Sentences with phrase «more readers does»

While progress has certainly been made — namely in the fact that more and more readers don't care how the book came about so long as it's a great read — there are still a few holdouts where indie authors don't garner the same respect or privileges that publishers and their authors can find.
While progress has certainly been made — namely in the fact that more and more readers don't care how the book came about so long as it's a great read — there are still a few holdouts where indie authors don't garner... [Read more...]

Not exact matches

Not only does the billionaire Microsoft founder publicly suggest this particular title to his readers, he also loved it so much he gave it to more than 50 friends.
A clear summary of your points is possibly the best thing you can do to not just deliver value to the reader, but also make the book memorable, which helps you sell more books.
Doing so is obviously a great professional and personal risk to them, but it makes their accusations easier for us journalists to cover and far more credible to readers.
Grandinetti was cordial in his comments, but he does put much onus on publishers to change and evolve into something that's more useful for both authors and readers:
It's also possible, I suppose, that TorStar didn't like the idea of asking some readers to pay $ 36 a month for one product and others $ 10 a month for a much more substantial one.
It promises to help readers «want nothing, do anything, and have everything,» with advice on time management, career advancement, relationship - building and more.
Not only does it creates an urge within the reader to read more about what is written, but it can also boost your brand and presence.
One opinion out there says that content of a certain age doesn't matter, that Google (and Panda) knows that older content is often ignored by readers and is more or less irrelevant.
I hope my work will, like Hawking's did for me, spur readers to look up at the night sky (preferably in the middle of nowhere) and see more than «just» moons, planets, stars, and galaxies.
Keep your writing focused on what it will do to help the reader solve a problem, get ahead or live a happier and more fulfilled life.
«We could have come out with just a basic card reader a long time ago but we wanted to do something a lot more compelling,» said Darrell MacMullin, managing director of PayPal Canada.
We respect our readers and don't try to trick them into clicking on links to get more page views.
Our work is more urgent than ever and is reaching more readers — but online advertising revenues don't fully cover our costs, and we don't have print subscribers to help keep us afloat.
«It's deliberately and boldly taking new steps of doing that which we know is important to readers and doing it in a better way with more investment,» Sheehan said.
Did you know that one of the fashion world's most revered websites (with more than 20,000 daily readers) was founded by a Calgarian?
I do owe my readers more updates and I'll try to get back on a regular weekly schedule of posting my latest purchases.
Don't just take our word for it... For inspiration, see our Expat Profile section to learn more about readers who have successfully made their own move overseas.
To most readers, this did not mean the dissolution of the CEIFB, especially when earlier on the same page, the Minister of Finance stated that «the CEIFB will continue to set the rate but the Government will limit rate increases to no more than 5 cents per year until the EI Operating Account is balanced».
I don't know how to create these fancy calculations on excel or google sheets, and what you're using can help us reader to be more accountable to our investments.
If everyone who visits rabble and likes it chipped in a couple of dollars per month, our future would be much more secure and we could do much more: like the things our readers tell us they want to see more of: more staff reporters and more work to complete the upgrade of our website.
Through stories of people who've made dramatic gains in self - awareness, she offers surprising secrets, techniques and strategies to help readers do the same — and how to use this insight to be more fulfilled, confident, and successful in life and in work.
But where Denton does see a big opportunity in connecting readers to brands by way of native advertising and e-commerce on its more product - friendly verticals like Jezebel, Lifehacker and Kotaku.
Make it apparent that readers should call a toll - free number, request a demo, download a guide, or request more information, and then make sure you've made it easy for them to do it.
No doubt many of you sharp - eyed readers will have spotted a spelling error, thinking I intended to refer to one of these: But, in fact, I really did have in mind something more like this: We are following an example from the recently published Mathematica Beyond Mathematics by Jose Sanchez Leon, an up - to - date text that...
Email readers will need to come to the site to watch the video: And if you fascination with quantitative managers doesn't end there, we highly recommend checking out Scott Patterson's The Quants which focuses on the likes of Jim Simons (RenTec), Ken Griffin (Citadel), Cliff Asness (AQR) and more.
I'll continue experimenting to try to make this blog more valuable to readers and I've got a project or two in the works as well as some post series I'm planning to do just that.
Although readers of Hacked don't need a lot of convincing to buy more cryptocurrency, higher inflation could certainly make this asset class more attractive.
How about peter Cashmore of mashable, Markus fried of plenty of fish they are not hard core affiliate marketers they are just give their readers, helping them to learn something new, engage and meet new people like Markus is doing and the end result is they are the top adsense earners in the world making more than any other so - called pro bloggers in the world.
If you bother to read some of the more popular atheist blogs, you will quickly see that they and many of their readers have some of their own unwritten rules, the majority of which have NOTHING to do with atheism / secularism and everything to do with promoting extremist left - wing agendas.
Leo is the more effective because he exemplifies those values, writing in a conversational tone that invites his readers to entertain the possibility that truth does not come in packaged party lines.
I hope that in his next book, Turner does a little more of this, for it transforms his funny, sometimes bizarre anecdotes into more relatable, human stories and makes the reader feel more like a participant and less like an observer.
I don't see the value of the buttons as anything more than a general barometer of the general perspective of other readers... and without the ability to reflect both positive and negative there is no real value at all.
Frankly, the readers should be doing more to support you.
To read homosexuality into Sodom or Gibeah reveals more about the reader than it does about the scripture.
But if the purpose of my images is not to impede reading of the text, but is instead to aid the reader to do his own thinking more confidently in images (I think he does it anyhow), then might not the pictorial gain be offset by apparently not appealing to the reader's imagination?
I do not believe there is any theme more central to Lewis's vision of human life in relation to God, and I think there are very few indeed who have managed as well as he to invoke simultaneously in readers both an appreciation for and delight in our created life, and a sense of the pain and anguish that come when that life is fully redirected to the One from whom it comes.
I do not know what the reader may feel; but I can say that for me this was enough, more than enough, to provide comfort and consolation.
In reading great literature, as in worship, the participant - reader becomes a thousand men and yet remains himself while transcending himself, and never more himself than when he does.
The reader does not expect to discover, in the midst of this paean to friendship and domesticity, a glimpse of something far greater than friendship or domesticity» something good beyond Badger's goodness and yet infinitely more frightening» something numinous.
It does little good to talk about those horizons until a reader has done more justice to what the psalmists thought were their own.
The author does assume a prior knowledge of Therese, and some instances of her life are mentioned with little explanation, but this is not off - putting; rather it makes the reader want to learn more.
Other readers present more of their own personalities in a reading than they do of the text.
There is much more that Girard argues, but I do not recommend it for the average reader.
I've been warned by more people than I can count that if I don't say just the right thing, if I don't toe the party line when it comes to sexuality, I could lose speaking engagements, book deals, readers, even fellowship with other believers.
Admittedly, we do not know the intellectual and spiritual profile of TNR readers, but in a nation where 95 percent of the people say they believe in God and almost as many identify themselves religiously, it seems improbable that only 8 percent of the more than eighty respondents were «religious believers.»
So my criticism is really itself an hypothesis: do the readers feel as I do that ambiguity, suffering and perishing have a more substantial place in human experience than is rendered by Hartshorne's philosophy?
Certainly I do not claim that I shall do more than raise questions, suggest a few possible answers, and urge readers to pursue the matter for themselves.
Because it focuses on a single case, Bloodsworth is more effective than The Death Penalty on Trial, which does not allow for the same depth of reader engagement.
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