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Worth the Wait by Laura Jackson
Worth the Wait by Laura  Jackson






Worth the Wait by Laura Jackson

That's always been really instilled in me." 3/ Have the right team around you I was doing a paper round from the age of 12. So I always had a really strong work ethic. She didn't give us all a tenner each because that's 50 quid! So she said: you're all going to go out and make make £10 washing cars.

Worth the Wait by Laura Jackson

I've always had a job my mum has always made us work. My family ingrained in me a strong work ethic from a very young age. "Just because you are doing something you love, doesn't mean it's not work. Play icon The triangle icon that indicates to play 2/ Never lose your work ethic I think I'm only doing things right now that I can really add value to, that I'm really invested in." And not take opportunities just because you think you need to do more.

Worth the Wait by Laura Jackson

I think that it's really important to be true to who you are. I have always tried to do this and have learnt over the years to trust my own gut and follow my own passions. "This is really the first step to a successful and happy career. Here, she shares her advice for building a career from what you love. "I've always looked for things I can put my personality and creativity into," she says. Yet what has defined her career has been seeking out her passions, something she has solidified now with Glassette, which was born from her love of redesigning and refurbishing her London home. "I've been that girl handing out toothpaste at the the tube stations or promoting gin – dressed up as a bottle of gin." "I've always just worked super hard, especially at things I really love," she says, confirming that her work ethic even extends to some of the wackier elements of her CV. Jackson is a beloved TV and radio presenter – a veteran of MTV and BBC – a podcaster, the host of a now famous supper club which spawned a best selling book Round To Oursand now, she is the founder of Glassette, an accessible interiors marketplace. It is just one of the strings to her bow. "I have always attributed my success to just getting on with people and getting on with the job in hand," says Laura Jackson, Zooming from a hotel room in Northern England one evening, before she is about to stay up all night learning lines for a TV show she is filming the next day.








Worth the Wait by Laura  Jackson