Sentences with phrase «huge impact over time»

And remember, even if impulse purchases may not seem like much at first, even a small increase in sales can have a huge impact over time.
Even the smallest improvements can build up a huge impact over time, so set aside 10 - 15 minutes every day to work on your breathing and then carry those new habits everywhere your day takes you.

Not exact matches

«When you have thousands of people coming to your site every day, if making one little change like putting a security logo on your checkout page makes a 1 percent difference in conversion rate a day that can make a huge impact on your bottom line over time
The changes may not seem significant but when you add them up over time can make a huge impact in your lifestyle change and weight loss * journey.
Butter is a perfect long distance food; it lasts for a long time, so it can be transported on a boat, it is resource intensive (a lot of feed goes into a gallon of milk, a lot of milk goes into a pound of butter), and the variation in environmental impact depending on where it is produced is huge (rain irrigated pasture over artificially irrigated grain).
The only problem is this is all an estimate and being 200 to 300 calories off during the day can make a huge impact on your body over a weeks time.
If you only learned one thing about personal finance, it should be compound interest because of its huge impact on how your money (or debt) grows over time.
These steady increases over time make a huge overall impact.
Bad footing over a prolonged period of time, especially during the growing period for a puppy could have a huge impact on their structural development and cause slipped patellaes which is a commong disorder in toy breeds..
Clearly, the loss of biodiversity (estimated at thousands of times the natural backgroud rate), the number of well known species that are threatened (10 - 40 % depending on taxonomic group), the loss of 10,000 - 30,000 genetically distinct populations per day (see Hughes et al., 1997) massive declines of groundwater, soil productivity and fertility, etc. as well as the fact that human activities now impact biogeochemical cycles over huge spatial scales is sufficient evidence that our species is living off of natural capital, rather than income.
That is obvious because over the past 50 years, the oceans appear to have gained 20 something raised to the 22nd power worth of Joules + / - 14.6 something raised to the 22nd power Joules, which is also assumed to be a huge number within a short time frame though we are not particularly sure what time frame is relevant, even though the impact of that 20 something raised to the 22nd power Joules produced roughly 0.09 C + / - 0.045 C increase in the mean value of the upper 2000 meters of the roughly 3600 meter deep oceans over the past 50 something years based on an imbalance estimate of 0.6Wm - 2 + / -0.4 which replaces the previous 0.9 + / - 0.15 Wm - 2 estimate which had a 95 % confidence level.
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