Sentences with phrase «known author said»

4 authors on how better credit can make you happy — Money can't buy happiness, but some well - known authors say taking steps to improve your credit can... (See Happiness)

Not exact matches

We asked the author of That's What She Said: What Men Need to Know (and Women Need to Tell Them) about Working Together for the lessons she learned the hard way.
This could be because the original article leaves the author enough wiggle room, including the use of a question mark headline, to say, «I didn't say we knew for sure.»
There are many factors why people stay in jobs that aren't mentally stimulating, said Silicon Valley - based Liz Wiseman, executive advisor and author of Rookie Smarts: Why Learning Beats Knowing in the New Game of Work.
«In this day and age, small businesses no longer have to say, «I'm out of the office right now, I didn't get your fax,»» says Ramon Ray, author and editor at Smallbiztechnology.com.
«By asking this question, you can uncover exactly what issues the hiring organization has identified and is currently dealing with,» says Heather McNab, author of What Top Professionals Need to Know About Answering Job Interview Questions.
«Everyone knows what's going on,» says James Rickards, author of Currency Wars: The Making of the Next Global Crisis.
«Your people need to know what exposes data,» says David Stelzl, author of Data@Risk and founder of the consultancy Stelzl in Charlotte.
«Keep your expectations high and let your employees know you have every confidence in their ability to meet, and exceed them,» says author Frances Cole Jones.
So there's no longer a negative stigma attached to online dating,» said the report's author, Victor Anthony, Topeka's managing director of Internet media.
«When it comes to establishing positive relationships with your coworkers, the most important thing is to get to know them first as individuals,» says Dorie Clark, author of Reinventing You.
After all, being known as someone who regularly gets the job done without complaint is one of the fastest ways to get promoted, says bestselling management author and CNBC contributor Suzy Welch.
If you want to be successful, you'll have to put in the work, says John D. Spooner, author of «No One Ever Told Us That: Money And Life Lessons For Young Adults.»
Here's how to tell your boss, «no,» but still be a team player, says Suzy Welch, bestselling management author and CNBC contributor.
Many business leaders confess to struggling to say no, as did Wharton professor and author Adam Grant recently in a recent LinkedIn post.
Students shouldn't borrow more in loans than they'll make in their first year of employment, said Jeff Selingo, author of «There Is Life After College: What Parents and Students Should Know About Navigating School to Prepare for the Jobs of Tomorrow.»
No matter where you are or what you're pitching, chances are if you're presenting to an audience - whether it's an audience of 5 or 5,000 - you're going to encounter one of three types of personalities, says author and speaker Mark Jeffries.
Dennis Cowhey, author of the book What Does It Mean — The Personal Stories Behind Vanity License Plates, says business people have used all sorts of creative combinations of numerals and letters to let the world know what they do.
«In my whole life, I have known no wise people who didn't read all the time — none, zero,» says Munger, according to David Clark, author of «The Tao of Charlie Munger.»
Media strategist Mack Collier, author of Think Like a Rock Star, says what fans most need to know is what's on the menu and where the food trucks are.
«If people know that their fellow co-workers are watching out for theft, they will think twice before stealing because there are higher odds they will be caught,» says Terrence Shulman, founder of the The Shulman Center for Compulsive Theft, Spending & Hoarding and author of Biting the Hand that Feeds: The Employee Theft Epidemic (Infinity Publishing, 2005).
«If you are always the last to know something, then that's a pretty big red flag that people don't feel as though they can trust you with information,» says Michael Kerr, an international business speaker and author of «The Humor Advantage.»
«There's no longer any question about whether a Web site has to be running all the time,» says Kaye, author of Strategies for Web Hosting and Managed Services (John Wiley & Sons, 2001).
«The retailers need to know how much of the beacons they want to use and figure out whether they should crawl, walk or run (with the technology),» said Schafer, who is a director at the National Retail Federation in the U.S. and author of Branded, a book about retailers and social media.
«I knew this research would be contentious,» said Adam Liska, the lead author and an assistant professor of biological systems engineering at the University of Nebraska - Lincoln.
«Bosses micromanage for many different reasons, but no matter how good their intentions, taking a heavy - handed approach typically hurts employee output, job satisfaction and, as a result, retention efforts,» said Max Messmer, chairman of Accountemps and author of Motivating Employees For Dummies ® (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.).
Malkiel (left), the Princeton economist best known as the author of A Random Walk Down Wall Street, now in its 12th edition, took to the op - ed pages of the Wall Street Journal on Tuesday, saying investors who would «pull their money out of the stock market today to invest in bonds are making a huge mistake.»
Lewis Carroll, the author of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, once said, «Any road will get you there, if you don't know where you are going.»
Rachael Hernandez, author and real estate investor at Adventures in Mobile Homes says she wishes she would have known the difference between active and passive income.
BOOKS — LOSING CONTROL By Stephen D. King The world is witnessing a massive redistribution of wealth as the West learns it can no longer live beyond its means, says HSBC's group chief economist Stephen D. King, author of...
We were even featured in a recent business book by a well - known author and business speaker,» said Clothier.
Reconnect with contacts from college or previous jobs to let them know you need work: «Everybody finds jobs through networking,» says Lori B. Rassas, an employment attorney and author of «Over the Hill But Not the Cliff.»
You know the sort of person I mean — those people more interested in an opportunity to assert their own moral superiority than in what either the blogger or the cited author has to say.
Those words were written by mere mortals no smarter than you or I. Anything Jesus said in the bible is strictly hearsay as the authors who wrote about Jesus never knew him, saw him or talked to him.
But I believe as the author says that in the end... people know what is right and what is wrong and may also realize, unfortunately, that people do the best they can do with what they have, even though it may be flawed to the max.
This is exactly what the author is saying: you don't understand because you are not an atheist and probably know none.
I don't think the various Gospel authors had Jesus asking question to show he did not know, nor to say «my peace is in the questions» but instead as a mere rhetorical tool to make a point and tell what he thought the answers were.
I was told that is not how it works, one author told me «I know what you think from your writing and now I will say what I think.»
I wonder — how do you know the books we have were authored by who we say they are?
The author knows zilch about vedic dharma have to say this
CNN: Anti-Obama mail piece: «We are no longer a Christian nation» Focus on the Family, the Colorado - based social conservative organization founded by evangelical author and radio host James Dobson, is targeting Iowa voters with a mailing that quotes President Obama as saying «we are no longer a Christian nation.»
An author can't just say that «in Jesus's day, one of the ways people got around actually saying the name of God was to substitute the word «heaven»» without telling me how he knows that to be true!
Am I the one saying that this author, this scientist, doesn't know what she's talking about?
The first, ascribed to Peter, exists in part in a papyrus fragment which describes the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus and breaks off when the author says, «But I, Simon Peter, and Andrew my brother, took our nets and went away to the sea, and with us there was Levi, son of Alphaeus, whom the Lord...» This gospel was known to and criticized by Serapion, bishop of Antioch, about 190.
Of the seven evangelical Protestant authors (e.g., Francis Schaeffer, Cornelius Van Til, Harold Lindsell, A. W. Tozier), it is fair to say that none of them would be named, and most of them would not be known, outside the world of evangelicalism.
Clive, you point out how others often don't understand what Jesus was saying; but while Jesus often labors to try and make things clear to the unbeliever («Oh, you of little faith) or at the very least the author tries to make it clear for us in retrospect (At the time they didn't understand that he spoke of this...), in this case Jesus switches from something that might be figurative to essentially say «no, I seriously mean this» and it concludes not with Jesus saying «don't go away, this is what I actually mean» but confirming that people would refuse to accept that God intended for them to actually fill themselves with the life that He offered so they stopped following him.
The author says, he is well known because he challenges some ingrained ideas about Jesus and is good at reducing his message down to a soundbyte.
The author of Hebrews says, «No!
Des Moines, Iowa (CNN)-- Focus on the Family, the Colorado - based social conservative organization founded by evangelical author and radio host James Dobson, is targeting Iowa voters with a mailing that quotes President Obama as saying «we are no longer a Christian nation.»
No, I think the author is trying to say that imagining there is a God is a byproduct of our advanced brains.
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