30 highly successful people share their New Year's resolutions for 2018
Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images; Courtesy of Tony Robbins; Charley Gallay/Getty Images; Richard Drew/AP
If you're hoping for a more successful 2018, you may want to tailor your New Year's resolution to help you meet your goal.
To help you come up with ideas, Business Insider asked successful industry leaders and entrepreneurs to share what they've resolved to do over the next year.
Find out what 30 super-successful people plan to accomplish in 2018.
Libby Kane, Lauren Lyons Cole, Tanza Loudenback, Áine Cain, Rich Feloni, Shana Lebowitz, Abby Jackson, and Mark Abadi contributed reporting.
Dry Bar founder Alli Webb wants to be the best mom, founder, mentor, and wife that she can be
Drybar"My life and schedule has been so nuts over the last eight years, and while I wouldn’t change a single thing, in 2018 I am going to really try to eat better, go to bed earlier, and travel more with my kiddos, who are minutes away from outgrowing family vacations.
"I'm also working on some charitable initiatives that I hope to get off the ground in 2018! "
TheSkimm founders Danielle Weisberg and Carly Zakin want to fail faster and fail harder
Courtesy of theSkimm"As our team continues to grow, we have the ability to iterate much more quickly. To encourage this, we celebrate when we fail.
"In 2017, we introduced a new tradition at our Friday Sip 'n Skimms, where one person on the team gets to wear our 'Fail So Hard' hat and spotlight a project that did not go as planned.
"As a team we celebrate the fact that they tried and failed at something in an effort to propel the business forward. If some of our ideas are not failing, we know we're not taking big enough chances."
Foursquare cofounder and Executive Chairman Dennis Crowley wants to use location technology for social good
Brian Ach/Getty Images for TechCrunch"My resolution for 2018 is to use the power of Foursquare for social good.
"We've spent years perfecting technology for our own apps, Foursquare City Guide and Foursquare Swarm, that understands how the world looks to mobile devices as they move through 105 million places globally.
"There are so many creative uses for these capabilities, like helping urban planners to prescribe models for the revitalization of neighborhoods, understanding foot traffic and community trends, or dissecting the impact of natural disasters.
"I'd love to put our tech to the task and helping others enhance physical spaces."
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