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Dating, Inc.: Recruit, Select, and Retain the Right Man for the Relationship

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A practical guide to finding true love using smart corporate business practices.

From defining their dream guy using a Mission Statement (or Wishin' Statement) to building a great relationship with him by honing their management (or Manage Men) skills, it helps readers use the same techniques that made them VPs and CEOs to find Mr Right.

272 pages, Paperback

First published November 30, 2006

2 people want to read

About the author

Jeff Cohen

92 books69 followers
Librarian note: This author also goes by the pen name E.J. Copperman

Jeff Cohen has worked in news since 2001, most recently as the city reporter for the Hartford Courant. He lives in Middletown, CT, with his wife, two daughters, and their cats.

Jeff Cohen is the nom de plume for Jeffrey Cohen, writer of intentionally funny murder mysteries in the Double Feature and Aaron Tucker series. As E.J. Copperman he writes the Haunted Guesthouse mystery series, and now collaborates with himself on the Samuel Hoenig Asperger’s Mystery series.

He’s been writing for a (nominal) living since graduating from Rutgers College during the Paleozoic Era, and has had articles published in The New York Times (which included lawn care tips from the head groundskeeper at Yankee Stadium, back when it really was Yankee Stadium), USA Weekend, TV Guide, Premiere, Writer’s Digest, American Baby, Hollywood Scriptwriter and many others.

When the idea for one of his countless unproduced screenplays wouldn’t cooperate and become a script, Jeff wrote it as a novel called For Whom the Minivan Rolls, and the book was published by Bancroft Press in 2002. It was followed in the Aaron Tucker series by A Farewell to Legs and As Dog Is My Witness. Aaron returned in a 2011 short story, The Gun Also Rises, in Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine. The story won the Barry Award (at the Rock ‘N Roll Hall of Fame!) for best short story of 2012.

The Double Feature Mystery series from Berkley Prime Crime began with Some Like It Hot-Buttered, which introduced Elliot Freed and his all-comedy movie theater, Comedy Tonight. It was followed by It Happened One Knife and A Night at the Operation.

Under the name E.J. Copperman, Jeff writes the Haunted Guesthouse Mystery series, which began with Night of the Living Deed and continues with An Uninvited Ghost, Old Haunts, and Chance of a Ghost. The series will continue in December with Inspector Specter.

In his copious spare time, Jeff is an unaccomplished amateur guitar player, a fan of Major League Baseball, a couch potato and a teacher of screenwriting at Drexel University in Philadelphia. He’s also available for weddings and bar mitzvahs, but don’t expect an expensive gift.

Visit Jeff on Facebook and Twitter, and read him at Hey, There’s A Dead Guy In The Living Room, the most comprehensive blog on mystery writing. Besides Jeff Cohen (Monday’s blogger), you’ll see perspectives from literary agent Josh Getzler on Tuesdays, publisher Lynne Patrick on Wednesdays, editor Terri Bischoff on Thursdays, publicist Erin Mitchell on Fridays, bookseller Marilyn Thiele on Saturdays and librarian Jessy Randall on Sundays. Check in every day for something new on mysteries, books and publishing!

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Chriss.
Author 3 books16 followers
April 17, 2008
This book had several good points but tended to view dating from a corporate standpoint, which I didn't seem to follow being in a non-corporate career. Write out a mission statement, interview your applicants, etc. I did agree with the author's point that we put more effort into getting a job than we do getting a mate. But as many of these books as I tend to read, they all seem to simplify finding good relationship material because it's not always what you are doing wrong, it might be what you have to pick from.
Profile Image for Shirin Abdel Rahman.
772 reviews50 followers
March 15, 2016
I will never ever call it a dating book, loaded with allot of business terms such as margin, net profit, sales, marketing and customers service!
this book is good for you if you have a business degree, otherwise wont recommend it to anyone.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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