//Random link plus text description script
//By Michael Dillon (http://www.mikenz.com)
//Script featured on JavaScript Kit (http://javascriptkit.com)

//specify total # of random links
var totallinks=9

var urls=new Array(totallinks)
var descriptions=new Array(totallinks)

urls[0]="John Byrne, executive editor, <i>Business Week</i>"
descriptions[0]="Clear, concise and clever. If this won't get them to pay attention, I don't know what will."

urls[1]="<i>Publisher's Weekly</i>"
descriptions[1]="There's<br>plenty of commonsense advice&#151;keep information easy to digest,<br> break up communications into bite-size bits, directly address consumers' desires and understand your audience."

urls[2]="<i>Library Journal</i>"
descriptions[2]="The book does a fine job of practicing what it preaches, with lots of bulleted lists, callouts, and summaries."

urls[3]="<i>Library Journal</i>"
descriptions[3]="This book is . . . particularly concise because it does not present very many formal case studies. Everything is in sound bites. A good . . . reminder for practicing professionals"

urls[4]="Steven T. Church, senior director, Communication, Georgia-Pacific"
descriptions[4]="<i>Your Attention, Please</i> is informative, useful, and yes, even funny. I've never made a book required reading for my team, until<br>now."

urls[5]="Bill Linton, director of New Product Development, Bush Brothers"
descriptions[5]="Brown and Davis lay out the dos and don'ts of creating a compelling story that cuts through the clutter."

urls[6]="Alex Beam, <i>Boston Globe</i> columnist"
descriptions[6]="In <i>Your Attention, Please,</i> Alison Davis and Paul B. Brown reveal the clean little secrets of getting your message across."

urls[7]="Robert S. Shulman, chairman/founder, Markitecture"
descriptions[7]=". . . Great execution increasingly depends on communicating effectively to those who actually get the work done . . . This book tells you how."

urls[8]="Jackie Zils, advisor, JayRay, a communications consultancy"
descriptions[8]="I've learned something on every page."

var MachoManRandomSavage=Math.floor(Math.random()*totallinks)