Sentences with phrase «people do at some point»

Renting an apartment is something many people do at some point in their lives.
Renting an apartment is something many people do at some point in their lives.

Not exact matches

That's why we did a partnership with the Scene card, so people can redeem points at our restaurants.
Blodget: And how do you look at brand versus direct response because a lot of people will say that digital is fantastic from a direct response point of view - tough to build brand.
«What we found is that people who spent money to buy time reported being almost one full point higher on our 10 - point [happiness] ladder, compared to people who did not use money to buy time,» wrote Elizabeth Dunn, an author of the study and a professor of psychology at the University of British Columbia.
Your goal at this point is to motivate them to make a purchase, so your messaging doesn't have to be as gentle and indirect as it was in the content you create for people at the top of the funnel.
Patricia G. Greene, a professor of entrepreneurship at Babson College, points out that «retirement» may not mean the same thing to small business owners as it does to people who have spent their lives working for other people.
«That doesn't mean you shouldn't work on yourself and develop yourself and learn to make people more comfortable, but at a certain point it's like, what are you trying to accomplish?»
As is often the case, the Government is busy pointing their finger at energy providers and energy providers are busy pointing their finger at the Government - but no one seems to be doing anything about it, and the people (and businesses) of South Australia are caught in the middle.
Why don't rcr employ local people from point Samson as its at the gates of cape lambert.
Perhaps the point of contact you despise leaves and is replaced by someone who's more pleasant to work with, or, better yet, the person you do enjoy working with gets a better gig at a competitor and sways his or her new company to hire your firm.
«The price points are lower, the food quality happens to be better at a lot of these places, and people don't want to sit, wait, and get served and sometimes get bad service.»
«I speak to people in the business world and the technology world, but I don't admire them,» he says, pointing an 8 - inch combat knife at me for emphasis.
At this point, we've all doubtless gotten sick of the term «experiential» to explain why people do things, but we shouldn't just roll our eyes at such an important trend,» the «Mad Money» host saiAt this point, we've all doubtless gotten sick of the term «experiential» to explain why people do things, but we shouldn't just roll our eyes at such an important trend,» the «Mad Money» host saiat such an important trend,» the «Mad Money» host said.
At some point, when you have developed a relationship, you do have to let people know that you'd like to do business with them.
Even people that are great at telling stories to family and friends somehow in their content marketing don't manage to capture the imagination and attention to get their point across with resonance and impact.
«At some point, people do want to talk or text outside of those [services»] message boxes,» Cohn says.
«We don't at this point know how many people ask their phones about suicide or rape,» Miner said.
At this point, it looks like the «new and improved» Kinect will be bundled with the Xbox One, meaning that the console's price will inevitably be pushed upward by something that certain wrestlers and I — not to mention a whole bunch of people — don't want or need.
«Utilizing the shopping centre as a warming centre probably was something that people did do, but at that point I don't necessarily think we were too concerned about that.»
«Dyslexia doesn't necessarily make people more open,» Gladwell admits at one point, before soldiering on: «But the most tantalizing possibility raised by the disorder is that it might make it a little bit easier to be disagreeable.»
At that point, Rosen did the unthinkable: he fired the rest of the sales force and nearly every person on staff.
But, as Bain pointed out, City Year must establish itself as the best at what it does (community service helping young people of diverse backgrounds).
I do realize that the exact definition of «sustainability» is up for grabs at this point, and many people interpret it quite broadly.
Well, if we were gonna normalize interest rates, that relationship had to get restored to normal somewhere, at some point, when people were confident that we didn't need the very low interest rates and so forth.
You may wish to do some clean up then as sites such as Bloomberg Business news are pointing directly at your current website and business activities in stories about the bankruptcy filing: http://www.bloomberg.com/research/stocks/private/snapshot.asp?privcapid=146030718 This is what leads people to believe that the current company filed.
At some point, provided that dividend is safe and investors are convinced it is going to be maintained, the dividend yield on the stock itself is going to be so attractive that it brings in buyers from the sidelines, people who otherwise can not stand to see the yield right there in front of them without doing something about it.
How can you create spot - on content for people in distinct stages of the buyer's journey if you don't have a deep understanding of their motivations at different points in time?
To paraphrase Charles Baudelaire's quip that the devil wins at the point where the public comes to believe that he doesn't exist, the financial sector's lobbying effort wins at the point where people believe that running into debt contributes to economic growth rather than burdens it, and that they will end up richer by acting as bank customers.
I was thinking this the other day, when a lot of the Facebook executives get on Twitter and feel victim - y, they're doing their victim - y dance right now a lot of the time, and at one point, Boz, Bosworth, when he said, «Maybe people will die,» that memo, and instead of being like, «Oh god, we really have to be more mature about this,» their thing was, «We can't talk now.»
And Charlie do you agree with that or do you think people run the risk of not knowing what they're doing and sending things to the wrong addresses because now they're dealing with multiple coins at this point.
Preston: And Charlie do you agree with that or do you think people run the risk of not knowing what they're doing and sending things to the wrong addresses because now they're dealing with multiple coins at this point.
Something like the 4 % rule, then you can again look at this, people call it the unconditional mean, the unconditional safe withdrawal rate, because I don't know what will be the conditions at that point.
«If money is free, very clever people at some point are going to do stupid things with it.
In terms, I think of inflation and bond markets, it took six, seven, eight, maybe 10 years of high inflation in the 1970s before you had Paul Volcker brought in to say «enough is enough,» and then again whether it's led by American monetary policy but similar moves in Europe, obviously in the UK, a significant tightening of monetary policy because people got fed up with inflation and I don't think that we are kind of yet at the point where real wages have been suppressed so much by that irritation that inflation is always running ahead, life is becoming more expensive, so we need the central bank radically to change their policy.
Although people understood the rules of open book management, at first they didn't see the point of adding yet another meeting to their busy schedules.
I know why don't we just all stand in a big circle and point guns at each other and decide as a group who's the biggest sinner until just one person is left.
Some people still argue that it is wildly improbable for a given self - replicating molecule to form at a given point (although they usually don't state the «givens,» but leave them implicit in their calculations).
At that point, it was about masturbation only (no one had made a comparison to homosexuality), so, without much personal stake in the debate, I thought to myself «See, this is why people don't like the answers, not (always) because it doesn't let them do what they want, but because the answers are sometimes very poor indeed.»
Also a personal pet peeve of mine is when people suggest that suicide is a sin which implies that person goes to Hell... I believe someone who is at the point that they take their life is already in Hell... I can not believe in a God who would do that.
He looked at each situation and used the principles of the Gospel as the central guide point — even if it didn't sit well with people.
An Atheist who points at a dead body and says, look as far as we know this person has ceased to function, as souls don't exist.
If he would fulfill my need, and prove he exists, I would pay more attention to what other people claim he wants and does not want, but at this point, he seems as invisible and irrelevant as Santa Claus.
Point your finger at others and criticize all you like, but don't then complain when people turn around and do the same to you.
«At the time our first record sold 50,000 records, when we didn't even know if we were going to sell one, it was an amazing point to realize there were people out there who knew who we [were],» Carter says.
Case in point, it is not logical to suggest there is «good» vs «bad» if there is no ultimate moral authority, no higher power that created everything, including free will and the ability to choose whether to heed that drive to do what is «good» vs doing what you want to do at the expense of «good» and of other people.
Obama always has that finger pointed at someone, if a white person did that to a black person, it would be racist
1) i don't know what Bible you're reading, but at NO point does it say God «intentionally created» people as imperfect.
Possibly, but why did the person who taught him know it was wrong... ad infinitum... eventually you have to come to the fact that there must have been a moral law giver (ie God) at some point.
My relationship with God is as natural as it is with any other person; going back into a situation where your walk is a «regiment» of reading, prayer, attending, singing, etc. is seriously a challenge, and I'm not sure what to do at this point... especially when confronted with «so how did you like this or that?»
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