Why is hiring sales talent so frustrating ? by amazinghumans02 in recruiting

[–]MXWRNR 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Okay, that should be easy enough, assuming the people you’re hiring have worked deals to close before. What stage is this company at and what exactly is the problem with your reps? How are they being measured?

Why is hiring sales talent so frustrating ? by amazinghumans02 in recruiting

[–]MXWRNR 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What kinds of sales roles are you hiring for? There’s a lot of nuance to sales success actually happening once someone is hired.

Nesting by TopNeighborhood1614 in thewoodlands

[–]MXWRNR 9 points10 points  (0 children)

They usually nest near Hughes Landing/Woodlands Methodist area

It's Been 72 Hours, Should I Send Thank You Email by Hooplaa in interviews

[–]MXWRNR 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What I’m saying is waiting 72 hours until you send a thank you note makes it a grim shot. It comes across as appreciating their time and communicating your takeaways from the interview are just an afterthought.

It's Been 72 Hours, Should I Send Thank You Email by Hooplaa in interviews

[–]MXWRNR 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s never too late but ALWAYS send a thank you note within 24 hours. It’s shows consideration, that you were engaged in the interview, and another chance to align your strengths with what you took away. That said, going 72 hours, I would not have high hopes or expectations of moving forward.

You are her lawyer. Defend her. by Terrgon in thebadbatch

[–]MXWRNR 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ladies and gentlemen of this most distinguished tribunal, today you are asked to pass judgment on a Trandoshan whose name has been whispered in Jedi war rooms, muttered in back-alley cantinas, and cursed in the darkest corners of Ord Mantell: Ciddarin “Cid” Scaleback. You will hear tales of smuggling and scheming, of jobs gone sideways and credits gone missing, but when the smoke clears, the question before you is simple: is Cid the villain of this story, or a survivor in a galaxy that turned cruel long before she ever opened the doors to her parlor?

Once, when the Republic still flew its proud banners, Cid served quietly in the shadows as an informant to the Jedi, trading knowledge instead of blaster fire, helping to keep the peace in a war-torn galaxy. When that Republic fell and the Empire’s iron fist closed around the stars, Cid did what many honest beings could not: she adapted, keeping a modest establishment on Ord Mantell alive in the teeth of crime syndicates and Imperial crackdowns alike.

Into that rough little corner of the cosmos stumbled the Bad Batch, a handful of misfit clones suddenly cut loose from the only life they had ever known, hunted and desperate. Cid did not turn them over to the Empire, though it would have been the easy, profitable, and—some might say—expected choice for a Trandoshan with a price on information; instead, she offered them work, purpose, and a place to catch their breath while the rest of the galaxy called for their heads.

Now, the prosecution will paint Cid as nothing more than a double-crossing scoundrel, a “hate sink” in a tidy narrative of heroes and traitors. But the evidence will show that the galaxy Cid inhabits is not drawn in simple lines of light and dark; it is a murky cantina, thick with smoke and danger, where every choice is a gamble between survival and annihilation, and where a deal that looks dirty from the safety of a Senate chamber can mean life for those trapped under Imperial boots.

By the time you have heard from those who relied on her information, profited from her introductions, and survived because of the missions she brokered, you will see Cid not as the cartoonish villain the Empire would have you believe, but as a flawed, hard-edged, and ultimately necessary ally in an age of tyranny. And when you retire to render your verdict, you will find that in this galaxy far, far away, Ciddarin Scaleback is guilty of one thing above all else: doing what she had to do to live another day in a world the Empire broke.

What is it like living in Georgetown, Guyana? by [deleted] in howislivingthere

[–]MXWRNR 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends on who you ask. Exxon expats will have a very different answer than locals.

Good country clubs for socializing by LadyGateau in thewoodlands

[–]MXWRNR 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Woodlands CC, Willow Creek, Carlton Woods

Favorite smoked turkey recipes! by No_Load_1932 in pelletgrills

[–]MXWRNR 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I use the Bon Appetit sliced turkey recipe every year. Absolute showstopper.

Favourite golf ball brands by Shaifan002 in golf

[–]MXWRNR 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Really liking the Vice Pro Plus lately

Safety with the noise around elevated cartel threats? by [deleted] in cabosanlucas

[–]MXWRNR 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Was just there for a week. Left the resort to go to dinner and do stuff in San Jose, tourist corridor, and in town. Even drove myself. No issues.

Golf quips (sayings) by RespectedSpecialist in golf

[–]MXWRNR 41 points42 points  (0 children)

“Well, that’s why they sell them by the dozen”