Sentences with phrase «know you think so»

If you're nodding yes, please know we think so too... that's precisely why we spent over a year developing EES.
I'm super happy with how it turned out and coming from a graphic designer like you I'm thrilled to know you think so too!
Let me know your thoughts so I can work on putting something together in January.
I know I think so, even if I'm not a large unitholder.

Not exact matches

«So he, you know, he's famous for being a bit of a jerk from time to time, and I think that was part of the package deal.
I think only in the past year or so, I've been like, no, everyone has their own journey, and they're doing their own thing.
«It's always hard to know exactly where to put your money these days given how rates and spreads are so low, but on a relative basis we still think there's value in EM debt,» Matt Tucker, head of the iShares fixed income strategy team, said this week during a panel discussion at the Morningstar ETF Conference in Chicago.
I'd heard from so many people that you should say yes to every opportunity, even when you don't think you know how to do it and that you should just dive in and learn on the job... And that's great advice!
I can't help but reiterate this because most businesses think, and wrongly so, that getting to know their customers is a process that starts and ends with the few initial interactions.
«On the other hand, if we both think it makes sense to have us do our deep discovery process with that Custom Design Audit so that we hand to you a Custom Development Blueprint, then we'll let each other know that right here at the end of our conversation today.
The good news is that the opportunities in the stores are so additive and important (from an experience, repeated trial, and data standpoint) to Amazon's ever - increasing accumulation of behavioral information and ultimate objective of knowing everything about us that I think Amazon will leave things alone for a while.
No, I like HSAs because I think they provide an aspiring entrepreneur with a health insurance cushion so that he or she feels more comfortable leaving a job that provides coverage in order to start a company.
«One day, I don't know what happened, I was thinking, «Why am I so miserable?
«But I had zero experience in voice work, so I thought, who knows if this will even work?»
You've got these people who have been so hardwired into their silos that they absolutely [think they] know what the outcome is going to be.
«The world has decided that these stocks can no longer be owned because a trade discussion that is turning into a tiff and a tussle has made it so people think the world is done growing.»
«Our employees don't want to deal with bosses who think they know everything... They want people who are willing to listen to advice and feedback so they can actually influence the company direction.»
I guess there's some logic to thinking that smarter people know more words so they use bigger ones.
So no, I don't think they're ready.
OK, so now that you know a lot more about polls, what should you think when a race is tight?
People know what the profits are going to be, so I think hitting it fast and early is the number - one prize.
But more importantly they think they know what their readers want, and so they think focus groups are redundant.
I'm not so sure the manufacturing sector is in that first category, and I'd like to know why Mr. Mulcair thinks it is.
So then we thought, «How can you know by their behavior on a website when people want to buy?»
Most people screw it up by thinking they already know the other side's position, and so they don't listen carefully to what their counterpart has to say.
FLAKE: No, I don't think so.
So no matter how tired you think you are when your alarm clock goes off, force yourself out of bed if you want to have a productive morning.
Conversely, the company knew customers wouldn't want to think what was supposed to be inexpensive fast food was associated the ritzy Marriott name, so both brands operated separately but successfully, he says.
I had the great pleasure of having lunch them recently, and an outsider would think they were brother and sister — they seemed to know each other so well.
The person you thought you knew so well is acting off - brand.
As entrepreneurs you all know how to think big so why not hire a plane, or use your own, to pass your house with your affirmation trailing it?!? Thinkthink big so why not hire a plane, or use your own, to pass your house with your affirmation trailing it?!? ThinkThink big!
He also has spent a long time thinking about policy, so he will know that the public doesn't always know what is good for it.
«I think that the problem of what they're really asking is do you wan na support a massive FDR - style infrastructure project so we can raise spending, raise taxes, and steal land from Republicans in Texas — no I don't,» Petersen said, referring to former President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
«Mistakes will be made... some people will not know what they're talking about, but I think it is so much better than where things were not very long ago.
«This year I think we did 21 cities,» Safi said, «and so we knew we were good at live shows and at sketch, and so we knew that those were the two things we wanted to bring to the show.»
He tweets constantly, so you can always know what he's thinking.
The important thing is that your team knows your preferred work style so everyone is thinking toward that same goal.
So no matter what your field of business is, try thinking of one feature your company should focus on and don't mix it with any other features.
Well, when you think about this, you'll realize that people want a cavity fixer, a wisdom - tooth puller, a brighter - smile maker, a false - teeth creator... and if that mental image means something known as «dentist,» we'll then, so be it.
MO: You know, the U.S. still imports a tremendous amount of oil on a daily basis, and I don't think it's realistic to expect to offset that over a very short period of time, so the connection with Canada is critically important.
I thought I knew what the market wanted, so I spent months putting together what I thought was a brilliant product.
I don't know why some investors are so arrogant to think that they're opinion will always be correct.
«From that point, I paid that [$ 21,000] off in just six months, and I paid that off so fast that I thought, «You know what?
I grew up with the last name «Fashingbauer,» so I think I know a little bit about misspelled and mispronounced names.
I know you're thinking about it, so let's start with the most common question: What is the difference between trail running shoes and hiking shoes?
As Richard Branson stated, «So please, take it from me: no matter how incredibly smart you think you are, or how brilliant, disruptive or plain off - the - wall your new concept might be, every start - up team needs at least one good mentor.»
When you have only 60 employees (and even more so when you have only 10 employees), you may think that you know not only all the employees» names but their favored pizza toppings and whether they have a significant other.
We stay loyal because a bad idea is wound so tightly into our thought process we don't know it's a bad idea.
Back in 2000 at the dot - com peak, it was seven times, so you know, so I don't think it's necessarily a valuation problem, but obviously it's been a big momentum play.
... You know, he's a leveraged buyout guy, so he had a lot of debt, and he wasn't able to continue to invest in the team the way he had been, and I think he got distracted.
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