One Thing At A Time Quotes by Peter Drucker, Jonathan Glazer, Luis von Ahn, Donald Trump, Sangharakshita, Philip Seymour Hoffman and many others.

Successful people know they need to get many things done-and done effectively. Therefore, they concentrate their time and energy on doing one thing at a time-and on doing first things firs.
I’m really so singular, I am only able to work on one thing at a time. I really am.
I am always able to keep a laser focus on one thing at a time without getting distracted. It helps that I try to break everything I do into small, achievable tasks.
The real achiever do one thing at a time.
We have to do one thing at a time. We can’t go – and I watched Lindsey Graham, he said, I have been here for 10 years fighting. Well, he will be there with that thinking for another 50 years. He won’t be able to solve the problem.
To be able to do one thing at a time is the whole art of life.
If I was a little bit younger I would worry more. I’d want to do one thing at a time but now I try to do a bunch of different things at a time if I can.
I’m the kind of person who likes to focus on one thing at a time. I’ll focus on my skiing and then when I get to the bottom of my run and the cameras are on me, I’ll focus on what I need to say, and then I’ll focus that night on recovering and getting ready for the next day.
I can’t really work on more than one thing at a time
I’m taking one thing at a time. With the children and launching my solo career it would drive me to a nervous breakdown if I tried to organise a wedding on top of that.
Your mission is to document and observe the world around you as if you’ve never seen it before. Take notes. Collect things you find on your travels. Document your findings. Notice patterns. Copy. Trace. Focus on one thing at a time. Record what you are drawn to.
Do one thing at a time and do that one thing as if your life depended upon it.
I’ve always been the sort of guy who’s happiest doing more than one thing at a time.
My thinking is first and last and always for the sake of my doing, and I can only do one thing at a time.
When I’m writing a comic book, I’m thinking about a character that I’m going to be drawing on the page. I’ve never drawn a character to look like who I want to cast in a movie because I don’t think that way. I’m a real monomaniac. I do one thing at a time.
I learned from Ethel Waters, Duke Ellington, Adelaide Hall, the Nicholas Brothers, the whole thing, the whole schmear. [The Cotton Club] was a great place because it hired us, for one thing, at a time when it was really rough [for Black performers].
I’m pretty much a movie-to-movie guy. It’s hard for me to multitask so I feel very one-thing-at-a-time oriented and I usually just wait until a movie’s done and it’s premiered, then just kind of reflect on what I’m interested in my own life and let the movies come to me rather than force them.