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    The Real Cost of Turnover
    Imagine for a moment that one of your best programmers comes to you and says, "Sorry boss, but I'm leaving for a startup with more opportunity." There are lots and lots of questions to ask, but let's focus on one: "What will it cost to replace her?" Here's a quick breakdown of the direct costs, assuming that her salary is $120K and it takes you three months to find and hire a replacement:3 months unfinished work$40000 Recruiter fees$24000 30 hours of your time$1800 60 hours of interview time$3600 3 months of startup @ 5
    -writing)

    - What does my audience need to know? (Details regarding the steps of the pre-writing process)

    - What questions are there about the topic and the needed information?

    Doing the Research Once you have clarified what your topic is, you’ll now have the beginnings of your information gathering. Continue asking yourself questions, looking at your topic from as many ways as possible. Looking at this list of questions, identify potential sources of information that you can turn to for answers. These may be individual experts, reference books, w

    How To Write Effective Internet Ads That Pull Responses
    It can be an exciting feeling to have your first ad placed on a directory listing, website, or email. You may have labored hours upon hours of time, money, and sweat to iron out the detail and create the ultimate internet ad. Everything is now set up and ready to the go. All you have to do is step back and wait for the responses to come trickling in.But they don’t. And this may cause confusion on your part.“Didn’t I make the best business design? Employed the best copywriter? Polished every word of each polished sentence?” Make the best offer the user could po
    A writer writes, by definition. We often imagine that professional writers sit down and simply write, with beautiful strings of elegantly crafted words simply streaming onto the page or screen with an inhuman grace. Such a mental image couldn’t be further from the truth. The reality of it is that writing is real work, a labor of care and love and obsession, with anything remotely graceful coming only after hour (if not days) of painstaking, plodding work. Even for most professionals, the art of writing is one filled with multiple drafts, numerous revisions and countless edits. Despite all of this, a few simple steps can reduce the time lost to labor and increase the speed with which completed articles go out the door.

    The keys to efficient writing aren’t necessarily used when you’re actually writing the article or polishing it for publication; instead, efficient writing begins before the writing even starts. The two keys to more efficient writing are planning and preparation. While such words may cause the artistic free spirit to balk, these two elements will often mean the difference between an extra week of writing the same article, or a fat paycheck for an article that’s in under the deadline. The steps are simple, and just need to be followed.

    Selecting a Topic Before you can write effective non-fiction, you must select a topic. Without a topic, you don’t even have a direction in which to go. Very often, when a non-fiction writer speaks of writer’s block, that writer is really speaking about a lack of topic. Once a topic is chosen, fleshing it out is more a matter of cold logic than anything else.

    Clarifying the Topic Once you have a topic, you have a broad, general direction to go in. While this may be enough to get you going, it’s rarely enough to base an article on. Often, our topics may be either too broad, encompassing too much information, losing any potential impact, or it may be too narrow, not leaving enough room for development. Ask yourself the following questions, with example answers given describing the article you're reading now:

    - What is the general topic? (writing)

    - What differentiates it from the rest of that topic (the pre-writing process)

    - Who is my audience? (writers, mostly experienced amateurs, non-professionals)

    - What is the purpose? (instruct writers on pre-writing)

    - What does my audience need to know? (Details regarding the steps of the pre-writing process)

    - What questions are there about the topic and the needed information?

    Doing the Research Once you have clarified what your topic is, you’ll now have the beginnings of your information gathering. Continue asking yourself questions, looking at your topic from as many ways as possible. Looking at this list of questions, identify potential sources of information that you can turn to for answers. These may be individual experts, reference books, we

    3rd Party Buying Tips - What You Need To Know
    Save Your Money and Be Smart!As your investment profile grows larger and larger you’ll notice that assigning a family member, wife or good friend to a home could be a definite advantage on your overall net worth. Especially in a rising real estate market where you can re-sell the property at a higher price before the completion date. Since half the property value is added onto your net worth, depending on the tax bracket your in, it might prove necessary to do a 3rd party buying. In this situation it’s important that in your contract you do not use “and or
    le steps can reduce the time lost to labor and increase the speed with which completed articles go out the door.

    The keys to efficient writing aren’t necessarily used when you’re actually writing the article or polishing it for publication; instead, efficient writing begins before the writing even starts. The two keys to more efficient writing are planning and preparation. While such words may cause the artistic free spirit to balk, these two elements will often mean the difference between an extra week of writing the same article, or a fat paycheck for an article that’s in under the deadline. The steps are simple, and just need to be followed.

    Selecting a Topic Before you can write effective non-fiction, you must select a topic. Without a topic, you don’t even have a direction in which to go. Very often, when a non-fiction writer speaks of writer’s block, that writer is really speaking about a lack of topic. Once a topic is chosen, fleshing it out is more a matter of cold logic than anything else.

    Clarifying the Topic Once you have a topic, you have a broad, general direction to go in. While this may be enough to get you going, it’s rarely enough to base an article on. Often, our topics may be either too broad, encompassing too much information, losing any potential impact, or it may be too narrow, not leaving enough room for development. Ask yourself the following questions, with example answers given describing the article you're reading now:

    - What is the general topic? (writing)

    - What differentiates it from the rest of that topic (the pre-writing process)

    - Who is my audience? (writers, mostly experienced amateurs, non-professionals)

    - What is the purpose? (instruct writers on pre-writing)

    - What does my audience need to know? (Details regarding the steps of the pre-writing process)

    - What questions are there about the topic and the needed information?

    Doing the Research Once you have clarified what your topic is, you’ll now have the beginnings of your information gathering. Continue asking yourself questions, looking at your topic from as many ways as possible. Looking at this list of questions, identify potential sources of information that you can turn to for answers. These may be individual experts, reference books, w

    188 Stage Hero's Journey (Monomyth): Romantic Challenge and Secondary Characters
    The Hero's Journey (Monomyth) is the template upon which the vast majority of successful stories and Hollywood blockbusters are based upon. In fact, ALL of the hundreds of Hollywood movies we have deconstructed (see URL below) are based on this 188+ stage template.Understanding this template is a priority for story or screenwriters. This is the template you must master if you are to succeed in the craft.[The terminology is most often metaphoric and applies to all successful stories and screenplays, from The Godfather (1972) to Brokeback Mountain (2006) to Anni
    are simple, and just need to be followed.

    Selecting a Topic Before you can write effective non-fiction, you must select a topic. Without a topic, you don’t even have a direction in which to go. Very often, when a non-fiction writer speaks of writer’s block, that writer is really speaking about a lack of topic. Once a topic is chosen, fleshing it out is more a matter of cold logic than anything else.

    Clarifying the Topic Once you have a topic, you have a broad, general direction to go in. While this may be enough to get you going, it’s rarely enough to base an article on. Often, our topics may be either too broad, encompassing too much information, losing any potential impact, or it may be too narrow, not leaving enough room for development. Ask yourself the following questions, with example answers given describing the article you're reading now:

    - What is the general topic? (writing)

    - What differentiates it from the rest of that topic (the pre-writing process)

    - Who is my audience? (writers, mostly experienced amateurs, non-professionals)

    - What is the purpose? (instruct writers on pre-writing)

    - What does my audience need to know? (Details regarding the steps of the pre-writing process)

    - What questions are there about the topic and the needed information?

    Doing the Research Once you have clarified what your topic is, you’ll now have the beginnings of your information gathering. Continue asking yourself questions, looking at your topic from as many ways as possible. Looking at this list of questions, identify potential sources of information that you can turn to for answers. These may be individual experts, reference books, w

    Virtual Assistance a Boon for Small Town Businesses
    Small towns and rural communities are wonderful places to raise families and retire. Small towns rely on local businesses as much, or more, as larger metropolitan areas. However, they are not necessarily the place for recent college grads or seasoned professionals who know their skills are worth more at a large corporation in a bigger city. This migration has been appropriately labeled as the ‘brain drain’. So, what happens to the businesses operating in small towns if they don’t have the available skilled labor force to meet their needs?Fortunately, a new – but
    ely enough to base an article on. Often, our topics may be either too broad, encompassing too much information, losing any potential impact, or it may be too narrow, not leaving enough room for development. Ask yourself the following questions, with example answers given describing the article you're reading now:

    - What is the general topic? (writing)

    - What differentiates it from the rest of that topic (the pre-writing process)

    - Who is my audience? (writers, mostly experienced amateurs, non-professionals)

    - What is the purpose? (instruct writers on pre-writing)

    - What does my audience need to know? (Details regarding the steps of the pre-writing process)

    - What questions are there about the topic and the needed information?

    Doing the Research Once you have clarified what your topic is, you’ll now have the beginnings of your information gathering. Continue asking yourself questions, looking at your topic from as many ways as possible. Looking at this list of questions, identify potential sources of information that you can turn to for answers. These may be individual experts, reference books, w

    The Value of the Simple Statement
    It is best to assume that with spoken language, simple is better than complex. Since we are unable to recapture or replay our spoken words, we hope that they will be correctly interpreted the first time they are heard. Unfortunately, spoken words can be the most misread and misinterpreted form of communication, and therefore, can be a great hindrance to effective persuasion. When you’re in a persuasive situation, use simple, direct, and concise language, rather than fretting about how eloquent you’re sounding. If you are preoccupied, you’ll miss a lot of important cues. Mor
    -writing)

    - What does my audience need to know? (Details regarding the steps of the pre-writing process)

    - What questions are there about the topic and the needed information?

    Doing the Research Once you have clarified what your topic is, you’ll now have the beginnings of your information gathering. Continue asking yourself questions, looking at your topic from as many ways as possible. Looking at this list of questions, identify potential sources of information that you can turn to for answers. These may be individual experts, reference books, websites, and many more. As you answer the questions, look for additional questions that the audience wouldn’t even know to ask, but still should know. As your information accumulates, you may find that some questions become unimportant, or unnecessary; other questions, like the original topic, may be either too broad or too narrow. Continue to research and revise until you are satisfied that every base has been covered.

    Thinking and Planning Looking now at your clarified topic, your refined list of questions and the information you’ve accumulated through expert research, it’s time to think about your article. Bearing in mind both the intended audience for this article and the purpose, how might this information meet those needs? How should it be presented for maximum effect? How can this raw information be shaped into a marketable work of art? Now is the time to ponder these questions, and to find answers.

    Making a List Finally, with all your prior work completed, make a list of the points that must be covered in your article. Sequence this list in the most effective manner you can so that it won’t confuse readers or misrepresent your topic. List the points again, this time in sequence. Ta-da! You now have a step by step blue print for your article, with all of the necessary information laid out for you. Without a single visit from your ‘muse’ or even one case of artistic distemper, you’ve built the majority of a great article, and you’ve done it quickly, and effectively.

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