Top 34 Ericsson Quotes
#1. We want to be number one, from the ingestion of content to the play-out to any type of channel. Everything between there, you should see Ericsson if you are a broadcaster, telecoms operator, or cable operator.
Hans Vestberg
#2. Every single person in the world could be a genius at something, if they practiced it daily for at least ten years (as confirmed by the research of Anders Ericsson and others).
Robin Sharma
#3. When I look into the Ericsson's mobility report that has predictions till 2018, the majority of people having mobile broadband by 2018 will be on 3G.
Hans Vestberg
#4. India is an important market for Ericsson, not only as a telecom market but also as a global hub for R&D.
Hans Vestberg
#5. What was really tough for me was that Lars Magnus Ericsson founded Ericsson in 1876; we've always had a consumer product. And I'm the 16th CEO of Ericsson, and I decided that we don't have any consumer products anymore.
Hans Vestberg
#6. Technology is something we buy to sell to the customers. Ericsson, Nokia and IBM do technology for a living, so let's give it to them because they know best. It has made the business model of Bharti very, very sustainable.
Sunil Mittal
#7. E: When one has at last reached freedom, can one even contemplate going back?
HC: But if it is not possible to go back, or to choose to go back, then it is not freedom!
~Ericsson; Hilary Craven
Agatha Christie
#8. Ericsson says that it takes approximately ten thousand hours of Deliberate Practice to gain true expertise, so it helps to start young.
Susan Cain
#9. I lose my cell phone so much that I switch it every month or so, but Sony Ericsson is usually what I use.
Chris Pratt
#10. What separates experts from the rest of us is that they tend to engage in a very directed, highly focused routine, which Ericsson has labeled deliberate practice.
Joshua Foer
#11. Ericsson notes that for a novice, somewhere around an hour a day of intense concentration seems to be a limit, while for experts this number can expand to as many as four hours - but rarely more.
Cal Newport
#12. The striking thing about Ericsson's study is that he and his colleagues couldn't find any "naturals," musicians who floated effortlessly to the top while practicing a fraction of the time
Malcolm Gladwell
#13. The subversive idea at the centre of Ericsson's work is that excellence is not reserved for the lucky few but can be achieved by almost all of us.
Matthew Syed
#14. Even if you buy a Finnish, Korean or American phone - it will be Ericsson on the inside.
Hans Vestberg
#15. If something goes wrong with my switch, there's no way anyone from Bharti can do anything about it. An Ericsson guy is going to have to come and fix it. I don't manufacture it; I can't maintain or upgrade it. So I'm thinking, 'This doesn't really belong to me. Let's just throw it out.'
Sunil Mittal
#16. Learning isn't a way of reaching one's potential but rather a way of developing it.
Anders Ericsson
#17. But the hole you left behind exists in every room, every chamber of my heart, every corner where we walked together. The hole is like a mirror into another mirror, giving endless form to the holes left in my life. I relive them all, simultaneously, and I have to go to bed for a day.
Stephanie Ericsson
#18. So here we have purposeful practice in a nutshell: Get outside your comfort zone but do it in a focused way, with clear goals, a plan for reaching those goals, and a way to monitor your progress. Oh, and figure out a way to maintain your motivation.
Anders Ericsson
#19. The Role of Deliberate Practice in the Acquisition of Expert Performance": "The differences between expert performers and normal adults are not immutable, that is, due to genetically prescribed talent. Instead, these differences reflect a life-long period of deliberate effort to improve performance.
K. Anders Ericsson
#20. This is a fundamental truth about any sort of practice: If you never push yourself beyond your comfort zone, you will never improve.
Anders Ericsson
#21. A world in which deliberate practice is a normal part of life would be one in which people had more volition and satisfaction.
Anders Ericsson
#22. When the human body is put under exceptional strain, a range of dormant genes in the DNA are expressed and extraordinary physiological processes are activated.
K. Anders Ericsson
#23. The best way to get past any barrier is to come at it from a different direction, which is one reason it is useful to work with a teacher or coach.
Anders Ericsson
#26. Our acceptance of lies becomes a cultural cancer that eventually shrouds and reorders reality until moral garbage becomes as invisible to us as water is to a fish.
Stephanie Ericsson
#27. The most important gifts we can give our children are confidence in their ability to remake themselves again and again and the tools with which to do that job
Anders Ericsson
#28. abilities gradually deteriorate in the absence of deliberate efforts to improve. So
Anders Ericsson
#29. Excellence demands effort and planned, deliberate practice of increasing difficulty
K. Anders Ericsson
#30. Call it "the New Year's resolution effect" - it's why gyms that were crowded in January are only half full in July and why so many slightly used guitars are available on Craigslist. So
Anders Ericsson
#31. The first step toward enhancing performance in an organization is realizing that improvement is possible only if participants abandon business-as-usual practices. Doing so requires recognizing and rejecting three prevailing myths.
Anders Ericsson
#33. the key to improved mental performance of almost any sort is the development of mental structures that make it possible to avoid the limitations of short-term memory and deal effectively with large amounts of information at once.
Anders Ericsson
#34. I've often mused over the idea that madness is actually a sane reaction to an insane world.
Stephanie Ericsson
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