Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Retention. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Retention Quotes And Sayings by 89 Authors including Henri Rousseau,Denis Waitley,Napoleon Hill,Sheldon Adelson,Finley Peter Dunne for you to enjoy and share.
The principal problem I had during the five years I ran the Caisse - and I bet you that it will be the same problem for my successor - is the retention, recruitment and training of competent personnel.
Persistence means giving full concentration to whatever you are doing right now ... Persistence is success through trial, error, resetting your goals, and moving toward the target.
The basis of persistence is the Power of Will.
The key factor in my strategy is longevity.
Continued focus on (employee) turnover is of critical importance, because of the direct relation of turnover to improvements in labor costs and guest satisfaction.
Persistence is a pretty important part of making it in this business, which, in retrospect, is the easy part. Maintaining a profile is the difficult part of the job. Somehow or another, I muddled through that system and somehow am around to still enjoy playing for people.
Nothing can be more hurtful to the service, than the neglect of discipline; for that discipline, more than numbers, gives one army the superiority over another.
Discipline is the habit of taking consistent action until one can perform with unconscious competence. Discipline weighs ounces but regret weighs tons.
Success comes from a constant focus on renewal.
Persistence is the most traveled path to success.
Longevity is highly over rated.
Memory is each man's own last measure, and for some, the only achievement.
To achieve or goals we need persistence
Practice makes permanent.
The secret of my success is longevity.
What I've learned at close quarters is that excellence, year after year, is exhausting.
Determination is like a muscle. If you do not use it regularly, it fades away.
Learning is limited by an organization's ability to keep its people.
Persistence overshadows even talent as the most valuable resource shaping the quality of life.
Those who do not lose their base endure. Those who die but do not perish have longevity.
Persistence separates those who want it more.
Nothing in the world can take the place of persistence.
Human memory, they say, is like a coat closet: The most enduring outcome of a formal education is that it creates rows of coat hooks so that later on, when you come upon a new piece of information, you have a hook to hang it on. Without a hook, the new information falls on the floor.
Motivation Push us out the door towards our goal.
All of us benefit from remembering our past. A people which remembers does not repeat past errors; instead, it looks with confidence to the challenges of the present and the future.
The same dynamics that promote performance also support learning and behavioral change.
Institutional memory is important in any organization, but so are fresh ideas.
How much of you is repetition?
Discipline is the fuel of achievement.
Getting feasible actions out of a retrospective and getting them done helps teams to learn and improve.
Scholars tell us that redundancy is correlated with retention. To minimize retention, a propagandist says one thing while showing the opposite. When the two differ, what we see tends to override what we hear.
The faculty for remembering is not diminished in proportion to what one has learnt, just as little as the number of moulds in which you cast sand lessens its capacity for being cast in new moulds.
Persistent work triumphs.
When setting a long-term goal, find the pace necessary to achieve it.
Do not suffer interim losses, relish and appreciate them
Discipline is the soul of an army. It makes small numbers formidable; procures success to the weak, and esteem to all
Discipline is denying ourselves in the present so as to prepare better for the future.
Finding #2: Those with the growth mindset found setbacks motivating. They're informative. They're a wake-up call.
The receding perspective of my past smothers my present. Remembering is the malignancy that feasts on my now.
At a certain point, memory begins to be a burden.
We need to uncover better ways to improve and retrospectives can provide the solution.
A declining institution often experiences survival of the unfittest.
The goal of retrospectives is help teams to continuously improve their way of working.
I believe persistence is a major key to success in any great endeavor. I want to remind folks to PERSIST in whatever they are tackling at the moment!
The price of excellence is discipline. The cost of mediocrity is disappointment.
CHALLENGE -
Instead of losing motivation, empower yourself to prove detractors wrong
Victory Consistently, train all year to be the enemy's misery!
Persistence is what keeps you hanging on when hanging on gets tough.
Retrospectives can make your organization faster, more efficient and innovative.
To stay youthful, stay useful.
Perseverance and perspective until victory.
Firmness is great; persistency is greater.
Persistence is the soul of a champion.
Memory is not just the imprint of the past time upon us; it is the keeper of what is meaningful for our deepest hopes and fears.
Motivation itself generally lasts about two plays - it's highly overrated," he said. "Give me a team that has a business-like attitude, a team that can deal with adversity when it comes.
Four years of service, and the Archive is still so full of secrets - some big, like altering; some small, like this. The more of them I learn, the more I realize how little I know, and the more I wonder about the things I have been told. The rules I have been taught.
What is memory for if not to fortify and sustain?
Longevity is the revenge of talent upon genius.
A retrospective's huge potential for learning should not be off-limits to any team member.
Persistence contagious.
A day should be your controlling and managing factor
The subject of this book is managing oneself for effectiveness.
Remembering tires a person out. this is something they don't teach us. Exercising one's memory is an exhausting activity. It draws our energy and wears down our muscles.
We've got a low turnover management group and executive group who've grown up in the business.
Persistence is to the character of man as carbon is to steel.
Discipline must be a habit so ingrained that it is stronger than the excitement of battle.
Some lose yet gain, others gain and yet lose.
Memory tempers prosperity, mitigates adversity, controls youth, and delights old age.
You must constantly persist to imprint your brand image on the mind of your audience
The spirit, the will to win, and the will to excel are the things that endure. These qualities are so much more important than the events that occur.
We have closely monitored the ups and downs of recruiting and retention trends for many years and have been quick to sound the alarm when challenges came into view.
Goals on the road to achievement cannot be achieved without discipline and consistency.
Success is fueled by being persistent and consistent.
Reps, reps, reps
For there is a general desire to be endlessly remembered and endlessly repeatable.
Pursuits become habits.
Persistence is the most powerful force on earth, it can move mountains.
Habit is a powerful means of advancement, and the habit of eternal vigilance and diligence, rarely fails to bring a substantial reward.
To be truly effective, your daily activity must align with your long-term vision, strategies, and tactics.
In all education the main cause of failure is staleness.
Every day you spend drifting away from your goals is a waste not only of that day, but also of the additional day it takes to regain lost ground.
The memory should be specially taxed in youth, since it is then that it is strongest and most tenacious. But in choosing the things that should be committed to memory the utmost are and forethought must be exercised; as lessons well learnt in youth are never forgotten.
Discipline - both mental and physical - is crucial.
Remembrance of things past.
Memory in youth is active and easily impressible; in old age it is comparatively callous to new impressions, but still retains vividly those of earlier years.
Don't complain, remain and sustain
Great habits improve performance and brings great success.
The memory is a muscle, the more you use it, the stronger it gets.
To be worn out is to be renewed.
When the initial excitement of playing starts to evaporate, good habits are needed to sustain the learning process.
Without constant practice, the officers will be nervous and undecided when mustering for battle; without constant practice, the general will be wavering and irresolute when the crisis is at hand.]
If you want to sustain excellence over a long time, you'd better come up with a system that works well. Anyone can sprint for a little while, but you can't sprint for forty years.
Our dispassionate acceptance of attrition ... [can] be matched by a full use of everything that has ever happened in all the long wonderful-ghastly years to free a person's mind from his body.
Discipline is currency for purchasing your progress
Practices were tough.
Success cannot resist the temptation of consistency and persistence.
Memory: what wonders it performs in preserving and storing up things gone by - or rather, things that are
Learning endures when an experience is meaningful.
How well we have learned to let go
In terms of instilling the values of mental toughness and work ethic, discipline is the gift that keeps on giving.