlikely goals were overly optimistic at best, delusional at worst, and just plain stupid most of the time.
17%
Flag icon
I figured my competitive edge was creativity. I would try one thing after another until something creative struck a chord with the public. Then I would reproduce it like crazy. In the near term it would mean one failure after another. In the long term I was creating a situation that would allow luck to find me.
Mauricio Chirino
Find an edge and exploit it as much as possible
17%
Flag icon
The world offers so many alternatives that you need a quick filter to eliminate some options and pay attention to others. Whatever your plan, focus is always important.
19%
Flag icon
If you want success, figure out the price, then pay it. It sounds trivial and obvious, but if you unpack the idea it has extraordinary power.
19%
Flag icon
Successful people don’t wish for success; they decide to pursue it. And to pursue it effectively, they need a system.
19%
Flag icon
Success always has a price, but the reality is that the price is negotiable. If you pick the right system, the price will be a lot nearer what you’re willing to pay.
19%
Flag icon
During your journey to success you will find yourself continually trying to balance your own needs with the needs of others. You will always wonder if you are being too selfish or not selfish enough.
20%
Flag icon
Society hopes you will handle your selfishness with some grace and compassion. If you do selfishness right, you automatically become a net benefit to society.
20%
Flag icon
Most successful people give more than they personally consume, in the form of taxes, charity work, job creation, and so on.
20%
Flag icon
Selfish successful people don’t cause worry and stress for those who care about them.
20%
Flag icon
We’re raised to believe that giving of ourselves is noble and good. If you’re religious, you might have twice as much pressure to be unselfish. All our lives we are told it’s better to give than to receive.
20%
Flag icon
generous people take care of their own needs first. In fact, doing so is a moral necessity. The world needs you at your best.
21%
Flag icon
Apparently humans are wired to take care of their own needs first, then family, tribe, country, and the world, roughly in that order.
21%
Flag icon
If you pursue your selfish objectives, and you do it well, someday your focus will turn outward. It’s an extraordinary feeling.
22%
Flag icon
Managing your personal energy is like managing budgets in a company. In business, every financial decision in one department is connected to others.
22%
Flag icon
Capitalism is rotten at every level, and yet it adds up to something extraordinarily useful for society over time. The paradox of capitalism is that adding a bunch of bad-sounding ideas together creates something incredible that is far more good than bad.
22%
Flag icon
No one will think worse of me in the long run for being thirty minutes behind for a full day of fun that they have already started. But everyone will appreciate that I’m in a better mood when I show up. That’s the trade-off. Like capitalism, some forms of selfishness are enlightened.
Mauricio Chirino
Be a little bit of an asshole of it helps
« Prev 1 3