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Last year we had to work overtime to keep up with the work.
BBC: Remploy staff in Coventry join strikes on factory closures
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Finally, it allows you to keep up with the work in your field by following current publications in a more focused way.
FORBES: ResearchGate Wants To Be Facebook For Scientists
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Keep up with the good work!
FORBES: CNBC "Half Time Report" Says Brazil a Bear
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So what can one person (you or I) do right now to manage employees in a modern way, a way that invites them to bring all of who they are to the work they do, so that our companies can keep up with the pace of change.
FORBES: Why Management Is Broken - And Why It Matters
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Whether you sing in the shower, rock out on your way to work, or keep yourself pumped up at the gym with your playlists, music unites us all.
FORBES: What The Grammys Can Teach You About Your Business
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Chaplin's 1936 film captures our frantic effort to keep up with the assembly line--and to stay ahead of work in general.
FORBES
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We need to gently and respectfully bring it up, keep at it, and work with them to prevent the serious injury of falling that changes lives.
FORBES: Mom! Look Out, Don't Fall!
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The hospital has created an environment that isn't only conducive to healing, she says, but makes it easier for her to keep up with her own work as a project manager via wireless Internet in the rooms.
WSJ: Children's Hospitals Make Room for Mom, Dad and Diversions
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With so many people out of work, the pressure to keep up financial appearances has disappeared.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Texting to a group of friends set up on my smartphone was an easy way to keep in touch with the team I work with on my SXSW blog.
FORBES: Do You Want To Know My Killer App For Mobile From SXSW Interactive?
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Part of the debate over seizures involves a potential conflict of interest: Under a 1984 federal law, state and local law-enforcement agencies that work with Uncle Sam on seizures get to keep up to 80% of the proceeds.
FORBES: Stealing Is Wrong, Even When It's The Government Doing It
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Lord Layard's analysis suggests an alternative view: it is not that Europeans are working too little, but that Americans work too long, driven to choose more income instead of leisure by an urge to keep up with the Joneses.
ECONOMIST: Why don't rising incomes make everybody happier?