Andrew Mason Famous Quotes
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I don't get stressed out.
I'm appalled that an industry has grown around teaching a practice as wholesome and spiritual as yoga, so I decided to create my own free video to help people get started.
The experience is fundamentally different for buying from local businesses than it is for buying consumer goods.
I look at being a capitalist businessperson like riding a bike - if I go too slowly, I'll fall over. Or it's kind of like a shark: if I stop swimming, I'll just die.
Hire great people and give them freedom to be awesome.
Groupon as a company - it's built into the business model - is about surprise. A new deal that surprises you every day. We've carried that over to our brand, in the writing and the marketing that we do, and in the internal corporate culture.
It takes some experimentation to figure out what people like and don't like.
I find myself using the word 'executives' now.
Generally, what people tend to underestimate is the cyborg nature of Groupon. We are a company that has the DNA of being both a technology company and a heavily operational company.
Life is not about money.
I'm going to continue doing my thing and work my butt off to add value for shareholders and as long as they and the board see fit to keep me in this role, I feel enormously privileged to serve.
When you think of couponing, you picture a mom cutting coupons out of the back of the newspaper.
I think if there's any difference between me and a traditional CEO, it's that I've been unwilling to change myself or shape my personality around what's expected.
In the arts they call it plagiarism, in business they call it competition.
If I could get a deal on whatever my impulse was, whenever my impulse struck, and it was nearby, I would use that all the time. It would reshape the way that I shop.
The popularity of Groupon has almost rendered the group-buying element of it obsolete, because we're able to deliver so many customers that the merchants are very happy with even the smallest number that we can provide.
I feel like clout is something that builds up on your teeth.
I think I was probably that kid in the neighborhood who you could expect once or twice a year to be knocking on your door trying to sell you something stupid.
Most small business owners are not particularly sophisticated business people. That's not a criticism; they're passionate about cutting hair or cooking food, and that's why they got in the business, not because they have an MBA.
One of the things I realized ... is how few success stories there are in websites or products or businesses that exist primarily for an altruistic purpose.
Most of the time, the things that really change the world exist for something fundamentally selfish and then the world-changing ends up being a side-effect of that.
One of the challenges of innovation is figuring out how to wipe your mind clean about what you should be doing at any given moment, and not having a religious attachment to what's gotten you there thus far.
I've been very lucky, from the beginning. I've found that as long as you're fundamentally good - as long as you're not being bad to people - people give you a lot of room to be yourself, because being yourself is being honest. And that's what people want to see.
I own over four ties.
I can't predict the future.
If dandelions were hard to grow, they would be most welcome on any lawn.
In music, which was my world before, you've got thousands and thousands of years of great ideas that have already been thought of. But the internet is basically 20 years old. So you can be way stupider and still have world-changing ideas.
Everybody loves a deal on a restaurant or skydiving or laser-hair removal.
If you laugh a lot, when you get older your wrinkles will be in the right places.
I didn't realize how hard it was to run a small business.
In terms of fear, I still am most afraid of Freddie Kruger.
Globally local commerce is a $12 to $14 trillion market. If we get 10 percent of that, we'll be very happy.
If you have a great business, if you're great at your craft people should be coming in there. It shouldn't be this secret.
Sainthood emerges when you can listen to someone's tale of woe and not respond with a description of your own.
All the trends show that email usage among the younger cohorts of Internet users is declining. Whether it will take five or 30 years for email to go extinct, I'm not sure.
You've got to go out there and kill what you're going to eat.
If you look at Myspace, Facebook was a better product. It's as simple as that.
If I told people that I knew what I was doing, nobody would believe me, so why even try and fake it?
I'm just not used to talking that much about myself. It feels strange.
Local commerce, without question, will be one of the fundamental use cases enabled by mobile devices over the next several years.