Sentences with phrase «business builds character»

New challenges like owning a small business builds character and grit which are important to build and develop throughout life.

Not exact matches

Failure can build your character, and make you a better communicator — and, thus, better at connecting with people, building your business, and paving your way to success.
At this point, you might want to enlist the help of an outside expert, such as a licensing agent, whose business is built on understanding the marketplace, analyzing the commercial potential of a character, brand, or design concept, and then using his or her network of contacts to turn concepts into deals.
A star player for Princeton in the»80s and then a successful investment banker, he quit the business world in the»90s to coach the game he loves, building a national profile at Brown University with his tough - love approach and emphasis on personal character and academics.
«Kenmore is a great community and this project builds on the character that brings together the people, neighborhoods and business that make the Village a special place,» said Congressman Higgins.
After the tech hub is erected, one theory goes, more residential and commercial development — such as luxury and market - rate apartment buildings, chain stores, and hotels — would change the community character, make the surrounding areas less affordable to small businesses and unrecognizable to long - time residents.
For the rest, he hired a screenwriter to build a story around these bits of business, along with characters the audience would care about.
They're his chance to build a character and reveal some human qualities before getting back to business.
Characters blow up businesses and government buildings.
The auteur specializes in building up characters to break them down, and no one in his 1997 exploration of the pornography business is exempt from his deconstructive impulses.
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.
The auteur specializes in building up characters to break them down, and no one in his 1997 exploration of the pornography business is exempt from his deconstructive impulses: Few directos balance the hilarious and harrowing so seamlessly, and even fewer rely on dramatic irony to achieve both.
The Golden Rule Foundation The Golden Rule Foundation believes fostering character development in children is serious business and is dedicated to helping schoo lchildren build character through community service.
A master at building flawed characters, Mitchell emphasizes Scarlett's business smarts and adaptability, not just her feminine wiles and ruthlessness, as she emerges from the Civil War as a woman uniquely suited to thrive among the wreckage.
Cathryn builds the tension nicely as her characters go about their mundane, and not so mundane, business.
You'll be laying down roads, rebuilding houses and businesses from the show, and sending your favorite characters off to do various tasks in an attempt to earn currency to build up Quahog bigger and better than it was before.
As Gob's obsessions deepen, we are taken from the battlefields at Chickamauga Creek to the society balls of New York, from innocent childhoods in Homer, Ohio, to the building of the Brooklyn Bridge; and as the machine grows, so does the amazing cast of real and imagined characters: Walt Whitman, ministering lovingly to the Civil War wounded; Mrs. Woodhull and her sister Tennessee, doing business on Wall Street and riding churning tides of scandal; Gob's friend Will Fie, a war veteran who builds a house from glass images of suffering and death; Maci Trufant, Victoria Woodhull's protege and Gob's great love; and even unnatural Pickie Beecher, a child who seems to float sinisterly between the living and the dead.
By coming into your loan appointment with all of the necessary paperwork and a polished business plan, you will also build your character.
Meanwhile, in a Business Week article, The Dark Side of Second Life, Catherine Holahan discusses the increasingly vexing problem of piracy within Second Life, in which users copy others» characters, objects and buildings, «potentially eroding the value of people's virtual property.»
As a micromessaging service with its 140 - character limit, Twitter allows you to build your personal or business brand, develop relationships with people you wouldn't normally have met, and gives you a chance to expand your network and sphere of influence.
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