Sentences with phrase «heard of key person»

Well, you might be surprised if you've never heard of key person insurance (sometimes called key man insurance).

Not exact matches

«That's a key part of what's missing, and it's critically important for entrepreneurs and young people to be able to look up to these people and hear their stories.»
When I hear that there is no room for God in the whole «mental health» debate, I want to remind those people of something that I think is one of the key issues at the center of this whole conversation: God loves people in their humanity and we are to do the same of one another.
The key Obama quote: «I'd just remind conservative commentators that for years what we've heard is, the biggest problem on the bench was judicial activism or a lack of judicial restraint — that an unelected group of people would somehow overturn a duly constituted and passed....
A terminally ill patient can turn their lives over to God, be faithful, and still (here is one of the keys people hate to hear) DO THEIR PART in the fight against that cancer.
KINGSTON, N.Y. >> A measure that would make it illegal for people under the age of 18 to possess tobacco products in Ulster County took a step forward this week when two key legislative committees approved a resolution setting a public hearing on the proposal.
You'll be hearing more from me and the rest of Labour's Work and Pensions team about this, and the better targeted support we need for key groups such as single parents and disabled people over the months to come.
«I go to conferences and listen to all the key people in our fields of interest, just to hear what they are saying about who's doing what and about what the next steps are likely to be.»
(NaturalHealth365) Perhaps you've heard people laughingly refer to «senior moments,» those temporary lapses of memory that can leave you searching for a word — or a lost set of car keys.
Women have always been a key part of Star Wars» mythos, but to hear the way some people reacted to The Last Jedi, you'd think that they feel Star Wars would be better off without any female characters at all.
by Bill Chambers Is there a person alive who can hear the opening theme from John Carpenter's Escape from New York and resist the urge to tap the keys of an invisible synthesizer?
Those people may well include the audience; while my black - tie gala crowd leaned in appreciatively at the disclosure of a key twist, I heard from a few colleagues that the same scene elicited laughs and snorts of derision at the press screening.
Miriam Mason - Sesay in Sierra Leone believes that all constituents of the school community should «have the right, but also the responsibility, to make their voices heard»; and Vicki Davis writes about the key principles that she believes can improve the well - being of any school community, including choosing to improve, playing to people's strengths and being willing to serve and love those we have to work with.
Zeroing in on the specific group of people that you're trying to connect with is the KEY to making connections with people who want to hear from you and who will be interested in your book.
And while few surprises came out of the key sessions on Tuesday (January 17), it was interesting to hear Macmillan CEO John Sargent — who is also president of Holtzbrinck Publishing — speak to the place of digital issues on publishing people's minds as he opened his keynote.
It didn't take long for the person behind the account to adopt a scorched earth policy in its takedown of key art world tropes: conceptual abstract painters showing at Bushwick outposts of Belgian galleries, pedestrian rabble - rousing headlines churned out by art blog sweatshops, people who ask «how the show was» only to hear about «how nice the space is,» Urs Fischer — et cetera.
Lawyers accused Home Office officials of overlooking key details, reluctance to disclose important information at tribunal hearings, incompetence and, as one barrister put it, being «on some sort of mission to imprison people».
Well, that was certainly one of the things that I thought when I first heard about this was that what makes it interesting that Thomson Reuters is developing AI products is that Thomson Reuters is an established player with a strong reputation and a long track record and that brings a degree of legitimacy to AI products that, as you say, that some startups, they may be fully legitimate startups and brilliant people working at them, but they don't have that reputation, and for lawyers to trust something I think that's a key element of it.
Neither were we, until we heard from Barb Agostini, managing partner at Recruiting Social: «I use Crowdfire to keep on top of key areas of interest and people on Twitter and Instagram.
KEY ACHIEVEMENTS • Introduced a «double information» system that proved helpful during emergency situations, by informing concerned individuals through telephone and in person at the same time • Set up a TDD system for hearing impaired callers which provided freedom of communication to patients • Implemented a series of emergency / disaster procedures (pertaining to initial communication) to be used during emergency situations • Serviced 3211 incoming calls in 3 hours following the emergency situation pertaining to the floods of 2012
Yeah, I'm really excited to hear what he says about that because I think that's the key to the online resume, is the analytical side of things, other than just a static, on your personal website kind of thing, which is wonderful, but you don't really get to see how people are interacting with that.
Another key theme from a Canadian - Australian Round - table on Indigenous Health and Wellbeing was the importance of providing young people with platforms and opportunities for having their voices heard.
When the person in the therapist role gets a little flustered about where to focus or how to deepen affect in the moment — often stoked by a dose of performance anxiety — we sometimes stop the role play briefly and I ask the therapist what she notices inside herself as she hears key words and phrases and observes his non-verbal communication.
When people suffer, as Kim did, they often do so twice: first because they've lived through something painful, and second because a key person in their lives doesn't want to hear about it, or doesn't want to hear all of it.
Unfortunately, you tend to hear the horror stories of the bad ones which gives the turn key model a bad reputation in some peoples minds.
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