Not exact matches
In these cases, eventually you get to a
bad result - either because no
deal gets done or - far
worse - because the entrepreneur grudgingly and half - heartedly accepts a
deal that he's unhappy
with and angry about for what he thinks is the good of the
business.
Projects and
deals can fall through, you can have a
bad quarter of
business, and you can have a few
bad weeks
with your diet but it's still a temporary thing because you don't have to accept it as a permanent reality.
You are now
dealing with the executor of Aunt Irma's estate, who may be 1) a greedy relative who sees the «gift» as an investment for which the estate is entitled to a substantial piece of your
business, 2) a local estate lawyer whose main purpose in life is to squeeze as many assets out of the estate as possible so as to maximize their fees, or 3) someone even
worse.
By 1884, however, Grant was diagnosed
with throat cancer (incurable by 19th Century medicine), and was nearly destitute after a worldwide tour and some
bad business deals.
That's
bad news for family members who have to
deal with the entrepreneur in the family spoiling the festive cheer
with constant tapping on a smartphone, and it's
bad news for
business owners themselves.
Once you fully analyze NAFTA's effects on your
business, understand the potential new costs and legal changes that would come into place if the
deal is terminated, talk to the
businesses you work
with and develop new plans, your
business will be ready for even the
worst case scenario.
The cynical view, of course, is that Abdul - Jabbar is playing just for the money, both to cover the $ 9 million he lost in
bad business deals (SI, Oct. 19, 1987) and to fulfill his contractual obligations
with the electronics company and athletic wear company that are paying him big bucks to endorse their products.
If the agent gets paid a percentage of the contract, then the «
worst» front offices to
deal with are actually the best in
business terms of protecting the franchise.
We can't being
dealing with this loser club, it's
bad for
business»?
No
deal would not necessarily be a
bad outcome, they insist, because the world is eager to do more
business with us, which will be cheaper in the future as sterling continues its steady decline.
Worse still, having vowed to abandon the European Union, Mrs May is driven into the arms of someone whose election (like the Brexit vote) was enthusiastically welcomed by every protectionist and nationalist in Europe, who seeks to destabilise the European Union itself, who has questioned the importance of Nato and who seeks a new
deal with Putin as a strongman whom he admires as someone he can do
business with.
By Sean Ryan Nonprofit developers operate in a market that could put them out of
business with one
bad deal.
Whether client
deals that have fallen through, product launches that performed
worse than expected, or article pitches that were rejected,
dealing with setbacks is just part of
business.
One of the
worst things about getting into any online
business is
dealing with the scammers, spammers, and bots that come
with every website.
Parents who were
dealing with the ethical issues of «good» pirates versus «
bad» politicians in the first movie will find those concerns minimized in this outing which pits nasty pirates against nastier scallywags and big
business playing the
baddest of them all.
The chief of staff was hoping to get this evidence from a younger man he mentored in college (James Ransone), who has a
bad relationship
with his abusive father (Griffin Dunne), a real - estate developer who is the mayor's biggest financial supporter and also his secret
business partner in the land
deal.
From this whipsmart opening, Whedon builds to a brutal second act that mercilessly piles on the hurt,
with each character — even Scarlett — given some really
bad business to
deal with in an extended mid-air action sequence of such sustained and wrung - out tension that it has the unintended effect of rendering the final showdown just a little limp by comparison.
This dealership is hands down the
worst business I've ever had the misfortune of
dealing with.
I've seen friends literally lose control of their books because an inexperienced agent made a
bad publishing
deal with a new publisher who went out of
business right after the book released.
And this is something I can certainly understand, given the subjects addressed there — such as years of
bad treatment of writers (Joe and myself included) based on a
business model where anyone who wanted to work as a writer had few - if - any options besides
dealing with bad business models and egregious contracts.
They are hamstrung
with bad business deals and as soon as someone new is hired to run the Nook division they are gone within a year or two.
Filed Under: E-Books and Technology for Writers, Social Media and Marketing For Writers, The Publishing
Business, Writers
Dealing with Reviews and Rejection Tagged With: Amazon Review Guidelines, Amazon reviews, Amazon rules, Book Reviews, British Bad Boys, Gamergate, how to get your book reviewed, how to sell on Amazon, Shari Stauch, Your Writer Plat
with Reviews and Rejection Tagged
With: Amazon Review Guidelines, Amazon reviews, Amazon rules, Book Reviews, British Bad Boys, Gamergate, how to get your book reviewed, how to sell on Amazon, Shari Stauch, Your Writer Plat
With: Amazon Review Guidelines, Amazon reviews, Amazon rules, Book Reviews, British
Bad Boys, Gamergate, how to get your book reviewed, how to sell on Amazon, Shari Stauch, Your Writer Platform
This may be wishful thinking, but I don't think Marvel or DC want to
deal with the
bad PR of having their customers lose 2 - 3 years of comics because a middleman distributor went out of
business.
While the taxes and fees for
business class aren't cheap, it's not such a
bad deal when you consider that the same seat
with cash on Delta could cost over $ 4,000.
It is generally a
bad idea to lie and it is even more so when
dealing with businesses contracts.
And as tempting as it might be, when seeking an unsecured personal loan
with bad credit, to jump at the first
deal offered, remember to check the background of the particular lender on the Better
Business Bureau website.
These may exhibit some level of negative correlation
with the economy — companies
dealing with distressed consumers &
businesses can particularly thrive in a
bad economy, or outright recession.
In a
worst - case scenario,
dealing with an innocent mistake in complying
with complicated MFA regulations could potentially put us out of
business and personally bankrupt us.
While the taxes and fees for
business class aren't cheap, it's not such a
bad deal when you consider that the same seat
with cash on Delta could cost over $ 4,000.
Adding our
business card did complicate things a little online, but overall, it is not
bad to
deal with.
For those more concerned
with their local economies than global greenhouse gas emissions, walking away from the Paris agreement was just another example of a bottom - line
business decision made by a president who knows a good
deal from a
bad one.
There is probably nobody out there who has not had to
deal with the pitfalls of the modern - day conference call: crying babies or dogs barking on the line of the person working from home; the dude calling in from his cell phone
with bad reception; the lady dialing in from the airport
with flight announcements on the P.A. system interrupting every 30 seconds; the loud talker; the soft talker; the foreign accent - talker you can not understand; the two people who keep talking over each other; the
business - speak cliches you must endure («at the end of the day»); and so on.
The «protectionist instincts» that I and others have are (1) to protect the independence of the bar (sure to be lost eventually under nonlawyer ownership), (2) to protect the health of the legal marketplace (sure to be
badly harmed by the cartelization of ABS (see the 5 % commissions charged by the cartel of real estate agencies who still control the vast majority of the realty market, and especially see the ridiculously high costs of
dealing with the American title insurance industry where four companies have upwards of 87 % of the conveyancing and title insurance market after first decimating the real estate bar
with predatory pricing and other unfair
business practices)-RRB-, and (3) to protect the public from those ravages.
There are a number of skills you need to learn: how to sell a client on you, how to talk to opposing counsel, how to counsel a client, how to run a
business, how to keep your
business moving forward, how to
deal with the unexpected, and how to
deal with a
bad client.
When your
business is already
dealing with bad PR, you've got a million fires to put out.
Worse still, the faith the
businesses repose in lawyer escrow accounts, particularly
with Biglaw and Big
Deals, may be fatally undermined as a result of this fiasco.
Patients
with damage to orbitofrontal cortex, the amygdala, or both, are often vulnerable to scams,
bad business deals, and exploitative relationships, a vulnerability that may be affected by deficits in specific aspects of social cognition (45, 47).
I know it doesn't sound that
bad to most casual investors to «break even» on a
deal, but when its your source of income, your
business requires overhead to operate, and you have a finite amount of cash capital to work
with, breaking even can be a
business killer if you do it too often.
Just a family
business,
dealing with all the same crap we
deal with - varying demand for their product,
bad weather, broken equipment and troublesome landowners.
You got it, and duplexs that sell for 60 to 70k same thing
worst areas of most MSA's only appropriate for locals that are going to stack them up and run them as a
business and are willing to
deal with that class of tenant.
The goal should be to educate people about the
business, the good, the
bad and the ugly, and then to graciously accept potential clients» decisions re whether they want to
deal with you, or not.
Few
business dealings are
worse than having to
deal with someone you do not trust.
1031 exchanges are based on INVESTMENT property that is bought
with the intent of an renting or for
business or commercial use, in other words not flipping (
dealing), so in an audit situation you must be able to show that you intended to purhcase the property for investment purposes but for some unforseen circumstance (job moved,
bad spot financially you had to sell).
In my experience
dealing with so many
bad wholesalers prior to this, I knew working
with someone else would be beneficial to selling this property, but I just had to work
with the right person (s) who I knew were professional, and did what I felt to be «GOOD»
business.
I don't have anything
bad to say about them — just like anything or anyone just make sure you
deal with someone that does good honest
business, but each one will be different.
Many of us don't have time to
deal with bad PM's, but it's a reality of the
business, and ultimately a good investment will outweigh the
bad PM (as long as it's identified an corrected / replaced early) in terms of long term gain / profit.