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In this, the first data-driven guide to real time marketing, Chris
Kerns outlines the value of RTM via a comprehensive social data
performance analysis. He lays out best practices for measuring RTM,
injects a data-driven mindset into every step of its methodology,
and shows how marketers can grow RTM into a daily win for brands
across the globe.
Amazonian Dark Earths are not only a testament to the vanished
civilizations of the Amazon Basin, but may provide the answer to
how the large, sophisticated societies were able to sustain
intensive agriculture in an environment with mostly infertile
soils. Locally known as Terra Preta de Indio or Indian black earth,
these anomalous soils are even today fertile and highly productive.
Though clearly associated with pre-European settlements questions
remain whether the Dark Earths were intentionally produced or
merely a by-product of habitation activities. This publication
provides a comprehensive review of our current understanding of
these fascinating soils: their origin, properties, and management
through time. These new and multidisciplinary perspectives by
leading experts on Amazonian Dark Earths may pave the way for the
next revolution of soil management in the humid tropics.
Why do parents who can pull off multi-million dollar deals at work
then go home and stumble with their kids? Parents spend an awful
lot of time negotiating with their kids-over everyday requests,
rules and policies, and big decisions, and often end up derailed
and frustrated. In Negotiating at Home, Kurtzberg and Kern offer
parents a chance to look more closely at what they already do well
(and why) and what can be done better. Grounded in decades of
research on how to negotiate effectively, parents will learn about
how to plan, recognize specific tactics, communicate and work in
partnerships with other family members, address fairness, and
handle conflict. Real stories and examples generated from
interviews with hundreds of parents demonstrating the common
patterns and "pain points" Strategies to avoid predictable pitfalls
Specific tips for mastering the immediate moment and paving the way
for future successes A guide for kids to learn the basic rules of
effective negotiating for use in their own lives
In this, the first data-driven guide to real time marketing, Chris
Kerns outlines the value of RTM via a comprehensive social data
performance analysis. He lays out best practices for measuring RTM,
injects a data-driven mindset into every step of its methodology,
and shows how marketers can grow RTM into a daily win for brands
across the globe.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification:
++++ Die Haberfeldtreiber: Oberbayerisches Sittenbild 3 C. Kern
Hallberg, 1862
The choice to include the human in the decision process affects
four key areas of system design: problem representation, system
analysis and design, solution technique selection, and interface
requirements specification. I introduce a design methodology that
captures the necessary choices associated with each of these areas.
In particular I show how this methodology is applied to the design
of an actual decision support system for satellite operations
scheduling. Supporting the user's ability to monitor the actions of
the system and to guide the decision process of the system are two
key considerations in the successful design of a decision support
system. Both of these points rely on the correct specification of
human-computer interaction points. Traditional, computer-centered
system design approaches do not do this well, if at all, and are
insufficient for the design of decision support systems.
The son of a Kentucky tobacco farmer, Raymond Kerns dropped out of
high school after the eighth grade to help on the farm. He enlisted
in the Army in 1940 and, after training as a radio operator in the
artillery, was assigned to Schofield Barracks (Oahu) where he
witnessed the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and participated in
the ensuing battle. In the months before Pearl Harbor, Kerns had
passed the Army's flight training admission exam with flying
colors. But because he lacked a high school diploma, the Army
refused to give him flying lessons. Undaunted, Private Kerns took
lessons with a civilian flying school and was actually scheduled
for his first solo flight on the afternoon of December 7, 1941.
Notwithstanding his lack of diploma, Kerns graduated from Officer
Candidate School and then completed flight training in the L-4
Piper Cub in late 1942. He was assigned to the 33rd Infantry
Division in New Guinea and saw extensive combat service there and
in the Philippines. In a simple but riveting style, Kerns recalls
flying multiple patrols over enemy-held territory in his light
unarmored plane, calling and coordinating artillery strikes. While
his most effective defense was the remarkable maneuverability and
nimbleness of the L-4, he was often required to defend himself with
pistols and rifles, hand grenades, and even a machine gun that he
welded to his landing gear and once used to blow up an ammunition
dump. Proud of his service and convinced of the effectiveness and
cost efficiency of the L-4 pilots in the Pacific and Europe, Kerns
earned the Distinguished Flying Cross and the Silver Star. Above
the Thunder, arguably one of the best memoirs of combat action
during World War II, will appeal to military historians as well as
general readers.
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