But getting a whole bunch of fast sales or downloads isn't a great idea if they're
random people buying random books or junk.
Not exact matches
I have listened to
random people I meet ask me what my product is called so they can
buy it.
Opening the door for someone who has their hands full,
buying coffee for the
person behind you and even complimenting someone at work for things they probably hardly get recognized for are great
random acts of kindness.
I actually ended up
buying one of the dresses but needed to get it altered and had to go to the front mirror where everyone could see you... well, let's just say
random people were coming up to me and asking about these pumps!!
No amount of positive reviews from friends and family is going to help if we convince
random people to
buy our story — and they hate it.
Once
people know you, they'll be more likely to
buy your book than if you throw your title at
random strangers.
Although having messy,
random also
boughts might not hurt, they could, and I'm hoping they go away pretty quickly once I get some more sales by real
people who actually enjoy my genre.
People in the target audience who personally interact with an author are more likely to check out a book,
buy it, and leave a review than some
random stranger who happens across it.
I've gone through Amazon and Best
Buy comments and found a lot of
people complaining about the exact same issues I had with the tablet:
random reboots and bad screen.
People who are subscribed to your author newsletter are around 25X more likely to
buy your book than some
random blogger you encountered or a Twitter follower you got.
It's not logical — it's based on what
random people will
buy and sell for, and when shocks happen,
people run in fear.
So, SAVE, SAVE, SAVE then beg, borrow and steal to get the down payment, rent rooms to friends or
random people to afford the payments,
buy a fixer upper in an up and coming neighborhood.
If I'm thinking of
buying a piece of property, I'll ask the
people who live nearby about the area — what they think of the schools and the crime and the shops... I ask and I ask and I ask, until I begin to get a gut feeling about something... I have learned much more from conducting my own
random surveys than I could ever have learned from the greatest of consulting firms.
I understand the complaints about the price as saying they need to change bout time this comes out but for the most part the complaints are like PS now is a rip off from
people like AutoCad now if they keep the price yea it can be a rip off but to not even wait to see if they keep this price structure and just flat out call it a rip off or a failure is premature and unwarranted it's
people like that who ruin it and cause some
people to never even try it out because they think these prices are real when it is a test and
people voting with their wallets
buy not renting these games in the beta will get the point across not crying about it on
random websites cause I can bet that Sony will take notice from the
people who are not renting anything before they listen to the cry babies and if you are going to complain go to the Sony blog and let them know there that is the only place they are going to check
peoples reactions so crying on N4G is just a waste of time.
You mean like the tears you PC losers were crying when Arkham Knight didn't work on PC, or when Steam revealed your personal information to
random people, or waiting for GTAV to release like peasants, or playing against hackers, or pirating games because you're too poor to
buy them.
The problem being that any
random person, science acumen being irrelevant, who ventures into this world is automatically going to be put off by the reception if they simply don't
buy the party line.
In each of the following simulations we have four
people (A / B / C / D) who each
buy a coffee each day from a
random barista (E / F / G / H) via Lightning.
Stopping
people at
random, we asked them their thoughts on both, the Galaxy S7 Edge and the LG G5, and whether they would
buy them.
When a
random person on the street in the United States is asked about bitcoin, he or she will usually respond that it is some sort of internet currency used to
buy drugs online — if they've heard of it at all.
It was an ambitious idea with lots of moving parts, and
people who
bought a cheap Android One phone undoubtedly got a better experience than they would with any other
random phone of the same price.
Apple is also offering to replace some iPhone 6S batteries for free for
people who
bought an iPhone 6S manufactured between September and October 2015 and are experiencing
random shutdowns.
Does anyone know for sure if calling
random people to
buy their property is covered by the Do Not Call List law?