Top 94 Quotes & Sayings by Jared Isaacman

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American businessman Jared Isaacman.
Last updated on December 23, 2024.
Jared Isaacman

Jared Isaacman is an American entrepreneur, pilot, philanthropist, and commercial astronaut. He is the founder, CEO of Draken International, a private air force provider and Shift4 Payments, a payment processor. As of June 2022, his estimated net worth is US$1.1 billion.

I've obviously been an aviation, space enthusiast for a long time.
Who hasn't imagined themselves cruising around in an X-wing?
Our first two weeks at SpaceX, we've got about 3,000 pages of academic material dropped on us, and it was just kind of death by PowerPoint, over and over, until you absorb it all.
Inspiration4 is the realization of a lifelong dream and a step towards a future in which anyone can venture out and explore the stars. — © Jared Isaacman
Inspiration4 is the realization of a lifelong dream and a step towards a future in which anyone can venture out and explore the stars.
I did tell my kindergarten teacher I would go to space someday, and she said she'd be watching.
One of the best times at a start-up is when you've got the eight people in the basement eating Chinese food and everybody kind of shares knowledge, and you share in your successes and failures together, and you learn together.
As soon as I got my business going, after a couple of years it was pretty much consuming my whole life.
United Bank Card, I picked that name in 1999 because it sounded like an established financial institution, and I was 16 years old in my parents' basement, so I needed a name like that. The moment we started building our own hardware and software and had our point-of-sale capabilities by 2008, that was the last message we wanted to send.
I truly want us to live in a world 50 or 100 years from now where people are jumping in their rockets like the Jetsons and there are families bouncing around on the moon with their kid in a spacesuit.
If you're at Kennedy Space Center, the closest you're going to get to a rocket going off is like three and a half miles.
Space adaptation syndrome is certainly real.
I mean, watching any rocket go up is pretty incredible, but watching a Soyuz go up is something else.
If you're going to accomplish all those great things out in space, all that progress, then you have an obligation to do some considerable good here on Earth, like making sure you conquer childhood cancer along the way.
I certainly get a lot of people who ask me about what it's like at SpaceX, and have you learned from it, and are there things you're taking away that you apply to your own business. The answer to all those is yes.
We've got to go back to the space station and back to the moon and Mars and beyond, because there is a lot of space out there and we know so little about it. — © Jared Isaacman
We've got to go back to the space station and back to the moon and Mars and beyond, because there is a lot of space out there and we know so little about it.
You only get so many flight hours. It's not a whole lot of time, so it really just comes down to maximizing it while you can.
I've been a SpaceX fanboy for a long time.
There's always a risk that something goes wrong, like a structural failure. But you have confidence in the whole system and the measures that have gone into place to minimize the risk. Sometimes you land when your knees are clanking together and you say you're lucky to be alive. But you are - and you move on.
As someone who flew in lots of airshows in his 20s, I know what immortal feels like.
St. Jude's mission is not about rockets or space exploration, it's about treating some of the most heart wrenching conditions that any parent could imagine.
If you do believe there's going to be a world like The Jetsons,' where everybody jumps in their rocket - very Star Wars' or Star Trek' - and people are exploring new planets and new worlds, then we've got to get the first one right.
Throughout our history we've had a lot of unique marketing initiatives that have led to growth.
Obviously you're looking out the window and you're seeing Earth and that's moving and then you're in a spacecraft now that can move on all axes while you're floating inside it and I think, for some people, maybe the combination of all three is a little bit of a sensory overload.
I came back to Earth with a house full of COVID.
When we're up in orbit, the first thing we will be excited to do is reveal what our zero-G indicator is and how that connects back to our overall mission. That's gonna be the first way we celebrate being in space.
In fact, Mario Parisi and my father are probably the two most inspirational figures when it comes to my growth as a company leader.
I think any pilot with my kind of background, flying ex-military-type aircraft and experimental aircraft, would say that the pinnacle is to be able to pilot a spacecraft - there's no question.
Shift4 has always been the greater portion of my time commitment.
To sign up to take credit cards 21 years ago, it was the same amount of paperwork as getting a commercial mortgage. It was very intense, it was burdensome, it was entirely unnecessary.
Using the bathroom in space is hard, and you've got to be very - what was the word? - very kind to one another.
I didn't really come out and expose my age.
I've been very lucky in life; you really don't get to a position that I'm fortunate enough to be in without the ball bouncing your way a couple times.
I've been a space enthusiast since I was in kindergarten.
I've been flying high-performance aircraft for a really long time.
I've said it really from the beginning that the stars have always aligned with Inspiration4.
My 3-year-old daughter told my wife she doesn't think I'm a pilot anymore because I don't fly. That was crushing.
I've been fortunate throughout many moments in my career, and whether that was traveling to Antarctica just a year ago on a mountain-climbing expedition or flying in air shows or world-record flights. These are all significant moments that I try to reflect on.
It sounds loud, but what you're hearing is the turbo pumps driving at max performance. Once you're going past the speed of sound it's really what is on the vehicle that you're hearing.
I hated high school. I watched my older siblings out in the world and they seemed to be having a much better time than me. I could not wait to be an adult. — © Jared Isaacman
I hated high school. I watched my older siblings out in the world and they seemed to be having a much better time than me. I could not wait to be an adult.
At stage separation, before the second motor ignites, to me it was a huge unload. You're practically at a zero-G event at that moment. It's the same thing when you get on orbit, except that it never starts up again. It's continuous. And the best way to describe that would be hanging upside down from your bed, like your head fills with blood.
Unfortunately, I don't do as much upside-down flying as I used to.
I didn't want to be just a weekend warrior and go up and fly every now and then.
I don't play golf or have sports hobbies. Just my two businesses and my family.
The mountain climbing, I just want to be able to have a real cardio-intense event, and the payoff is you get the top.
It all starts with opportunity. You can have the smartest person that works tirelessly day and night on a business venture but if there's no opportunity behind it, it's going to be a pretty big, uphill battle.
I certainly like to go out and seek out interesting challenges, and I try to highlight a very worthwhile cause and make a positive impact along the way.
We care about this not being a world where 600 people have gotten on orbit; we want it to be 600,000.
I could have just invited a bunch of my pilot buddies to go, and we would have had a great time and come back and had a bunch of cocktails. Instead, we wanted to bring in everyday people and energize everyone else around the idea of opening up spaceflight to more and more of us.
Square essentially targeted consumers who were doing peer-to-peer transactions. They made it easy for personal trainers to charge their clients or for a guy to sell his golf clubs to his buddy.
Someday in the future, 50, a hundred years from now, you're going to have a lunar base, you're going to probably have some sort of a Martian colony. But you have to start somewhere.
We have so much Apple influence in what we do, because we love Apple. We don't want to use their products necessarily, but we want to think in design terms the way they do. — © Jared Isaacman
We have so much Apple influence in what we do, because we love Apple. We don't want to use their products necessarily, but we want to think in design terms the way they do.
We want to work towards a Jetsons-like world.
My parents wanted to make sure I at least had the high school diploma, so I got a GED.
SpaceX is not going to put us up into orbital spaceflight unprepared.
SpaceX returned human spaceflight to the United States, and no one is close to doing that other than them.
It was like I need something else in my life, and that's when I kind of went back to my childhood interest in aviation and aerospace, and I just started flying.
Our mission to space had to serve a bigger purpose, which is why St. Jude is such a big part of this. It can't simply just be about opening the door to space for everyday people.
SpaceX's goal to make life multiplanetary and get us to Mars and be able to stay there makes the Manhattan Project look small in comparison.
The odds of becoming a NASA astronaut - you have a better chance of getting hit by lightning.
I grew up in a very middle-class background. It was a place where if you wanted something, you worked to get it.
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