Quotes about Productivity
The Pareto Principle 20 percent of your priorities will give you 80 percent of your production IF you spend your time, energy, money, and personnel on the top 20 percent of your priorities.
— John Maxwell
Put first things first today and neglect things that don't really matter.
— John Maxwell
Yet a little sleep a little slumber a little folding of the hands to sleep.
— Anonymous
The fascist synthesis did not view Italy as a society divided by class but rather as a unified country in which all sectors of society could come together. The fascists replaced the old Marxist divide between unproductive capitalists and productive labor with the single category of the productive nation.
— Dinesh D'Souza
Summing up, we can see that the progressive pitches about greed, selfishness, and inequality are basically diversions. They seek to deflect us away from the core issue, which is that the creators of the wealth are the ones who deserve the wealth they have created. To put it in primitive terms, the farmer who grew the crops gets to keep the crops and the hunters who killed the deer get to eat the deer.
— Dinesh D'Souza
Nashville bike store: and you'll get hours back in your day and get to work faster.
— Donald Miller
For instance, if step one in the plan is to "set up a call," what benefits will they receive from that call? Will it save them time, will they find out if they're a good fit, will they get information they currently don't have?
— Donald Miller
The most miserable creature on earth is the man who has nothing to do. Work for the hands or work for the mind is absolutely essential to human happiness.
— JC Ryle
In America, 13.5 million days of work are lost per year due to work related depression, stress and anxiety.
— Jack Canfield
Instead of waiting for the time to get started to simply appear one day, we need to be intentional with scheduling it.
— Lysa TerKeurst
Most men think they are simply here on earth to kill time—and it's killing them.
— John Eldredge
The business world—where the majority of American men live and die—requires a man to be efficient and punctual. Corporate policies and procedures are designed with one aim: to harness a man to the plow and make him produce.
— John Eldredge