Going to ad:tech New York? Here’s Your 20% Discount Code

If you work in online marketing then you’re probably aware ad:tech is pretty much the largest conference out there covering online marketing and advertising technology. Perhaps you’ve been. Perhaps you haven’t. If you have, then you know how beneficial it can be both from a networking and educational perspective. If you haven’t been, see the previous sentence. The bottom line is you should go.

We’re not saying this because this promotion is part of media sponsor deal we have with ad:tech (to be clear, it is), rather it is because we have been to every ad:tech for the past ten years and can personally vouch for the benefits you will realize if you choose to attend. To make that decision a bit easier, we can offer you 20% off the registration fee if you use the discount code: ADR20NY14.

ad:tech New York will take place at the Javits Center November 5-6.

Oh and a secret: Follow the @adrants Twitter account closely. We’ll be tweeting out a link to a one time only offer for a 100% free All Access pass to the conference sometime on Thursday. Whomever clicks first and registers, gets the free pass.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

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I’m 65 and I didn’t have a word for what my mother was until I was 43 and a therapist said “narcissistic traits” and the room went quiet — not because the word was shocking but because it was organizing, like someone had handed me a filing system for 40 years of experiences that I’d been storing in a pile on the floor, and the relief of that word was immediately followed by the grief of realizing I’d spent four decades thinking the problem was me

I’m 65 and I didn’t have a word for what my mother was until I was 43 and a therapist said “narcissistic traits” and the room went quiet — not because the word was shocking but because it was organizing, like someone had handed me a filing system for 40 years of experiences that I’d been storing in a pile on the floor, and the relief of that word was immediately followed by the grief of realizing I’d spent four decades thinking the problem was me

Global English Editing

Research suggests people who rarely felt loved as a child and now have nearly zero close friends at 65 aren’t repeating a pattern of rejection — they’re running the only software their childhood installed, which is that closeness is conditional, people leave, and the safest number of people to depend on is none, and that program is still running because nobody taught them how to update it

Research suggests people who rarely felt loved as a child and now have nearly zero close friends at 65 aren’t repeating a pattern of rejection — they’re running the only software their childhood installed, which is that closeness is conditional, people leave, and the safest number of people to depend on is none, and that program is still running because nobody taught them how to update it

Global English Editing

Behavioral scientists found that people who were overly criticized growing up often become less likeable as they get older — not because their personality deteriorates but because the exhaustion of performing acceptability for 50 years eventually exceeds the energy available, and the “difficult” person their family describes is often just someone who finally stopped auditioning for approval that was never going to be granted unconditionally

Behavioral scientists found that people who were overly criticized growing up often become less likeable as they get older — not because their personality deteriorates but because the exhaustion of performing acceptability for 50 years eventually exceeds the energy available, and the “difficult” person their family describes is often just someone who finally stopped auditioning for approval that was never going to be granted unconditionally

Global English Editing

I’m 73 and my husband planned a cruise for our 50th anniversary and by the second evening I was standing on the deck looking at the ocean and crying—not because I was unhappy but because I’d expected to feel something enormous and instead I felt exactly the same as I do in my kitchen, and the realization that geography doesn’t fix the thing that’s wrong when the thing that’s wrong is internal was the most expensive lesson I’ve ever been taught in a bathrobe

I’m 73 and my husband planned a cruise for our 50th anniversary and by the second evening I was standing on the deck looking at the ocean and crying—not because I was unhappy but because I’d expected to feel something enormous and instead I felt exactly the same as I do in my kitchen, and the realization that geography doesn’t fix the thing that’s wrong when the thing that’s wrong is internal was the most expensive lesson I’ve ever been taught in a bathrobe

Global English Editing

Research suggests the simple act of eating a meal without your phone has become one of the most radical things a person can do for their mental health — not because the phone is harmful, but because the meal without it is the only daily occasion most people have left to exist without being reachable

Research suggests the simple act of eating a meal without your phone has become one of the most radical things a person can do for their mental health — not because the phone is harmful, but because the meal without it is the only daily occasion most people have left to exist without being reachable

Global English Editing

The generation that was never allowed to be tired, never allowed to be lost, never allowed to need anything from anyone is now sitting in quiet houses in their late 60s and 70s wondering why a lifetime of being needed by everyone left them feeling known by no one

The generation that was never allowed to be tired, never allowed to be lost, never allowed to need anything from anyone is now sitting in quiet houses in their late 60s and 70s wondering why a lifetime of being needed by everyone left them feeling known by no one

Global English Editing