Sentences with phrase «fear about competition»

More expert advice, more gear, more fear about competition and safety, and more choices to make about education, nutrition, even entertainment.

Not exact matches

Something I hear about often is the fear of competition.
So, out of fear, they opt to cheat or make disparaging comments about the competition.
«Management will likely need to calm some fears about domestic competition, but it's not like they are a stranger to competition,» Cowen & Co. said in a note.
AT&T's $ 67 billion bid for DirecTV and Comcast's $ 45 billion tilt at Time Warner Cable raise fears about less competition and higher rates.
New research published by the Business Centre Association (BCA) in collaboration with CBRE has found that the business centre sector enjoyed a 13 % increase in turnover and was home to around 11 % more workers in 2015 and 2016, despite initial fears about the impact of Brexit on the sector, and increasing competition from new entrants into the market.
If the Prime Minister, on advice from the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, signs off on a voluntary code it will relieve industry and retailer fears about rumoured plans within government to impose a mandatory code on the sector.
Drogba averaged about 14 goals a season in all competitions for 6 out of 8 seasons at Chelsea, does that change the fact that Drogba was one of the EPL's most feared strikers in his prime?
In every issue, students write about matters closest to their hearts: love, secrets, dances, body image, sexual identity, relationships with parents, and also intense academic pressures, competition, loneliness, depression and fears for the future.
Your child may be able to express his fears and say that he feels worried about an upcoming game or competition.
Although physicists have long shared their work as preprints, biologists have been slower to embrace them for various reasons — such as fear of being scooped by the competition and concerns about releasing medical findings that haven't been vetted.
I think about many solutions: — Increasing my aerobic volume — Adjusting my MAF HR to 180 — my age + 5 (I'm 29 yo so it would be 156 instead of 151 bpm) * according to the 180 formula I can add 5 if I've been running for at least two years without injury and have made progress in competition * in my case this is almost true except that it's been only 1 + year — Performing a lab test to discover my true MAF HR — Adding some more intensity periods, without fearing about the volume (but always listening to my body and ensuring proper rest between workouts)
The mature woman may have concerns about her attractiveness as the fear of competition that they might face from younger women as time passes by.
Separated, without the competition of girls in the class, they will talk about the double standards they face, how they pick role models, their fears and successes, and the pain of death and divorce.
Competition is fundamentally about fear.
With so much coverage given in the past two years to the so - called «death of books» due to the on - going digital vs print debate, it's interesting that not many pundits have spoken out about a fact that parents and educators have feared for generations, that books apparently are in competition with all of the electronic devices that young students have access to.
In my small unique book «The small stock trader» I also had more detailed overview of tens of stock trading mistakes (http://thesmallstocktrader.wordpress.com/2012/06/25/stock-day-trading-mistakessinceserrors-that-cause-90-of-stock-traders-lose-money/): • EGO (thinking you are a walking think tank, not accepting and learning from you mistakes, etc.) • Lack of passion and entering into stock trading with unrealistic expectations about the learning time and performance, without realizing that it often takes 4 - 5 years to learn how it works and that even +50 % annual performance in the long run is very good • Poor self - esteem / self - knowledge • Lack of focus • Not working ward enough and treating your stock trading as a hobby instead of a small business • Lack of knowledge and experience • Trying to imitate others instead of developing your unique stock trading philosophy that suits best to your personality • Listening to others instead of doing your own research • Lack of recordkeeping • Overanalyzing and overcomplicating things (Zen - like simplicity is the key) • Lack of flexibility to adapt to the always / quick - changing stock market • Lack of patience to learn stock trading properly, wait to enter into the positions and let the winners run (inpatience results in overtrading, which in turn results in high transaction costs) • Lack of stock trading plan that defines your goals, entry / exit points, etc. • Lack of risk management rules on stop losses, position sizing, leverage, diversification, etc. • Lack of discipline to stick to your stock trading plan and risk management rules • Getting emotional (fear, greed, hope, revenge, regret, bragging, getting overconfident after big wins, sheep - like crowd - following behavior, etc.) • Not knowing and understanding the competition • Not knowing the catalysts that trigger stock price changes • Averaging down (adding to losers instead of adding to winners) • Putting your stock trading capital in 1 - 2 or more than 6 - 7 stocks instead of diversifying into about 5 stocks • Bottom / top fishing • Not understanding the specifics of short selling • Missing this market / industry / stock connection, the big picture, and only focusing on the specific stocks • Trying to predict the market / economy instead of just listening to it and going against the trend instead of following it
He who reduces fear better than the competition can, potentially, stop competing on price, convenience, or just about anything else.
This is not about an eroding profession and it's not about the Competition Bureau overstepping its bounds, it's about fear of change and the reality that in order to make it in this industry you now have to offer more than just access to the MLS.
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