Sentences with phrase «spend much time trying»

If you do so, HR would not spend much time trying to understand if you are the candidate they need to consider for this position.
Many authors of children's books don't spend much time trying — but publicizing a children's book can be easier than publicizing an adult novel.
Duncan noted that resources are limited, emphasized the need to make tough choices, urged states and districts to contemplate boosting some class sizes and consolidating schools, and didn't spend much time trying to throw bones to the status quo.
He said resources are limited, embraced the need to make tough choices, urged states and districts to contemplate boosting some class sizes and consolidating schools, and didn't spend much time trying to throw bones to the status quo.
This is what happened to me with the Clone the last time — my focus changed to something else and I did not spend much time trying to lift the Clone.
I spend much time trying to figure out what makes a marriage work.
I usually just say «agnostic»... as I really don't spend much time trying to figure out the «Ultimate Nature» of the «All.»
We find ourselves quite unconvinced by much of the ancient rabbinical reasoning, a little of which is reflected in the letters of Paul.7 Nevertheless the Jews spent much time trying to learn how the Scriptures they had inherited from a former period were to be seen as relevant to their own day.
I have always been a bit put - off by the pains that must be taken to prepare them properly, but, I have not spent much time trying.
Larry is not very good at getting along with people because he has not spent much time trying.
But the fact is, we don't know what schools might be able to do to close the gap, because most elementary schools serving low - income kids haven't spent much time trying to systematically build their knowledge and vocabulary.
No, it's just that I haven't spent much time trying to uncover undervalued shares, and what time I have spent has been anything but successful.
There's no such thing as a user reading a website manual or otherwise spending much time trying to figure out an interface.
I haven't spent much time trying this feature out, but I can see many using it on social media.

Not exact matches

Executives spend too much time dealing with investors and analysts, trying to meet or exceed earnings expectations every quarter, and end up seeking short - term gains at the expense of the company.
Spend as much time as it takes trying to have derogatory marks removed because they also weigh heavily on your overall score.
How much of your time do you spend trying to acquire new clients, and how much do you spend making sure your current clients are happy?
If you're spending too much time trying to close new business, you'll miss the important relationships already in your ecosystem.
«Many times you can spend just as much trying to research something (and still not know for sure) as it would cost you to just start doing it.»
However, if you don't take the time to truly benchmark your performance, fine - tune your campaigns and understand your actual CPA, you could find you're spending far too much money trying to grab leads that will never offset your overall campaign investment.
Like most people who spend too little time asleep and too much time trying to stay focused on work, I tend to drink a fair amount of coffee.
«Now we don't spend as much time trying to track things down for [our accounting firm]» Vicki Evertson, a Southwest finance manager, tells The Build Network.
We're constantly trying to make time for everything and we're discovering that not only is this an impossible dream, but we end up spending too much of our time on the urgent, rather than the important.
As a PhD candidate at Weill Cornell Medical School, Piraye Beim spent much of her time trying to figure out why a particular cancer drug was lifesaving for some patients but useless — or worse — for most.
Disrupters have a tendency to spend a bit too much time trying to win over adversaries.
They are spending too much time trying to prove Russian collusion with the Trump campaign — there is no collusion.
Sure, it has probably spent a lot of time and energy trying to recruit new customers but I can also see tangibly from my own credit card statements how much time Amazon has spent trying to get more money out of me.
He and many of the other characters spend much of their time trying to shape reality into what they wish it really were.
Spending too much time trying to counter the naysayers can be just as damaging as failing to counter their criticisms at all.
I try not to focus too much on historic highs and lows and I certainly don't spend much time thinking, «what will stocks do over the next decade.»
«Business owners realize that if they spent more time working and less time trying to fix their technology issues, their business would be in much better shape.»
Hence they have spent a lot of time trying to figure out how much they can safely withdraw without running out of money.
They are spending too much time trying to prove Russian collusion with the Trump campaign - there is no collusion.
I have seen too many people waste too much of their day trying to come up with that killer «long tail» keyword, instead of spending their time more wisely on other equally important aspects of SEM.
And when asked where the ideas came from, the company's executives always said something like «we see behaviors from our community and we try to build on top of them» or «I don't spend too much time looking at what other people are doing or not doing.»
My country and my church have both already spent too much time, energy and money trying to accommodate these backward points of view when they are no longer even tolerable.
Some of us spend far too much time trying to discern God's will when all He wants from us is to take a step forward.
We spend to much time trying to convince each other that «we serve this and that,» and we lose track of those universal laws, such as love thy neighbor, care for each other, empathize, patience, action based love.
If my beliefs in God as a Christian are so rediculous why is so much time spent by secular individuals spent trying to discredit them to validate their own.
I just find it ammusing that they spend so much time trying to justify why they don't believe in something.
Loving one another (family specifically) unconditionally and teaching love by example is far more of a noble focus than spending much of our time obsessing over and trying to please a god whom there is zero proof of existence.
It's embarrassing that so many Americans, people who say they believe in freedom and equality, have spent so much time and energy trying to justify being anti gay marriage - with false arguments from the Bible (as thought that should be the only source of their decisions).
Why do they all spend so much of their time trying to convince other groups?
Wouldn't it be wonderful if God's people spent as much time trying to live like Him as they did trying to attack each other?
Craig, you need to stop spending so much time trying to explain the scriptures away and start accepting their plain meaning in the context in which they were written.
@RightTurnClyde If people who DID believe in the Oracle of Delphi were trying to get her words and visions written into the law of the land, non-believers would spend as much time debunking the Oracle as we do debunking Christianity.
Try the scientific process time much better spent.
«Before we spend too much more time trying to straighten out the American neighborhood, we might get our own house in order.»
Jeshua, if that were the case then religious authorities wouldn't spend so much time trying to control information, trying to pass off their beliefs as scientific, or attempting to misinform the public on genuine scientific explanations that happen to contradict those beliefs.
If we, as a citizenry, would spend half of our time trying to help solve our country's and world's problems, this would be a much saner society.
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