Adrants Gives Thanks For Growth

Back in March of 2002, Adrants had one reader. We now have 30,000 every day. That growth would not have been possible were it not for every single one of you reading Adrants today. It would not have been possible without the early inspiration and wise advice from people like Tony Pierce, Rick Bruner, Elizabeth Spiers and John Engler or the education and guidance of Ask Wapling or the editorial and sales expertise of Tig Tillinghast.

Neither would any of this have been possible without the support of our advertisers which, in 2006, included ad:tech, AllBusiness, Aquent, Business Development Institute, Forbes, Exact Target, GOT, Flippies, Conde Nast, Lyris, Marqui, MSN, New York Times, Sprint, Tacoda, Thinkmap, Time, MarketingSherpa, WebAwards, iMediaConnection, Captains of Industry and many more.

The support is truly appreciated. We’d love to hear from you in comments about the things you like about Adrants. The things you hate. The things you’d like to see changed. The things you’d like to see added. Anything. It’s your forum and we want to know.

Happy Holidays. We’ll be publishing the site and the newsletter lightly next week but be sure to watch for our annual top ten lists. See you next year.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

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Psychology says the loneliest part of being an aging parent isn’t being alone – it’s realizing your children love you but don’t actually enjoy spending time with you, and understanding that gap is something you created decades ago

Psychology says the loneliest part of being an aging parent isn’t being alone – it’s realizing your children love you but don’t actually enjoy spending time with you, and understanding that gap is something you created decades ago

Global English Editing

Psychology says the freedom that childless couples experience in midlife carries a hidden cost. Without the natural structure that children impose on time, weekends, holidays, and decades, they must generate their own sense of purpose continuously, and that ongoing act of self-creation is both the privilege and the exhaustion nobody warns them about.

Psychology says the freedom that childless couples experience in midlife carries a hidden cost. Without the natural structure that children impose on time, weekends, holidays, and decades, they must generate their own sense of purpose continuously, and that ongoing act of self-creation is both the privilege and the exhaustion nobody warns them about.

Global English Editing

Psychology says staying silent in these 8 specific situations isn’t weakness or avoidance—it’s the most precise form of self-respect that most people only learn after saying the wrong thing one too many times

Psychology says staying silent in these 8 specific situations isn’t weakness or avoidance—it’s the most precise form of self-respect that most people only learn after saying the wrong thing one too many times

Global English Editing

I raised three kids, worked full time, and kept a marriage together for forty years, and my son told me over dinner that my generation had it easy. I didn’t argue. I just felt something close quietly inside me.

I raised three kids, worked full time, and kept a marriage together for forty years, and my son told me over dinner that my generation had it easy. I didn’t argue. I just felt something close quietly inside me.

Global English Editing

Psychology says the reason you can’t maintain self-discipline isn’t lack of willpower — it’s that you’re trying to force a behavior your nervous system has learned to associate with punishment, criticism, or being unloved

Psychology says the reason you can’t maintain self-discipline isn’t lack of willpower — it’s that you’re trying to force a behavior your nervous system has learned to associate with punishment, criticism, or being unloved

Global English Editing

Psychology says people who pretend not to see acquaintances in public to avoid small talk aren’t rude—they’re running a very efficient internal cost-benefit analysis that extroverts simply don’t have the software for

Psychology says people who pretend not to see acquaintances in public to avoid small talk aren’t rude—they’re running a very efficient internal cost-benefit analysis that extroverts simply don’t have the software for

Global English Editing