Promotion in a sentence as a noun

Schneier was in pretty big self-promotion mode at that time.

I believe they're more likely to leave when they're passed over for a promotion or raise.

" "Well Bob got that promotion because he's so good-looking.

I proceeded to try to ask for things, like being named the tech lead, a promotion, or just more money.

All of the positive street cred he is getting for his promotion of green energy is being lost to this fight.

It's important that this applies to self promotion and persona creation and not science.

If you have any money left, spend that cash on those awful, dark-alley fake review and promotion services.

So no, I don't think people who engage in a bunch of self-promotion are stupid or inferior, just selfish and shameful.

Clever employee gets huge promotion, and negotiates for all of his coworkers to be better off as well.

AMC gets promotion for new seasons and Netflix gets a huge rush of people watching previous seasons as they become available.

Scott McNealy would occasionally send a note of congratulations on a promotion, typically he would say "One step up, one step closer to the door.

The appropriate reward for doing great work isn't a "promotion to management" -- that's actually a punishment for a great individual contributor.

Who is it useful to besides you?Buying into an obnoxiously self-promotional attitude is defecting in a giant Prisoner's Dilemma.

If by "if by 'if by whiskey'" you mean to circularly employ the same manipulative tactic of deceptive self-promotion, then I am certainly against it. But if by "if by 'if by whiskey'" you mean to strategically exercise the same practice out of admiration of its effective and pacifying avail to reason, then I am certainly for it. That is my position.

Full of horrid legacy systems that are built to ****-- specifically, to be "interesting" enough to merit a promotion for the original architect, who then moves on before it goes into maintenance phase and falls to pieces.

The world has an unbelievable, enormous, tedious, completely indefensible surplus of self-promotion and marketing.

It serves only to make my life and others' a little worse as I filter through "good self-promoters" to find people who are good at ordinary, interesting, non-self-promotional things, who do and say things I actually want to pay attention to.

C's implicit conversions in general have caused more harm than good and what the author is complaining about is having to tell the compiler to do 64-bit arithmetic on 32-bit values instead of having it follow complex promotion rules that few programmers even know about.

> The problem, as with white geeks, is that Asian-Americans disproportionately aren't learning how to bs, how to promote themselves and their productsActually it is the attitude like this -- the attitude that equates self-promotion with ******** -- that causes problems for people with an engineering mindset.

Besides, if something like that ever becomes a problem, a better response would be a prohibition on self-promotion or some other clear guideline, rather than a vague requirement of notability.- If these deletionists are just being OCD and wanting everything to be tidy and clean and under their editorial control, I would say that they need to take a break.

Promotion definitions

noun

a message issued in behalf of some product or cause or idea or person or institution; "the packaging of new ideas"

See also: publicity packaging

noun

act of raising in rank or position

noun

encouragement of the progress or growth or acceptance of something

See also: furtherance advancement

noun

the advancement of some enterprise; "his experience in marketing resulted in the forwarding of his career"

See also: forwarding furtherance