Succeed in a sentence as a verb

It's great if you succeed; if you fail, you have a network.

It won't be fun or lucrative to work for one that fails, so you're trying to predict which ones will succeed.

What he truly desires is not for his projects to succeed, but to connect with people through his projects.

I am very glad to see that people are following what I did and have succeeded in beating me.

But I bet it really, really hurts for the many folks who genuinely worked their asses off to see Zynga succeed.

To succeed today in the app stores, you have to cheat, so go buy some reviews and downloads so you can raise your ranking in the store.

Take the least amount of stock possible - your startup is statistically unlikely to succeed.

Deviations from each of these create strain on the relationships among teammates and require changes in the work or processes of collaboration to succeed.

Even if you succeed, all you've achieved is to protect one solitary person at the cost of considerable personal inconvenience.

You may not mean it this way, but when people describe Apple as being a marketing company, the implication is that given the exact same product, Apple would succeed where Microsoft would fail.

If you're struggling with some concept of enterprise grade operations, what people expect of you and how you can succeed with events like this in the future, I'm positive every capable person here would provide some level of guidance and support.

I can finally let go of my plan to abandon my family, move to the bay area, drain my life savings, live in a shoebox, stumble from one conference and event to the next hoping to network and find my messiah & co-founder, try to get funded, grow my business to someone else's expectations, all for a tiny fraction of a chance to succeed and be either a slave to my own company or lose control of my baby and walk away with diluted equity.

Succeed definitions

verb

attain success or reach a desired goal; "The enterprise succeeded"; "We succeeded in getting tickets to the show"; "she struggled to overcome her handicap and won"

verb

be the successor (of); "Carter followed Ford"; "Will Charles succeed to the throne?"

See also: follow