Quotes about Execution
Perhaps we have become too analytical to take decisive action. We may be spending too much time studying our problems and not enough time solving them.
— John Maxwell
Education without execution is extinction
— Bo Sanchez
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
Good feelings and desires are useless if they are not accompanied by action.
— JC Ryle
A truly obedient man does not discriminate between one thing and another, since his only aim is to execute faithfully whatever may be assigned to him.
— Bernard of Clairvaux
When the world's people look to the "church," they will find "Christians" without Christ. They will find a church that no longer looks to Jesus and says, "There is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved."41 In fact, they will hardly mention the real Jesus. Instead, they will honor a "good person" who was wrongfully executed and "died before His time.
— Terry James
Also pertinent to these spirits is the execution of divine works which are done outside the order of nature, for these are most sublime among the divine ministrations... And if there be anything else that is universal and primary in the carrying out of divine ministrations, it is proper to assign it to this order.
— St. Thomas Aquinas
The only way a strategy can get implemented is if we dedicate resources to it.
— Clayton M. Christensen
The strategies and plans that managers formulate for confronting disruptive technological change, therefore, should be plans for learning and discovery rather than plans for execution. This is an important point to understand, because managers who believe they know a market's future will plan and invest very differently from those who recognize the uncertainties of a developing market.
— Clayton M. Christensen
In psychiatry there is a certain condition known as delusion of reprieve. The condemned man, immediately before his execution, gets the illusion that he might be reprieved at the very last minute. No one could yet grasp the fact that everything would be taken away. all we possessed, literally, was our naked existence.
— Viktor E. Frankl
The danger never lies in a technique in itself, but solely in the spirit in which the technique is applied and handled.
— Viktor E. Frankl
In psychiatry there is a certain condition known as "delusion of reprieve." The condemned man, immediately before his execution, gets the illusion that he might be re- prieved at the very last minute.
— Viktor E. Frankl