A Quote by Tom Landry

I'd rather have a second-best decision diligently pursued than a first-best decision lackadaisically pursued. — © Tom Landry
I'd rather have a second-best decision diligently pursued than a first-best decision lackadaisically pursued.
The best decision is the right decision. The next best decision is the wrong decision. The worst decision is no decision.
The second best decision in time is infinitely better than the perfect decision too late.
Better a good decision quickly than the best decision too late.
Other than my marriage, the decision to get a Ph.D. was probably the best decision of my life.
Working toward perfection is not a one time decision but a process to be pursued throughout one's lifetime.
Even though it was a start-up with fewer than 20 people, and I was pregnant with my first child, the best decision I've ever made was to join Google in 1999. Worst decision? Deciding to get a puppy and a bunny right when the baby came.
The decision on how philanthropic money is spent is made on the whims and personal interests of the wealthy, rather than what is best.
Unless a decision has degenerated into work, it is not a decision; it is at best a good intention.
I made a conscious decision back then that I would rather be the best actress who ever lived than the most famous one.
I have pursued her, as love hath pursued me
Leadership is about making the right decision and the best decision before, sometimes, it becomes entirely popular.
I think that every decision I made came from what's best for the kids. If both parents have the children's best interests in mind, it's going to go OK. The second that the parents don't do that, it gets ugly.
I was 18 and moved to a different country on my own. It was a tough decision but, looking back on it now, it was the best decision. I learned so much from being out there.
There aren't a lot of situations where I look back and I say, The decision I actually made or the course we actually pursued was the wrong course.
Often any decision, even the wrong decision, is better than no decision.
Although focusing is best pursued as a deliberate strategy over a period of time, it is also valuable as a kind of psychological first-aid, as useful to a distressed, 'stuck' person as a tourniquet to an accident victim.
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