If my assistant goes off and becomes successful, and people want to work with him, I'd take that as a compliment that I'd trained them well.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
When you're an assistant, you're executing the wishes of your boss.
When a director you admire says that he wants to work with you, it's always a compliment, very good for your ego.
I'm avoiding having an assistant because then I would become the horrible boss. I can't justify having an assistant as a 25-year-old; I just can't do it!
I don't have an assistant. I make a lot of people around me my slaves, but no assistant.
The highest compliment that you can pay me is to say that I work hard every day, that I never dog it.
It's always nice to receive a compliment.
I don't have any assistants, I do it all myself, I don't have any secretaries.
I wouldn't go down the route of having an assistant. I don't want to be like that. I want to be normal.
I'm a good assistant. That's why I don't have an assistant, because I'm so on it that no one can be as on it as me. I know that.
The best advice is often the compliments received, and they are often about an associate who did something exceptional. I tell my teams that it's the random acts of kindness, the unexpected, that people remember most.