A Quote by Kevin Systrom

Someone once described entrepreneurship to me as a series of happy accidents. — © Kevin Systrom
Someone once described entrepreneurship to me as a series of happy accidents.
My life and my career have been a series of happy and not so happy accidents.
It's ridiculous. My life's been a series of happy accidents.
My life has been a series of slightly happy accidents.
A director is someone who presides over a series of accidents.
Happy accidents are real gifts, and they can open the door to a future that didn't even exist. It's kind of nice sometimes to set up something to encourage or allow happy accidents to happen.
My life has been a whole series of accidents, some of them happy, some not.
Single life should be experimental in nature and open to accidents. Some accidents are happy ones.
Accidents happen, whether they're car accidents, friendly fire, drug overdoses. Accidents happen, and they're tragic. It's like a bomb that goes off and pieces of shrapnel rip into the flesh of the family. It's the families that need the compassion, because everywhere they walk, every day, someone reminds them of their loss.
Entrepreneurship, entrepreneurship, entrepreneurship. It drives everything: Job creation, poverty alleviation, innovation.
I was a victim of a series of accidents, as are we all.
Every once in a while I get a fan letter from someone about thinking he or she saw me in an episode of an old western or police series. The writers are probably right.
Some critics have suggested that Ronald Reagan succeeded in a series of careers, ultimately as a two-term president of the United States, by a series of fortunate accidents. Such a criticism is not backed by the evidence. It is true, though, that Reagan's approach to work and life was not conventional.
Creating and producing creative work, to me, those are all happy accidents.
Creating and producing creative work, to me those are all happy accidents.
I am the victim of a fortunate series of accidents.
History was a series of decisions about what to tell and a series of accidents about what survived after telling. Not truth, but a historian could search for truth, and the search was as worthy as any other human activity.
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