From the minute I got to 'Fortune,' I loved my job. I knew myself to be a virtual dunce about business, and I was wide-eyed about how much I was learning.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I knew what my job was; it was to go out and meet the people and love them.
Every single thing I learned about marketing and building my business, I learned from my mom, and she had never been in the workforce. She just had great practical sense.
I was very blessed in always knowing what I wanted to do, and by the grace of God I've been able to succeed in my chosen career.
When I came into the business, things changed a lot, and my life was in a real state of flux.
I love my job so much, and not everyone can say that and I recognize how lucky that is.
Well, I was sort of a jack-of-all-trades in show business for a long time. I was a singer and a dancer and then I got a job as an actor.
I built a great company, one of the - some of the most iconic assets in the world, $10 billion of net worth, more than $10 billion of net worth, and frankly, I had a great time doing it.
I got the first job and kept going. Once I got a job, I very much wanted to keep getting jobs, basically. I did try to learn what I could in those first couple of decades.
I always knew I wanted to be an entrepreneur. I started my own software company in high school and went to college to study entrepreneurship.
The beginning of my career was so brilliant. It wasn't until ten years later that I went, 'Oh, that was a big, fat fluke and, boy, was I ever lucky.'