After practicing as a lawyer for nine years in New York, Kaplan has become a public speaker and career advisor for law students and legal professionals and most
recently authored The Opportunity Maker: Strategies for Inspiring Your Legal Career Through Creative Networking and Business Development (Thomson - West, 2008).
Not exact matches
I
recently had the
opportunity to speak with Gary Vaynerchuk, the serial entrepreneur, CEO, investor,
author, public speaker, and internet personality (among other things).
I
recently had the
opportunity to interview New York Times Best Selling
Author Tim Ferriss about the release of his new book: The 4 - Hour Chef: The Simple Path to Cooking Like a Pro, Learning Anything, and Living the Good Life.
Not only is it time for
authors to take control of our own careers, we have the
opportunity to grow our own global empires (something I
recently blogged about) via strategic partnerships.
But, after seeing the book publicity
opportunities recently garnered by Gary L. Stewart,
author of the new book, The Most Dangerous Animal of All: Searching for My Father... and Finding the Zodiac Killer, this book publicist has to wonder about that.
Though the editor - for - hire market has only
recently started to reflect it, the shift away from in - house editing and the ebb of
opportunities for new
authors (first novelists especially) began some time ago.
I've
recently self - published a book and one thing I think you've overlooked is that books that are published by traditional publishers are given marketing
opportunities that self - published
authors are not.
I had the
opportunity to talk
recently with Inkspokes, a site for indie
authors and their readers — we discussed some of the joys (and pitfalls) of independent publishing.
We
recently had the
opportunity to interview
author and book marketing expert Pavarti Tyler on Google Hangouts.
It also wouldn't hurt if publishers took this
opportunity to poach a few self - published
authors, as in the case of
recently signed Amanda Hocking, provide them with hitherto unseen support, and maybe see the content creators as the revolutionaries they are, instead of encroaching masses about to eat their business.
To elaborate further why this year will be such a great
opportunity for boxed sets, David Gaughran has
recently teamed up with several
authors who write in the similar genre as his, historical fiction, and discussed the process of working from start to finish.
Nathan Meunier started exploring self - publishing
opportunities nearly a decade ago, but his efforts have
recently gained momentum with the introduction of his Indie
Author Success Series.
We have
recently completed a very special project where we were lucky to have the
opportunity to work with published
author, Veronika Martenova Charles.
I
recently had the
opportunity to interview Meir Statman,
author of the new book What Investors Really Want, and a professor of finance at Santa Clara University in California.
Having had the
opportunity in recent years to study a number of excellent exhibitions in which Cubist paintings have figured prominently — including the 1980 Picasso exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art and the Essential Cubism exhibition
recently mounted at the Tate Gallery — may we endorse John Richardson's recent petition in your columns that any Cubist paintings that are still unvarnished should be left in the state in which their
authors intended them to be seen?
Michael Levi is a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and the
author, most
recently, of «The Power Surge: Energy,
Opportunity, and the Battle for America's Future.»
In their
recently released book Remaking Law Firms,
authors George Beaton and Imme Kaschner provide a compelling and empirically researched global snapshot on the challenges and
opportunities facing large law firms in transition.
I attend chapter meetings frequently and
recently had the
opportunity to meet with Verne Hernish, one of the top 10 business consultants in the USA and
author of «Rockefeller Habits» and «Scaling Up.»
I
recently had the
opportunity to hear Dave Pelzer,
author of «A Child Called «It»» (www.davepelzer.com), speak and he challenged the audience throughout his keynote.