Sentences with phrase «what spaces people»

Use that research to provide insights into what spaces people like and why.

Not exact matches

And some of the players to watch out for are the same big guys from 10 or 20 years ago (Microsoft, Oracle, AT&T, etc.) who are the long - entrenched stakeholders and «powers - who - be» in your space — not because they're great innovators or disruptors, but because: (a) they're increasingly well - informed about who's doing what very well (damn those demo days); (b) they're fairly fast followers with great gobs of money; and (c) they have the people, resources, and patience to hang around and keep buying and trying until they eventually get things right in the long run.
We become more than a faceless corporate entity with shelf space in major retail stores; and that can lead to longer relationships and brand loyalty from people who enjoy our products and what we offer.
Moving furniture, posting pictures and personal items in their office space, and making upgrades to their equipment is all perfectly acceptable — people work better in environments they've created, because most people understand what works for them.
Bogusky is one of the biggest players in the advertising industry, and he's got lots of ideas he likes to share with people — especially about environmentalism, and what people are doing to innovate in the space.
«I think what's really going to help them outlast some of their competitors is the fact that they're a socialized network where people meet up, where the need for a physical space doesn't go away,» says Gray.
It'll take time, but you will find your voice, you will figure out what content resonates most with people, you will build an audience, and you will ultimately turn yourself into a thought leader within your space.
When he and co-founder Adam Neumann created the first WeWork co-working space in New York City in 2010, they soon realized what would set them apart was not just providing the logistics to other companies and entrepreneurs to operate individually, but by «connecting then to other cool awesome people» working around them.
We started thinking about how the typical conference room setup — what would happen if we pulled the chairs and tables out of the room and had people hold that same kind of meeting in a non-sedentary space?
«If you put a lot of smart and able people in the same space, give them what they need and remove barriers, magic happens,» says Daniel Weinand, Shopify co-founder, and chief design and culture officer.
And even though highbrow glassware is more expensive, less sturdy, and takes up more space, it's also increasingly what people look for when they order beer at a bar — and not just the outposts of artisanal suds.
But for most people, what makes co-working alluring isn't the child care or the yoga but the cooperative spirit and community vibe fostered by the people who populate those spaces.
In a live tweeting scenario, it's just as valuable to follow your event's hashtag as it is to follow influencers in your space so that you are able to stay in touch with what people are saying about your event.
Kelly: Yeah, I'll tell you what: Flying in space is a privilege, and even more so when you can share that experience with this person that I've known my whole life.
People often look at a company like SpaceX, a private entity that is doing some incredible things in space, and I think sometimes they don't recognize that for some of what SpaceX does, NASA's in partnership with them, supports them.
What do you think about the way this has people behaving in unique ways and on large scales, converging on not just public spaces, but other people's homes?
There were 10 people around the table, all asking questions, when Eric Lefkofsky, Groupon's co-founder and then CEO, interrupted: «Listen, when the market changes and the retailers are pissed off that you disrupted the space, what are you gonna do?»
When checking out an industry, «meet with people who are already involved in the space and see what they think of [your] concept and whether it has legs,» says Rex Falkenrath, the regional director of the Miller Business Innovation Center, a business incubator based in Sandy, Utah.
To be honest I wasn't sure what tech space I wanted to be in, but the people they put me in front of were well qualified, smart and genuine so they were able to help guide me.
Everybody knows this company, and what they do: connect travelers with people who have space to rent.
What began as a two - person space planning operation in Silicon Valley in 1991 is today a San Francisco — based design firm with over forty employees and clients that are some of the most dynamic companies in American business, including Facebook, Uber, Cisco Systems, and Yelp.
At Camp GCUC, Pan will talk about why it's important to have a holistic approach to workplace design, what it takes to create an environment that's inspiring and motivating, and why workplace design isn't just about furniture and aesthetics, but a combination of how people interact and flow with the physical space itself.
Most people who use coworking spaces aren't really trying to be cool, or trying to be with cool people, or trying to meet cool people, or thinking about what is cool or what is not or how to be cool.
Whether it is noise, work ethic, cleanliness, or appropriateness, every generation and person in the space can and times will have a different opinion of what is annoying and should be considered as acceptable.
The lead designer on the project, Markus McKenna, worked with Steelcase to construct what McKenna refers to as a «cocoon - like space»; a three sided set of privacy screens that work together to obstruct peripheral vision and help block out the sound and vision of people traffic around it.
«We wanted to observe what was happening between people in their spaces, to help foster innovation,» she said.
I would ask people what this meant, all this praying «to» or «in front of» statues in homes, temples and public spaces.
If I'm not in those spaces to tell people, «Jesus loves justice and Jesus loves you and He's calling you into His family,» then what it's worth for me to go do missions in another country if I'm not rehearsing God's mission in my city?
Unfortunately, most of what we see in the blogoshpere and internet space is people who are unaccountable to any authority scripture or otherwise.
What matters is that you give people space to question and to search, many things an organized church often doesn't appreciate.
We are able to offer what Henri Nouwen calls «hospitality»: a space in our lives where other people can feel at home, where they are given room to be themselves.2
And that's what it does for a lot of people... it helps us bear the void in the universe - the motion of the planets, their imperturbable wheeling through space, their silent indifference to the place of our pain.
So we decided instead to focus on what we do best: training officials to determine when one person has violated the personal space of someone else.
I don't think people can control who from which religions can rent there and what they can do with the space they rent beyond the normal city controls for any rental space in the neighborhood.
Who are we to judge what God does or allows he has his reasons who can fathom his ways he sees the end from the beginning and is not limited to time or space like we are.Does God want anything the answer is Yes he wants a relationship with us that is why he sent his son because he had a purpose in creating us.However the wages of sin is death in this scripture alone regardless of what happens here we all deserve to die God could have wiped us all out with another flood for who of us is worthy.It is by grace that we live and yes bad things do happen to good people just as it does for the wicked is it to test our faith i do not know but i do know that God gives us the grace to endure through trials and difficulty and that all things do work for Good if we love him..
I sometimes wonder what the space age is going to do to some people's faith in life eternal.
What I do know is that there is certainly space to discuss God's justice and judgements in our theology, but it seems that people don't want to discuss those topics because it's not «nice» and generally, people want a nice God, not a real one.
What Jacobs and her peers did not see is that crowding can make people more private, more defensive, more protective of the little space they have.
What lies within that protected space is a person's own behavior.
The void left by abandoning the Church contributes to what scholars refer to as seeker spirituality wherein people shop for religion and are open to finding spirituality in otherwise secular spaces.
Time and space and silence are required to ponder what the other person has said or done in our presence.
I'm curious, what do you see as a way for people to bring more realness into their online social space?
I'd like to write about what I do in that field in a more informal way in this space (after all, the name «Because I Like Chocolate» always came from a place of wanting to help people have healthier relationships with food).
I feel a bit as if my efforts in this space now are, in a way, giving back to the wonderful community that gave so much to me in my early years as a vegan — wondering what a lentil was and why people bought containers filled with «fish flakes» (a.k.a. nutritional yeast).
If they can be organized either Korean or English alphabetical order or a space where one can search for a dish, I think it will be very convenient.Regardless what I said, I am grateful to you having this site available, especially for the people who live abroad.
I am looking forward to new year of this blog with people who have stayed with me till now and would love a feedback of what different they would like to see in this space, which is like my abode.
we have no cover for CB at all then, Chambers needs to sit on the bench and be healthy for covering RB and CB as much as i want to see what hes like as a DM its too high of a risk to play him there atm, I'd def go for bellerin for RB though hes so fast and has tremendous technical ability, One person i think wenger should of taken to dortmund is diaby just incase hes needed would be nice for diaby to get a good 60 min game but i do nt think hes ready for CL just yet since he hasnt even featured in the PL yet but then again no harm in taking him since hes been linking up with bellerin pretty well in the U21's we must remember we have some really good youngsters in the squad than can fill in some of the spaces.
He's a bit overrated I must say.I also don't get those who are asking him to tackle well.The fact is he's not a good tackler.I fear Wenger has made him untouchable in our team such that even if he plays badly he still starts.I mean if people are saying he's not a DM in the first place then is he also a CM?If he's a CM does he have the quality to play along side a DM?These are the questions we need to ask ourselves.If he's a CM then he's good at distributing from deep and also up top but he can't hold thd ball in tight spaces or dribble which is very important.If he's a DM then he simply can't defend.That's why for us to be successful in the long term with him we need a hybrid midfielder or what I call a defensive box to box midfielder.
I thought people here were debating about two or three seasons back why he should be our top striker.When I thought the Monaco match was the icing on the cake to show how average he was it seems just like Wenger we» will never learn our lesson.Now people our okay with him being a super sub which is debatable.Giroud was a super sub in games last season because he wasn't played when he was supposed to.He's not your ideal super sub because he very hardly creates but rather requires people to create for him.Most of the time super subs are the one's who tend to create the chances and open up spaces in the opposition defence.West ham are ready to pay and hence we should demand more from them.We can then use the money from his sale on far better players.Given the same seasons, time and chances a lot of average strikers can do better than what he did.This is because Arsenal create a lot of chances and it just needs someone who can finish.Goodbye!.
It's obviously what made LeBron James what he is today, but the key differences (and people can correct me if I'm wrong) between bully - ball vs. back - to - the - basket is vision and creating space.
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