Not exact matches
In a
blog post dated March 29, 2011, Diane Ravitch makes the same point: «The gains under Rhee were no greater than the gains registered under her predecessor Clifford Janey, who did not use Rhee's high - powered tactics, such as firing
massive numbers of teachers.»
Examples include: testimonials already secured by celebrities, famous authors, or other influential people; firm commitments (sometimes in writing) from influential people to help promote your book to their audience when the time is right; you having a
massive mailing list or social media following; you having a website and / or
blog with
massive traffic and / or comments (with the
numbers to prove it); your own radio show, TV show, or syndicated column; past and upcoming media appearances; past and upcoming speaking engagements in front
of lots
of people; pre-sale commitments from corporations or organizations; having your own publicist or being able / willing to hire one.
... As you know, there are a
massive number of amazing baby boomer travel
blogs and sites out there.
As pointed out here by Scott Greenfield on his Simple Justice
blog, Gradeless appears to have found a way to monetize his
massive following on Twitter through a service called Sponsored Tweets, which hooks «Tweeters» like Gradeless up with advertisers who want to reach their supposedly vast audiences (although as discussed here, a person's
numbers of Twitter followers can be a pretty meaningless figure).
Written By ESR News
Blog Editor Thomas Ahearn On September 7, 2017, nationwide credit reporting agency Equifax announced that a
massive data breach incident had impacted approximately 143 million Americans — almost half
of the country — a
number that grew to include 145.5 million people in the U.S..