Top 31 Quotes & Sayings by Pete Cashmore

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Scottish businessman Pete Cashmore.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Pete Cashmore

Pete Cashmore is the founder and former CEO of the popular media and entertainment company, publication and digital platform Mashable, which started as a Technorati Top 10 blog worldwide. He grew up in Banchory, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, and founded Mashable in Aberdeenshire in 2005 when he was 19.

The talent that has to be learned is finding out what someone's passion is and setting them up to realize that. You don't get the best work from people if you're guiding them versus them guiding themselves.
I'm very much a creative person, but you've got to do the follow-through. A lot of people start out with an exciting thing and they want to take over the world, but really the people who do take over the world have a good plan of how to get there and the steps along the way.
The Internet was appealing partly because it was something I could do in bed and feel like I was achieving something. I had an operation when I was 13 and ended up with complications, so I was in and out of the hospital. The bottom line is you can get through health challenges. It's part of why I was so driven.
My dad is good at sticking with stuff and he has a strong work ethic, which is imbued in me. Growing up, he would constantly ask what I was doing and was I achieving anything.
I kept my age quiet for a good few years. I didn't see it as a positive. I worked remotely, so I just didn't tell people. — © Pete Cashmore
I kept my age quiet for a good few years. I didn't see it as a positive. I worked remotely, so I just didn't tell people.
You just want to be judged against everyone fairly.
If it doesn't come through the Internet, it's not really compelling to me.
Execution really shapes whether your company takes off or not.
I don't have a TV or watch movies. I don't like to be broadcast to, I want to participate.
We're living at a time when attention is the new currency: With hundreds of TV channels, billions of Web sites, podcasts, radio shows, music downloads and social networking, our attention is more fragmented than ever before.
You need space to try things and create. It takes a long time to recalibrate if you let people pull at you all the time. A lot of stress comes from reacting to stuff. You have to keep a certain guard [up], if you're a creative person.
You have a responsibility when you have a large community.
The more people you know from different backgrounds, the more tolerant you feel of different ways of living, and the closer you feel to the issues that those people have.
We're living at a time when attention is the new currency We're all publishers now, and the more we publish, the more valuable connections we'll make. Twitter, Facebook, Flickr, Foursquare, Fitbit and the SenseCam give us a simple choice: participate or fade into a lonely obscurity.
Creating the future is incredibly exciting. When you talk about ideas and creativity, it's really about having that vision in your mind of how the world could be better, of how it could be a brighter place.
Always, in your career and personal life, be evolving with technology.
I find it best to dive right in and learn the hard way.
Privacy is dead, and social media holds the smoking gun.
I don't have any personal challenges about throwing away the past. If you're not changing, you're giving others a chance to catch up.
We are really competing against ourselves, we have no control over how other people perform.
What I’m interested in are tools that can assist people to do the things they’re really good at.
We are all more connected than ever. That connectivity builds tolerance.
Now, two things happen. One is, people know people, whether that's on Facebook or Twitter. They feel closer to the event. Secondly, people see other people doing something about it.
We have this revolution that's happening in our lifetime. The Information Revolution is changing absolutely every industry and every part of life and society and behavior.
Those who insert themselves into as many channels as possible look set to capture the most value. They'll be the richest, the most successful, the most connected, capable and influential among us. We're all publishers now, and the more we publish, the more valuable connections we'll make.
We're living at a time when attention is the new currency. Those who insert themselves into as many channels as possible look set to capture the most value. — © Pete Cashmore
We're living at a time when attention is the new currency. Those who insert themselves into as many channels as possible look set to capture the most value.
That's really been my passion: to communicate to a broad audience why the technology matters for you.
We're living at a time when attention is the new currency.
Execution really shapes whether your company takes off or not. A lot of people start out with an exciting thing and they want to take over the world, but really the people who do take over the world have a good plan of how to get there and the steps along the way.
I think you’re going to see tech bringing efficiencies to businesses that aren’t pure tech.
Talk to people no one else is talking to.
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