Not exact matches
So, there's a tremendous amount
of standard business
wisdom about how you need to have an elevator pitch, a small
nugget that will encapsulate what it is you do with the amount
of time it takes to pitch your business to a theoretical once - in - a-lifetime investor in a chance elevator encounter.
I've been thinking
about what the most important
nuggets of wisdom I've gained are - what I most want to share with you as you head out the gate...
And please note, here at The Institute for the Psychology
of Eating we do NOT endorse or promote any particular diet or nutritional lifestyle, but we do believe there's a
nugget of wisdom to be found in just
about any diet that's been designed with care in mind for people and planet.
There's a really interesting article on TD [1] by Chuck Hodell
about SMEs, which contains this pithy
nugget of wisdom:
Diagnosis, in brief: (1) they write
about stuff they clearly don't understand (2) they pick a catchy reverse - common -
wisdom nugget as a headliner without the having the slightest interest in whether it is true or not (3) they pick an expert to talk to, but since they don't have a clue
about the subject they don't know how to pick a good expert, or even understand what the expert says (4) there is a grain
of sense in there, but so badly wrapped in trash it is nearly unfindable.
You see, the more that the deniers squeal
about something, the more likely there is a
nugget of wisdom in there that they are trying to hide or exploit.
I'm a big Mr. Money Mustache fan, and he's given me a couple
nuggets of wisdom when it comes to thinking
about purchasing vehicles:
The irony
of job search advice: There's so much available that you don't have to spend more than four seconds Googling
about before you land on some
nugget of wisdom or another.
The «Dude» writes
about his mistakes in finances and marriage in hopes that you, the reader, can learn just a few
nuggets of wisdom and maybe prevent the same mistakes.
I often find myself thinking
about little
nuggets of wisdom you shared — or remembering the analogies you used to help me think
about problems.
In this episode, Kitabayashi shares
nuggets of wisdom from his classroom discussions
about international transactions.