hamburger menuopenquotes logo

Quotations and aphorisms by :

People need to understand how exponential technologies are impacting the business landscape. They need to do some future-casting and look at how industries are evolving and being transformed.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Today, the smartphone in your pocket has a high-quality digital camera. Everyone - not just artists - is a photographer, and the explosion of photos taken annually proves it.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I view risk-aversion as crippling America in many ways.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

My father, who grew up picking olives on the Greek island of Lesbos, was a doctor. So my family expected me to become a physician.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Nothing gets us down more than watching violence on television or reading about war and brutality in the newspaper. The truth is, there's a massive reduction in the amount of violence around the world.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

There was a Gallup poll that said something like 70 percent of people in the United States do not enjoy their job - they work to put food on the table and get insurance to survive. So, what happens when technology can do all that work for us and allow us to actually do what we enjoy with our time?
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Regardless of what the naysayers believe about human interaction and social media, the data show us that the abundance of technology is actually increasing the abundance of happiness all over the world.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

When I talk about taking bold actions in the world, few things are bolder than creating the 'Huffington Post' from scratch and reinventing the newspaper business.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

All over the world, we're seeing access to food, clean water, education and healthcare improve; as a result, global innovation is rising as well.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I get demoralized by organizations that start off with a mission and pull back when they find it's risky.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Whether it's steamships disrupted by the railroads or railroads disrupted by the airlines, it's typically the large entrenched incumbents that are displaced by innovators.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Private industry's job is to make money. Private industry's job is to create a huge economic engine.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

It's easy to forget that for centuries - for millennia - the 'workforce' was all of us.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I get my news from selected Google News and my social feed.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

The world's biggest problems are the world's biggest market opportunities. And that's a huge thing. Solve hunger, literacy and energy problems, get the gratitude of the world and become a billionaire in the process.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

After more than a decade as the editor of 'Wired' magazine, Chris Anderson started the company of his dreams - a robotics manufacturing company called 3D Robotics - to produce the autonomous flying vehicles coming out of DIY Drones.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I live in L.A., where every coffee shop is filled with scriptwriters, producers and directors.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Never tolerate a toxic person in your organization.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Today, we don't blink an eye when the world's wealthiest individuals donate enormous sums of money to charitable causes. In fact, we expect them to do so.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I had started Zero-G specifically to broaden the public for access to weightlessness.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

If the idea is really new and unique and big, other people will all think it is bad and is going to fail.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

If you have a fear of flying, don't. The data are very clear: If you have to travel someplace, the safest way is by airplane.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

The reason we care so much about what happens to the likes of Lady Gaga is not because her shenanigans will ever impact our lives; rather because our brain doesn't realize there's a difference between rock stars we know about and relatives we know.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

As humans, we have evolved to compete... it is in our genes, and we love to watch a competition.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

The fact is that data are worth a lot of money.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I think about the Internet and cell phones and jets and spaceships, and I wonder, 'What's going to make that look ancient?'
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

As I've conducted my interviews with crowdsourcing entrepreneurs and experts, it's constantly hit me that your ability to do something big and bold is really a function of the size and quality of your crowd.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Did you know that Kodak actually invented the digital camera that ultimately put it out of business? Kodak had the patents and a head start, but ignored all that.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

You might hear people decry the loss of privacy in today's world, but radical transparency is dramatically reducing violence everywhere. Most violent things happen in the dark when no one's watching, whether it's an oppressive dictator or someone causing violence in the inner city.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Find Peter Diamandis on Ebay!

In 1980, during my sophomore year at MIT, I realized that the school didn't have a student space organization. I made posters for a group I called Students for the Exploration and Development of Space and put them up all over campus. Thirty-five people showed up. It was the first thing I ever organized, and it took off!
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Now, we connect via Skype or Google+ Hangout and see our friends' and loved ones' faces live.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

In most developed countries, the average person receives about 16 years of education. Even in developing countries, the population gets five to eight years of education.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Many have built their careers buttressing the status quo, reinforcing what they've already accomplished, and resisting the radical thinking that can topple their legacy - not exactly the attitude you want when trying to drive innovation forward.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Back in 2007, I had the opportunity to meet Professor Stephen Hawking through the X PRIZE Foundation. In my first conversation with him I learned that he was passionate about flying into space someday.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

With sufficient water on the Moon, solar energy can be used to split the water into hydrogen and oxygen. The oxygen is, of course, critical for humans to breathe and the water important for us to drink.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Not only are we working less, we're enjoying ourselves more. As we're working toward this world of abundance, we're able to increasingly enjoy leisure time.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

If anyone has seen success and failure on a global stage, it's my friend Steve Forbes.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

It's never been easier to share your ideas and passions with the world.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I think about things like, 'Will my kids need a college account? Will they even go to college?' I don't know if that will be the case.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

The constant monitoring of our emotional landscape and personal interactions is a bizarre concept. But it is one that could help many people.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

My feeling is that if you can make a big impact on the global literacy problem, you can uplift a big portion of society.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I think we're heading towards a world of what I call 'technological socialism.' Where technology - not the government or the state - will begin to take care of us. Technology will provide our healthcare for free. The best education in the world - for free.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

It used to be that, in astronomy, a small team of people could look at photos of a few thousand galaxies and classify and catalog them relatively easily. But now, with a new generation of robotic telescopes scanning the skies constantly and producing millions of images, that's become next to impossible.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Many entrepreneurs that made their fortunes by founding successful technology companies want to give back and solve the world's biggest problems on a grand scale. There is tremendous opportunity in this approach.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Even in an organization that's doing something big and bold, there's the mundane, day-to-day execution work of keeping it going. But people need to stay connected to the boldness, to the vision, and stay plugged in to the main vein of the dream.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

We know from hard research that educated populations have lower growth rates, are more peaceful, and add to the global economy.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

When hiring, trust your feelings.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

If you look back 600 years ago, royals' sole goal was to keep their wealth within the family.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Companies have too many experts who block innovation. True innovation really comes from perpendicular thinking.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

The automotive X Prize, to a great degree, is focused on addressing petroleum usage and carbon emissions.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Making things open-source brings the cost down.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Every generation feels it has the problems that will destroy it. That's because we can perceive them a long time before we have the ability to fix them.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

What decisions would you make differently today if you knew you would most likely live to be 150? How would you think about your 50s or 60s? How would you evaluate your career arcs or investments or even the area in which you live?
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

By 2030, just a small percentage of the global population will live in poverty.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Even a small village in the middle of Africa with a 3D printer will have access to any good it can download. The world of the 'Star Trek' replicator is not far away.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Private companies should be building businesses.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

My personal fascination with the power of the crowd has been growing: Exactly what can a 'crowd' accomplish? We know crowds can raise billions of dollars, create Wikipedia, and even design and build small autonomous drones. But how about something large and complex like designing a new car, and maybe someday even a spaceship?
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

In 1980, it cost just under $600 to take a round-trip flight within the United States.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Future companies will be smaller and more nimble.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

At the turn of the 20th century, the disparity in literacy here in the U.S. largely came down to race. Nearly half of minorities at that time - 45 percent - were illiterate, while 94 percent of white citizens were literate.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

When I was a grad student at MIT, I had a chance to become friends with the Viking Mission's chief scientist, Dr. Gerald Soffen. Viking was the first Mars lander looking for signs of life on Mars.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

As of the mid-90s, over 50 percent of women have a bachelor's and master's degree, compared to about 35 percent and 30 percent, respectively, in 1920.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Most advertisers spend millions upon millions of dollars to buy commercial time during the Super Bowl, and millions in creating eye-popping ads, hoping to create catchy, unforgettable commercials. Unfortunately, most Super Bowl commercials end up being unmemorable. Costly mistakes for brands and creative flameouts for advertising firms.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

If the government regulates against use of drones or stem cells or artificial intelligence, all that means is that the work and the research leave the borders of that country and go someplace else.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

By 2020 the U.S. will be short 91,000 doctors. There's no way we can educate enough doctors to make up that shortfall, and other countries are far worse off.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Many people who try to do big bold things in the world find out it's not about the money or the technology: It's about the regulatory hurdles that will try and stop you.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

The truest drive comes from doing what you love.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

As education becomes dematerialized, demonetized and democratized, every man, woman and child on the planet will be able to reap the benefits of knowledge. We're rapidly heading toward a world of education abundance.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Drones watch for disease and collect real-time data on crop health and yields.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Human exploration is something that's been going on for thousands of years, and the models that worked 500 years ago are likely to work again today.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Mining asteroids will ultimately benefit humanity on and off the Earth in a multitude of ways.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

With faster Internet and better computers, you'd better believe we're creating and consuming more digital data.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

So while I can't tell you if bringing a child into this world is the morally-responsible to do, I can say that the future, much like the present, is going to be a whole lot better than you think.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I think the folks who go after grand challenges are impatient.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

As of 2011, it cost about $5,000 to launch a tech startup.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

The fact that the Virgin logo was on the side of SpaceShipOne on October 4th, 2004 was fantastic.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Collective management will build companies - not top-down decision-making.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

The U.S. government doesn't build your computers, nor do you fly aboard a U.S. government owned and operated airline. Private industry routinely takes technologies pioneered by the government and turns them into cheap, reliable and robust industries. This has happened in aviation, air mail, computers, and the Internet.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

When you have an employee who's innovative in your organization, what are they thinking about in the shower? If they're working in an exciting place, they're not thinking what they're going to do over the weekend. They're thinking: 'How do I solve that problem?'
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

In 1976, Kodak's first digital camera shot at 0.1 megapixels, weighed 3.75 pounds, and cost over $10,000.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Online games for data-mining have a short virtual shelf life. People get bored, especially if the game seems stagnant.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Gossip, in its earlier forms, contained information that was critical to survival because, in clans of 150, what happened to anyone had a direct impact on everyone.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

One thing that humans still do better than computers is recognize images.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

In the 1820s, the U.S., Japan, and the U.K. were some of the only countries where the average population received at least two years of formal schooling.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Space is an inspirational concept that allows you to dream big.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Paul Allen with Microsoft revolutionized the software industry.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Find Peter Diamandis on Ebay!

Old-style management is irrelevant.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

The challenge is that the day before something is truly a breakthrough, it's a crazy idea. And crazy ideas are very risky to attempt.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

WhatsApp is both disrupting and demonetizing the entire wireless industry, and now the Facebook acquisition provides the infrastructure needed for WhatsApp to begin offering voice calls. So instead of people paying on average $80 per month, users only have to pay $0.99 per year for the same services. Wireless carriers, beware.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

As lower-cost phones begin to penetrate, they'll become the educator and physician everywhere on the planet.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

The communications industry has been tremendously successful, but we need to build the railroads and the oil wells and the gold mines of space.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Eight billion people will have Internet access by 2020.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

If you stop and think about it, the form of propulsion used today hasn't changed in over a thousand years... since the invention of fireworks by the Chinese.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Your mission is to find a product or service that can positively impact the lives of 1 billion people because that's the game we're playing today.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

If the risk is fully aligned with your purpose and mission, then it's worth considering.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Two-thirds of all growth takes place in cities because, by simple fact of population density, our urban spaces are perfect innovation labs. The modern metropolis is jam-packed. People are living atop one another; their ideas are as well.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

There are nearly one billion illiterate people on Earth.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

From a scientific point of view, we now know that the water is interlaced with the lunar soil in many locations, perhaps as remnants of comet collisions with the lunar surface.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I collect a lot of data. We all do.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

If someone is always to blame, if every time something goes wrong someone has to be punished, people quickly stop taking risks. Without risks, there can't be breakthroughs.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Passion gets an entrepreneur through the startup days and the enormous efforts it takes to build a business.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

In the 1960s, 110 countries had averages of six or more children per family.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

The rate of innovation is a function of the total number of people connected and exchanging ideas. It has gone up as population has gone up. It's gone up as people have concentrated in cities.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Drones photograph, prospect and advertise real estate from golf courses to skyscrapers; they also monitor construction in progress.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Revealing water in significant quantities on the Moon could truly be a turning point in space exploration.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

In 1900, 180-plus out of every 1,000 African-American babies died.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

3D printing will massively reduce the cost of certain products as the cost of labor is removed.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Visual artists use drones to capture beautiful new images and camera angles.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I think that we're living in a time where there are trillion-dollar opportunities that never existed before.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Learning how to understand how technology evolves, using tools like a Technology Road Map, is what you need more than anything to ride on top of the tsunami instead of being crushed by it.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Have an open mind - allow different ideas into your way of thinking.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Incentive prizes work.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

In 1994, to motivate me to complete my pilot's license, my good friend, Gregg Maryniak, gave me Charles Lindbergh's autobiography of his solo flight across the Atlantic.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

In 2000, just before the first dot-com bubble burst, it cost a whopping $5 million to launch a tech startup.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

In the early '90s, well under 5 percent of the global population was online.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Bad news sells because the amygdala is always looking for something to fear.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

We live in a world bathed in 5,000 times more energy than we consume as a species in the year, in the form of solar energy. It's just not in usable form yet.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Elon Musk with PayPal revolutionized banking.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

If you're the CEO of a publicly traded company, you're worried about quarterly returns.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

The Net is allowing us to turn ourselves into a giant, collective meta-intelligence. And this meta-intelligence continues to grow as more and more people come online.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Imagine what we could do for the world's grand challenges with a trillion hours of focused attention.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I was seeing a lot of entrepreneurs who were effectively working on the next photo-sharing app. I wanted to inspire them to go much bigger, bolder and more significant than that.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

The goal of my work is to help assure that we can create a world of abundance in which we meet the basic needs of every man, woman and child.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

We're now able to 3D print in 200 different materials, from titanium to rubber, plastic, glass, ceramic, leathers, and even chocolate.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Because it's cheaper and easier to fly than ever before, air travel is becoming democratized.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Your chances of dying a violent death are 1/500th of what they used to be during medieval times.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

The Department of Energy made an investment that failed, and it got raked over the coals for that failed investment. This is ridiculous. The fact of the matter is, the government should be making a lot of risky investments, the majority of which are likely to fail.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

As you may know, I'm the co-founder and co-chairman of an asteroid company called Planetary Resources that is backed by a group of eight billionaires to implement the bold mission of extracting resources from near-Earth asteroids.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I founded a launch company called International Microspace when I graduated medical school in 1989. We were trying to build a microsatellite launcher.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Nothing is more precious than life... especially the life of your child.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Three hundred years ago, during the Age of Enlightenment, the coffee house became the center of innovation.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Since the age of 6, I've always wanted to go to space.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Large companies and government agencies have a lot to protect and therefore are not willing to take big risks. A large company taking a risk can threaten its stock price. A government agency taking a risk can threaten congressional investigation.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

At its core, bitcoin is a smart currency designed by very forward-thinking engineers. It eliminates the need for banks, gets rid of credit card fees, currency exchange fees, money transfer fees, and reduces the need for lawyers in transitions... all good things.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Government research has to go through peer review.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Remember when vacation photos meant toting along a bulky camera?
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Every second of every day, our senses bring in way too much data than we can possibly process in our brains.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

All of us are linear thinkers. We evolved in a world that was local and linear. You know, back 100,000, 200,000, millions of years ago, when we were evolving as a human species, nothing changed. You know, the life of your great-grandparents, you, your kids - it was the same. And so we are local and linear thinkers.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

As sensors and networks continue to expand around the world, we'll see violence drop even further. After all, when there's a danger that your actions can be caught on tape and shown around the world, you're more responsible for your behavior.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

It's now possible to have your body 3D-imaged from head to toe at a sub-millimeter accuracy, showing every ripple of muscle or cellulite, to allow the perfect-fitting jeans or shoes.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

When I think about creating abundance, it's not about creating a life of luxury for everybody on this planet; it's about creating a life of possibility. It is about taking that which was scarce and making it abundant.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

In 1750, 75 percent of people on the planet worked to support the top 25 percent.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I think people are dreaming big because they have the tools to dream big. I hope that people are dreaming big because it makes them feel good about their lives.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Find Peter Diamandis on Ebay!

Now the amygdala is our early warning detector, our danger detector. It sorts and scours through all of the information looking for anything in the environment that might harm us. So given a dozen news stories, we will preferentially look at the negative news.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

In 1820, the average lifespan was just 26 years. Twenty-six years!
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

It used to be that the only ones with access to cutting-edge technology were top government labs, big companies and the ultra-rich. It was simply too expensive for the rest of us to afford.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Make it clear up front what the aim of the company is. Stay true to your authentic vision.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

As medical research continues and technology enables new breakthroughs, there will be a day when malaria and most all major deadly diseases are eradicated on Earth.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

In the 1940s, about 20% of people in the U.S. had graduated from high school, but less than 5% continued their education to get bachelors' degrees or higher.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

The old newspaper adage, 'If it bleeds, it leads,' is as true today as it was a century ago.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

True disruption means threatening your existing product line and your past investments. Breakthrough products disrupt current lines of businesses.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Your mindset matters. It affects everything - from the business and investment decisions you make, to the way you raise your children, to your stress levels and overall well-being.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Today, every skirmish in every part of the planet is broadcast straight into your living room live, in HD... over and over again.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I have the general philosophy of creating the future you want to see.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Large-scale philanthropy, based in the private - not the public - sector, is a relatively recent historical development.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I don't think the space station is innovative. Going to the moon was innovative because we had no idea how to do it.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

An exponential growth is a simple doubling. One becomes two becomes four.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

A dapper Canadian in his mid-fifties, Rob McEwen bought the disparate collection of gold mining companies known as Goldcorp in 1989. A decade later, he'd unified those companies and was ready for expansion - a process he wanted to start by building a new refinery.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

If you give people unlimited time and money, they'll do things the same old way. But if they have to achieve the goal in a brief time, they'll either give up or try something new.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

I've stopped watching TV news. They couldn't pay me enough money.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Lots of people dream big and talk about big bold ideas but never do anything. I judge people by what they've done. The ratio of something to nothing is infinite. So just do something.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

My childhood dreams were focused on being part of the effort to make humanity a multiplanetary species.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Because it's free, easy to use, and high-quality, photography is now a fixture in our daily lives - something we take for granted.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

We are living toward incredible times where the only constant is change, and the rate of change is increasing.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Never before in history has the global marketplace touched so many consumers and provided access to so many producers.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

If you've been wondering where the next gold rush is going to take place, look up at the night sky to our closest celestial neighbor. The next economic boom might just be a mere 240,000 miles away on the bella luna.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Nothing matters more than your health. Healthy living is priceless. What millionaire wouldn't pay dearly for an extra 10 or 20 years of healthy aging?
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Super-ambitious goals tend to be unifying and energizing to people; but only if they believe there's a chance of success.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

3D printing has digitized the entire manufacturing process.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Millions of years ago, our brains became wired to remember about 150 people as 'close friends.'
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

Once we start believing that the apocalypse is coming, the amygdala goes on high alert, filtering out most anything that says otherwise.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

We are effectively living in a world of communications and information abundance.
~Peter Diamandis


Link:

 

Peter Diamandis quotes

Find Peter Diamandis on Ebay!

 

Share:

twitter share icongoogle+ share iconfacebook share icontumblr share icon

stumbleupon share iconreddit share iconlinkedin share iconflipboard share icon

vkontakte share iconwhatsapp share iconemail share iconpinterest share icon

Permalink:

 

Browse:

Random author

Authors