Any one can give advice, such as it is, but only a wise man knows how to profit by it.
Letting your customers set your standards is a dangerous game, because the race to the bottom is pretty easy to win. Setting your own standards--and living up to them--is a better way to profit. Not to mention a better way to make your day worth all the effort you put into it. " -
Unless we change direction, models show that the profit of the entire consumer goods sector could be wiped out by 2050
What men call friendship is only social intercourse, an exchange of favours and good offices; it comes down to a commercial dealing in which self-esteem always expects to profit.
Journalism was being whittled away by a Wall Street theory that profits can be maximized by minimizing the product.
Eleanor Roosevelt once said, ‘No one can make you feel inferior without your permission. ’ With stories from her own life and data carefully researched, Sheryl Sandberg reminds women that they have to believe in themselves and reach for opportunities. More women than men may need that advice, but I'd bet that both genders would profit from this very well-done book
I thank God to have it. I thank God that I finished it. And I hope that I will live enough to take profit of it.
The promise of every product and service is a better life. Profits are the prize for delivering on the promise.
To be a great man it is necessary to know how to profit by the whole of our good fortune.
Capitalism believes that its remit is exclusively to make maximum short-term profits.
I liked the results of the profits in the markets.
Civilisation and profits go hand in hand.
He that hath a calling, hath an office of profit and honor.
All I want to do is make serious movies that explore social issues and turn a profit, and slip the schnitzel to Jane DePugh.
Once we allow ourselves to be disobedient to the test of an accountant's profit, we have begun to change our civilization.
Newfoundland dogs are good to save children from drowning, but you must have a pond of water handy and a child, or else there will be no profit in boarding a Newfoundland.
Profits, like sausages. . . are esteemed most by those who know least about what goes into them.
America can no longer afford to get the Nobel Prizes while our competitors get the profits.
Nowadays the rage for possession has got to such a pitch that there is nothing in the realm of nature, whether sacred or profane, out of which profit cannot be squeezed.
Not to say that corporations are perfect today, but even grand corporations like Dupont have made immense progress in translating some of their past environmentally damaging practices into new profit opportunities.