"Your Attention, Please. is the new strategy guide for communicating to the reluctant consumer. It shows you who the new audience is, how to reach them, and how you must communicate differently?or risk losing mindshare and marketshare"--Publisher website (March 2007).
Until finally I co-wrote Gavin and Stacey. And my whole life changed. This is that story. The story of how I found myself here, talking to you.
Your attention, please. Is the definitive strategy guide for breaking through the clutter and getting distracted audiences to pay attention.How can you get the attention of distracted and busy audiences? Change the way you communicate.
This book is a must-read for everyone in your organization searching for lasting and meaningful success." —Tom Hill, founder of The Eagle Institute, coauthor of Chicken Soup for the Entrepreneurial Soul "Chris Hilicki has a special talent ...
They represent resilience, growth, optimism and strength. Life is not linear: neither is working through ADHD. May We Have Your Attention Please? will lead you to a place of clarity and purpose, to live with, not in spite of, your ADHD.
A simple framework to help you blast through writer's block and know exactly what to say in any piece of writing. How to "read your customers' minds," and get them looking for reasons to buy from you. Who is this book for?
This collection takes as its starting point the seeming paradox of an artist of so few words who produces an art of so many words.
" This 64-page book helps students with ADHD and students who are otherwise wiggly and overly busy learn how to pay better attention and focus for longer periods of time.
Imagine if there was a process for pleasantly surprising decision-makers and convincing them you're the right person for the job, position, project or contract. You don’t have to imagine it, Sam Horn has created it.
One can understand by reading this that all these are staged by human beings. Although the book appears to be a clip of what was said, it is said that everything said is true.
In the book, Curt Steinhorst and Jonathan McKee help leaders rethink every aspect of work with an eye toward our most precious and dwindling resource: attention.