Sentences with phrase «as experts at something»

Not exact matches

As Barry Saltzman, a business - strategy expert and CEO of Saltzman Enterprise Group, previously told Business Insider, successful 20 - somethings know what they can do and become extraordinary at something.
As Todd Tucker, a trade expert at the left - leaning Roosevelt Institute, argues, the move could be productive if it was actually a bargaining chip for something bigger: negotiations with the global community over how to deal with China's cheating on steel production.
Now, I won't pretend to be an expert on the kid, and, yes, that is a highlight video, but he appears as nimble as the day is long and has a pretty clever left foot, something that always puts an attacker at an advantage.
In the statement, Hochul frames the proposal as a «tax increase» on New Yorkers worth $ 4.7 billion (Health care experts, like Bill Hammond at the Empire Center, say the move would likely be something of a wash).
While such a trial is unlikely on U.S. soil, experts say, American geologists and seismologists are watching closely, surprised at a legal system that would attempt to criminalize something as uncertain as earthquake prediction.
I am open to correction on this, but as best I can tell, the Hubble telescope would have something like 15 - centimeter resolving power if it were pointed at something on the Earth, like the Statue of Liberty (if you are a telescope expert, please write in and correct me if I am wrong).
Kate Taylor, resident relationship expert at match.com, offers her explanation as to why this will be the busiest day for online dating ever: «New Year is a fantastic time for us to turn over a new leaf and try something new — why should dating be any different?
In the final, incredible scenes at Candie Land, easily the peak of the film and some of the best scenes of the year, everyone on - screen is hiding something from Django pretending to be a mandingo expert to Broomhilda pretending she doesn't know him to Samuel L. Jackson's memorable turn as a loyal butler with plenty to hide.
Not to say that the idea of being an expert, being a leader, being productive, or being fabulously talented is anything new — hey, I'm 49 and those words have been around even longer than I have — but this commanding, demanding focus on something as necessarily hazy as «excellence» deserves attention, especially at the start of the new school year.
And while the deficit remains with academy trusts, several pension experts said the government would ultimately have to cough up should a trust collapse without a new sponsor — something described as a «extreme circumstance» by John Wright, head of public sector at pensions firm Hymans Robertson.
As one of my brighter friends at RealMoney, Howard Simons, used to say (something like), «On Wall Street, to those that are expert, we give them super-advanced tools that they can use to destroy themselves.»
Women in the Pet Industry Network (WIPIN) is looking for business experts to share their knowledge and tips as speakers at The Start of Something Big!
I conjecture that three changes in the way in which the climate problem is presented by the experts to the general public would make the conversation go better: acknowledge that climate constraints are unwelcome (thereby establishing empathy with general audiences, as a doctor does when conveying bad news), present the science as unfinished (thereby taking away the surprise factor that accompanies every new wrinkle — cf. the cosmic ray stories of a couple of weeks ago), and admit that no solution is wonderful (something hard for much of our community, which loves some strategy and hates at least one of the others).
They also recommended prompt investment in projects aimed at capturing and permanently storing carbon dioxide from power plants on a large scale — something that many energy experts say has to happen because coal will continue being used as a fuel for decades.
Something I wrote about in The National Law Journal a few years ago appears as a quote at the top of the page («A lawyer would be remiss not to check an expert through The -LSB-...]
Something I wrote about in The National Law Journal a few years ago appears as a quote at the top of the page («A lawyer would be remiss not to check an expert through The Daubert Tracker»), and the five - star award from my book, The Essential Guide to the Best (and Worst) Legal Sites on the Web, appears to the right.
I am an amateur at this and in doing research on this I discovered a post by an expert which goes into greater detail with greater understanding than I, and as I tell law students, «don't recreate the wheel, if the experts have done something, see what they had to say», so if you want to read more about this I recommend going to Jeffrey Rosenthal's «Margins of Error in Opinion Polls».
I would add that as we lawyers become marginalized, our role and value both Face to Face and at the Interface will be in extolling our expert niche specialism with exceptional emotional intelligence whilst delivering extraordinary customer service (humanisation — naked — something AI and computers will never be... or will they?).
As TheGrindstone's Editor At Large, career expert and author Debra Shigley said in an interview with The Today Show, «Many people get to that point in their lives and they feel an incredible urge to do something and not have any regrets.»
As a masterful therapist, Lori Gottlieb knows this work, but she is also an expert at something that is a bit different.
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