A Quote by David T. Kearns

In the race for quality, there is no finish line — © David T. Kearns
In the race for quality, there is no finish line
To be successful one must make change an ongoing process. Quality is a race with no finish line.
There are always more questions. Science as a process is never complete. It is not a foot race, with a finish line.... People will always be waiting at a particular finish line: journalists with their cameras, impatient crowds eager to call the race, astounded to see the scientists approach, pass the mark, and keep running. It's a common misunderstanding, he said. They conclude there was no race. As long as we won't commit to knowing everything, the presumption is we know nothing.
I'm different than most people. When I cross the finish line of a big race, I see that people are ecstatic, but I'm thinking about what I'm going to do tomorrow. It's as if my journey is everlasting, and there is no finish line.
I'm different than most people...when I cross the finish line of a big race, I see that people are ecstatic, but I'm thinking about what I'm going to do tomorrow. It's as If my Journey is everlasting and there is no finish line
Life is a Sisyphean race, run ever faster toward a finish line that is merely the start of the next race
The race for Quality has no finish line - so technically, it's more like a death march. Efficiency is doing things right; effectiveness is doing the right things.
The race for excellence has no finish line.
It is not how you start the race or where you are during the race-it is how you cross the finish line that will matter.
The at-home mother's life: it was a race with no finish line.
Life is the only race you'll run where you don't know where the finish line is.
During a race where everyone holds their own truth, the finish line is a surprise.
I look at whatever the finish line is for the character and then kind of act backwards from that and play him in such a way so that that finish line is more rewarding.
Reaching the finish line, never walking, and enjoying the race. These three, in this order, are my goals.
Suffering produces the very endurance that will enable you to reach the finish line of the race set before you.
At 10 minutes to seven on a dark, cool evening in Mexico City in 1968, John Stephen Akwari of Tanzania painfully hobbled into the Olympic Stadium-the last man to finish the marathon. The winner had already been crowned, and the victory ceremony was long finished. So the stadium was almost empty and Akwari - alone, his leg bloody and bandaged - struggled to circle the track to the finish line. When asked why he had continued the grueling struggle, the young man from Tanzania answered softly: My country did not send me 9,000 miles to start the race. They sent me 9,000 miles to finish the race.
I take every race like my ride is on the line, like it's my last. I don't get sponsors when I finish second. My sponsors aren't happy when I finish second. They're happy when I win.
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