Top 28 Quotes & Sayings by Gerald Chertavian

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American businessman Gerald Chertavian.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Gerald Chertavian
Gerald Chertavian
American - Businessman
Born: May 15, 1965
College today is an expensive option without a lot of economies of scale, right, when you go and live at a college. So you have a system that's increasing its cost base by probably five percent a year.
The saying in business is that, 'You hire for skills and you fire for behavior.' And one would argue that in order to move up in career, to be promoted, to take on additional responsibility, in many ways that's linked more to the attitudes and behaviors that you carry rather than what you know technically about a given subject.
You have, unfortunately, a K-12 educational system where the requirements to graduate are not the requirements to be college and career-ready. So if you want young adults who are college and career-ready, our K-12 system right now does not have that as its standard.
The millennial generation and a growing number of employees are looking for more than just a paycheck. If a nonprofit could make that easy for me, they are doing me a favor. It's not just a one-way value exchange; it is an internal morale building opportunity.
Many training programs and often schools focus on just a skill or a kind of work competency. That's only half the equation. — © Gerald Chertavian
Many training programs and often schools focus on just a skill or a kind of work competency. That's only half the equation.
When we think about the workplace, people think about hard skills being dominant, but they're not. The employer realizes knowledge will shift quickly, and there's a half-life to knowledge in this world.
I've never been afraid to make a polite ask to someone.
I was taught very early on how you treat people is actually what matters.
The best thing we can do is prepare people to lead in a much more diverse environment and see that as one of our national assets and one of the things that makes America strong.
As we say at Year Up all the time, investing in our young people is not just a matter of economic justice. It's good business sense.
Our young immigrants have a lot to offer. They are motivated and hard-working, and in many cases have already contributed significantly to our society - by excelling in school, by volunteering in their communities, or by serving in the military.
Years ago, as I was beginning my professional career on Wall Street, I volunteered as a Big Brother in New York City.
Mentors provide professional networks, outlets for frustration, college and career counseling, general life advice, and most importantly, an extra voice telling a student they are smart enough and capable enough to cross the stage at graduation and land their first paycheck from a career pathway job.
At Year Up, we have helped thousands of students rise from poverty into a professional career in a single year.
You can learn what you want to learn through hard work. And a good employer will teach you what you want to learn as long as you show the right attitude and behaviors.
At Year Up, our students - low income 18-24 year olds - come to us having already faced substantial obstacles in life. They are not in search of a handout; what they want most of all is the ability to take ownership of their own futures.
It's not always the case that doing what's right is also doing what's smart, but when it is, the question of 'what to do' should be pretty simple.
The Opportunity Divide doesn't just keep our students disconnected from the mainstream economy; it prevents our businesses from growing.
Businesses are no longer receiving the cost savings from outsourcing that they once did.
The ABC's are attitude, behavior and communication skills.
When it comes to expanding opportunity, businesses and young adults are not the sources of the problem - they are a substantial part of the solution.
Year Up for me is a year in which the young adults that we serve have an opportunity to move up in their lives and gain the access and opportunity they need to realize their potential.
One can fall into the 'soft bigotry of low expectations.'
Many of our students say, 'We wish we had a mentor in high school. We wish we had someone we could spend more time with, who paid more attention to us, who I could sit down with and talk to when I had a problem.' So relationships are critical.
One can fall into the soft bigotry of low expectations. — © Gerald Chertavian
One can fall into the soft bigotry of low expectations.
You can't give until you have.
The ABCs are attitude, behavior and communication skills.
The best thing we can do for a young person is to expect a great deal from them.
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