Perhaps you could
write next posts mentioning to this article.
And I'll
write the next posting AFTER the awards are presented so I can discuss the next steps of the Best Book of the Year awards a little more specifically.
I'm not sure if you just validated my position (that the course is overly optimistic about the potential for easily making a living from writing — not my own intention at this time) or gave me reason to
write my next post on «You get out what you put in!»
Or bring your laptop, choose a little table and
write the next post in your blog with a nice coffee.
Not exact matches
The Ellevate chair and former Citigroup CFO
wrote in a LinkedIn
post that she's never more productive than she is at 4 a.m. «I brew a cup of coffee, I keep the lights pretty low, I sometimes light a fire in the fireplace, and I let my daughter's cat sleep
next to my computer,» she
wrote.
New York City bar owner Michael Sinensky
wrote on the Huffington
Post last week that «the cancellation of
next year's NFL season would be the final knockout punch for many small businesses like mine.»
In his blog
post, Sacca said he and his wife Crystal found a note he
wrote at 20 that laid out his career goals for the
next two decades.
However, to briefly cover what should come
next, create a rough outline or a mind map for the book and start
writing blog
posts to fill in the details.
You have to convince people to pay for the product you believe in,» Taylor Dawson, product evangelist at FirstBuild, General Electric's incubator for the
next generation of home appliances,
wrote in a recent blog
post about his experience in running a campaign on Indiegogo.
In 2010, tech blogger Chris Dixon
wrote a widely circulated
post, titled «The
next big thing will start out looking like a toy.»
He's
written for Forbes, Mashable, the Huffington
Post, the
Next Web and others.
In this episode we talk in detail about how he has landed
writing opportunities at Inc, Forbes, Entrepreneur, Huffington
Post, The
Next Web and much more.
Each headline, paragraph, and line you
write needs to be irresistible so that not only are readers entertained for the moment, but they hungrily wait for the
next post they can share with the people they know.
For more on this, see my blog
post The Definitive Guide on How to Write a Compelling Intro for Your Next Blog P
post The Definitive Guide on How to
Write a Compelling Intro for Your
Next Blog
PostPost.
[Steve Eisman] A
write - up on the impending Hilton (HLT) spinoff [Clark Street Value] CBRE (CBG): industry deep dive to detect an emerging moat [Punch Card] A look at Discovery Communications (DISCA / K)[Contrarian Edge] Sustainable sources of competitive advantage [Collaborative Fund] Why deep learning matters and what's
next for AI [Algorithmia] The unexpected genius of Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg [Fortune] Google's online travel adventure upsets its biggest advertisers [Bloomberg] A billionaire's dreams of creating a guns empire [NYMag] If oil refiners crash, so will the economy [WSJ] Mastercard, Visa set to reap spoils of India's war on cash [Bloomberg] How Best Buy (BBY) fought Amazon [WSJ] The evolution of media & entertainment: conversation with CEOs [YouTube] How to get comfortable with being umcomfortable [Inc] Why gut feelings may really help you make risky decisions [Washington
Post] Why stoicism is one of the best mind - hacks ever devised [Aeon]
The end of dreams, and of reason George Jonas,
writing in the
Post, muses over how the world will go to hell
next.
Jesse Livermore of the always interesting Philosophical Economics outlines the case for
writing puts in his recent
post The World's Best Investment For the
Next 12 Months.
So I'm excited to see what Alan
writes in the
next few
posts.
I have several more
posts written over the
next several days which show this even more clearly from Cain and Abel, Abraham's sacrifice of Isaac, and the Mosaic sacrificial system.
This is my first book, so I'm not sure what to expect
next — what the editing process will be like, when the book will be released, how long it will take to lose the ten pounds I gained while
writing it, etc. — but I will keep you
posted.
That's fine, but before you make such accusations about what I believe and what I
write about, you might want to check a few more
posts next time.
I'll choose my favorite questions, do my best to pose them at the conference, and
next week
write a
post about the responses.
Anyway, regarding pastors and priests, I have
written several
posts on the topic of pastors, and will be putting out a book about this in the
next year or two... To get it for free, make sure you have subscribed to the email newsletter.
For the
next few weeks, I'll be getting by with a little help from my friends — specifically, some of my favorite bloggers, who have contributed challenging, thoughtful, and beautifully -
written posts.
I will be
writing my
post for the All About Eve blog on Thursdays for the
next 40 weeks.
I will probably
write a
post in the
next week or two that says I am giving up on my project.
Over the
next couple weeks, I will
write some
posts based on my Luke Commentary, and then get a chapter or two done on Close Your Church for Good.
I want to propose a possible solution, but as I
wrote it, it became too long to publish in one blog
post, so I will spread it out over the
next couple days.
Over the
next several
posts, I want to explain the history of the doctrine of the Inspiration of Scripture, the passages that are used to defend it, and provide a slightly modified and nuanced approach to the process by which I think God might have superintended the
writing of Scripture.
All I can see is the
next word, the
next post, the
next prayer, the
next Sunday, the
next bit of wafer and wine, the
next story, the
next need, the
next comment, the
next baby bird to jump out of that nest in our carport, the
next nudge of the Spirit, the
next puzzle, the
next question, the
next random thing that nettles my brain and screams
WRITE!
She
wrote a previous guest
post for Redeeming God, which can be found here: Have Your
Next Corona on Me.
I am working hard on the
next several
posts, and many of the comments so far are helping me refine what I will
write.
Over the
next several weeks and months, as I continue to study Scripture and
write commentary, I will make
posts about the strength of this software package.
I was going to
write a
post about all the changes you can expect to see and what plans I have for the future, but then I realized that I simply don't know what is going to happen to me or this blog
next week, let alone
next year.
Yes Gary; Jesus is in you as your savour as He is the savour of the world: In Adam all die even so in Christ is All made alive: But I have seen in the past couple days your words and they are not my Lords at all: Christ is not divided or Bi-Polar: He does not cuss like a sailor one day and then minister to the masses the
next: No; Christ is consistent, He is Grounded in His word; those that waver are not stable in anything, even as is
written: I truly know now the you truly do have a mocking spirit in you, because again Christ is not Bi-polar: Go re-read you other
post and see if they are the words of my Lord, then ask if anyone will be willing to follow you even as you are of Christ: The false Christ comes up along side of the truth Christ to pervert everything that is of God: That is how all these sects are again formed, many started of in the truth, but went out from the Word of our Lord even through Paul now to become their own god: You are now an example of what I speak: Thank - you Gary; In Jesus Name Alexandria:
Fortunately, I'm back on my
writing schedule, so
posts should be more consistent for the
next several months.
After three years of blogging and lots of trial and error, I've learned some important lessons about how to
write a controversial
post without regretting it the
next day.
If someone else has already requested to
write the
next link, then please wait for that blog
post and leave a comment there requesting to
write the following link.
1) If you would like to
write the
next blog
post (link) in this chain, leave a comment here stating that you would like to do so.
Ian, I will be
writing about historical and scientific errors in the
next few
posts.
I will be
writing a blog
post all about cacao
next week so keep a look out!
Your
post is so good, I wait for your
next post Really nice article that you have to
write, i really appreciate, well -
written
Whether this is editing photos,
writing a blog
post, developing a recipe or
writing my
next month of content ideas, I have the piece of mind that I'm keeping on top of my workload whilst also giving myself a break!
It seems like just yesterday I started Simply Without,
wrote a
post, pressed publish and waited to see what happened
next.
It might be a little quiet around here
next week, but I'm hoping to
write a
post or two from the Wi - Fi porch at the island's public library.
p.s My blog will be a bit quiet over the
next few weeks as I
write it myself and will be on the road but please keep
posting your shelfies and selfies and tagging me on my Instagram account whilst I am away as I love seeing all of your wonderful creations.
I'll be
writing up a
post with pictures and stories of my California adventure, so look for that
next week.
I'm currently
writing this
post with a blanket of snow outside my window, Christmas music blasting, snuggled up
next to my space heater, which will probably be the case until about March, cause I'm forever freezing.
My daughter's birthday is actually today, too (I publish my
posts late at night so that it's ready for people to read first thing in the morning, so I often
write them as if it's already the
next day)... what a good day to be born!
Another tricky thing I do is recipe testing in batches aka do a bunch in one week and spend the
next month editing photos,
writing the
posts and retesting if I'm not 100 % sure about something.