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David Pearl

Auteur de Piano Exercises For Dummies

26 oeuvres 146 utilisateurs 2 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

David Pearl is a freelance pianist, composer, and arranger. He is the author of Chord Theory Explained, Learn to Play Classic Rock Piano From the Masters; books of jazz transcriptions; arrangements of rock, jazz, and classical pieces; and opera arias for piano.

Œuvres de David Pearl

Piano Exercises For Dummies (2008) 46 exemplaires
Hamilton: An American Musical (2020) 4 exemplaires
Story for Leaders (2016) 3 exemplaires
Muslim Family Law (1998) 2 exemplaires
A textbook on Muslim personal law (1987) 2 exemplaires
Solo Plus: Christmas: Trumpet (2004) 1 exemplaire

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While I am not a fan of this particular musical itself (I had trouble actually hearing the lyrics when viewing on Disney and required subtitles) the music is catchy and very entertaining. Many students of mine also really like this soundtrack. Played through on piano.
 
Signalé
The_Literary_Jedi | Jun 11, 2021 |
Meetings are the bane of modern-day business. Is there any way to make them not so long, boring and unproductive?

First of all, exchange the donuts and soda for something much healthier, like water and protein bars. The sugar rush, followed by the mid-afternoon sugar crash, helps no one.

Why do people attend meetings? It's a nice alternative to doing actual work, technology makes it possible, we confuse "efficient" and "effective", and we forget that there is an alternative.

Looking at the anatomy of meetings, there is a big difference between what a meeting is about, and the intention. Make sure the "right" people are at your meeting, like the Leader, the Recorder, the Facilitator and the Coach. Look at things from the point of view of your customers. Read magazines that you would not normally read; listen to other radio stations. Who attends meetings? Do they have to be there?

What can be done? The average hotel "business conference room" is a windowless room in the basement with harsh artificial lighting. Stay out of that room. Hold your meeting in the hotel lounge, or, even better, hold it outside. Back at the office, consider getting rid of your big, rectangular conference table, and replacing it with several smaller tables with swivel chairs.

Have an agenda, and stick to it (but leave room for the unexpected). Is this meeting to brainstorm new ideas, or to keep everyone informed on recent developments? Don't let anyone change the focus of the meeting, or otherwise monopolize it. Impose a Fine Jar, where all participants are required to pay if they are caught texting during the meeting.

This book is very much worth reading for companies of all sizes. Even small changes in a company's meetings can only help. Some sort of summary or bullet points would have made this book even better, but, yes, it is worth the money.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
plappen | Apr 28, 2014 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
26
Membres
146
Popularité
#141,736
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
2
ISBN
41
Langues
2

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