The five-time world champion says he likes to set new goals frequently.
"The first rule for excellence is there is no room for complacence. You have always be humble and assume that there is something to learn. You have to keep setting yourself with new goals. I became World Champion for the first time in 2000, and it was in my third attempt," Anand said.
"I knew that I had to wait and there could be no euphoria, no relaxation, till I finish the job, so this time I managed to see everything through the end and I became a world champion," he recently stated at the IMC Ramakrishna Bajaj National Quality Awards.
"When I was young, there were steady goals at every stage. First was to become an International Master, then become a Grandmaster, and then try for the World Championship," he said.
"When I won the Grandmaster title, which was right after winning the World Junior title in 1987, I had a funny period of about six months where I simply couldn't make a Grandmaster result again. Though I had become a Grandmaster, I had received the title, but I simply couldn't attain a Grandmaster result again.
Anand said he became a bit complacent after winning the World Championship for the first time, which affected him and it took him a while to play at the same level again.
