Posts Tagged ‘Goals’

Writing can help you accelerate your success | The Practice of …

Writing is the easiest way to speed up your likelihood of success no matter what your goals. Why? It gets ideas out of your head. It allows you to remember the things you’ve done in greater detail

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Think Big For Your Book, and Make it Happen

Visualizing goals is one of the most important foundations of human achievement. By using your imagination, and envisioning life after your dreams have come true, you can actually attract what you want into your life. And just like athletes are trained to visualize victory, aspiring authors can use this powerful technique to get them excited and motivated about writing their book, and to help ensure it actually gets done.

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10 Posts to Help with Getting Started | Confident Writing

The blogosphere has been awash with helpful posts this week on getting started with goals, plans, intentions and new ways of doing things in 2010. Here are.

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Writing Skills Training and Business Communications Training Depend on Learning to Be Concise

When it comes to business communications in the professional working world, the only one impressed by your ponderous writing will be you. To hone your writing skills, you should know your readers and respect their time. That means getting to the point and supporting it with details in as compact a space as possible. Media training will help you understand reporters, which will allow you to turn almost any media encounter into a plus, even assisting you with your marketing communications goals.

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Tutor Help: Do You Find Writing a Tough Job?

Start by writing these down – may be something you write will spark more ideas that you can talk about. Now when you hit a road block you should ask a question. Questions are very handy because they help you focus your energy on an …

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How Twitter Can Help You to Write with Confidence | Confident Writing

Twitter still strikes me as an audacious, outrageous experiment. Thousands of people talking to each other in short bursts of 140 characters. Ordinary.

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