Sentences with phrase «focus on the big picture which»

Not exact matches

All that time in the air, he says, gives him a chance to focus on the «big picture» for his brand, which is now available in nearly 10,000 bars, restaurants, and clubs in the United States and abroad, and to embrace different culinary traditions.
Once you bring in these new advisers, you'll need to step back and focus on the bigger picture, which requires some changes to the way you approach your business.
This helps not only myself but also the rest of my team stay focused on the big picture, which of course includes the company's finances.
Keep the focus on the big picture, which is: having an overall healthy eating pattern leads to lower risk factors.
I talk a lot about the importance of eating clean, but I love what Dr. Welch has to say about food, which is basically this: It's possible to focus too much on food, and not enough on the bigger picture.
The Shape of Water, Universal's Get Out and Lady Bird were joined on the Best Picture list by Sony Classics» Call Me By Your Name; Focus Features» Darkest Hour, home to Best Actor frontrunner Gary Oldman, nommed today; Warner Bros» Dunkirk, with Christopher Nolan's stunning war movie scoring eight noms; Focus» Phantom Thread, with Daniel Day - Lewis back in the Actor race; Fox's The Post, along with it the 21st nomination for Meryl Streep (though not for director Stephen Spielberg); and Searchlight's Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, probably the other frontrunner coming into today noms and which had seven nominations, with Martin McDonagh nominated for writing but not directing, and the film's big three — Frances McDormand, Woody Harrelson and Sam Rockwell — all nominated.
While this is all well and good — and absolutely needs to be part of the big picture — data shows a different story on which we should be focusing.
Both schools focus on their students» professional prospects by helping them find yearlong internships that form a key part of the curriculum, which the Big Picture Company in Providence, Rhode Island, supplies.
Thomas Payzant: Focusing on the Big Picture at Dallas ISD Dallas News, February 7, 2012 «Standards - based reform has been a game - changer in states and school districts since the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act in 1993 - 94, which required states to develop standards in language arts and math and to develop annual student assessments aligned with those standards,» writes Professor Thomas Payzant.
This post dodges some of the bigger picture questions on changing student achievement goals, which will impact the entire state, and focuses only on what to look out for that uniquely impacts authorizers.
Of course that doesn't mean a developmental editor won't point out issues with mechanics or a line editor won't make suggestions regarding characterization, but the focus of each type of editing is essentially different, and by the time a manuscript is ready for line editing it shouldn't have many big - picture issues left, which allows the line editor to focus on your lovely prose and how to make it even better.
In the case of developmental editing, which focuses on the big picture of our story, characters, and plot, we might not even know — really — what editors do.
They should be focused on the bigger picture, which is why of the three groups, they should be involved earliest in the process.
An author's success also comes from focusing on the «big picturewhich often requires authors to rethink their mission and their position, and identify ways to relate their specialized areas of knowledge to topics that are media - friendly, i.e., relevant and timely.
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
These articles, which will usually be cover stories, will focus on big - picture topics that will not only impact the way retailers do business today, but also how they should plan to operate six years into the future — the year 2020.
On paper it's actually quite a good setup, one in which there's no real right answer: do you try to help them win the battle, or do you focus on the bigger picture and head straight for your objectivOn paper it's actually quite a good setup, one in which there's no real right answer: do you try to help them win the battle, or do you focus on the bigger picture and head straight for your objectivon the bigger picture and head straight for your objective?
I still love these kind of games, the ones that are about strategy, not tactics, which is to say focused on the big picture rather than the details.
How fractured and angry depended on choices you made, and that cliffhanger felt like one of the few true bits of consequence in a series which, while enjoyable and often endearing, often felt like it exchanged big picture tension for character focus.
Your resume should represent the top points of your career, but you may be so focused on the details that you can't see the bigger picture, which includes landing interviews and growing your opportunity pool.
The first is their «big picture» approach which focuses on developing a real estate sales practice that supports personal as well as professional goals.
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