From the time that I can remember, I worked to make money - either baby-sitting, or one year wrapping gifts at a department store at Christmas, so I could have my own money.
I had higher math SATs than in English - yet I became an English major in college.
I had an allowance, but I had to do things around the house to earn it. I think I always wanted my own money.
I expected to go into journalism or law.
I don't think about financial success as the measurement of my success.
I don't know what a world would be like if you do away with sexy images.
I developed a great sense of self-confidence when I was very young.
I defend the right of almost everything to be published... because I think that you're better off in trusting the marketplace than allowing other people to make that decision.
Actually, my parents were separated by the time I was about 2 years old.
Half of my employees are women.
Even though money seems such an objective topic, it can also be the most intimate, and possibly harmful, part of a relationship.
But maybe because the dot-com world gives people positions at a younger age, and many women are prominent in this business, it will help change the view about who can run big companies.
Billy not only had a distinguished career in the Legislature, but he also has great business instincts and has done exceedingly well making investment decisions in both stocks and private ventures such as real estate.
Being a CEO still means sitting across the table from big institutional investors and showing your leadership and having them believe in you.
I know what the attitudes of the readers are: These are guys who love women and respect women.