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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a quick win" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It refers to a small or easy victory or success that can be achieved quickly. Example: The new marketing strategy implemented by the company was a quick win, resulting in a significant increase in sales within just one week.
Exact(46)
Education is not a quick win, he points out.
BOOKMAKERS are an easy target for politicians seeking a quick win.
What it is not going to be is a "quick win".
Britain in the Lead The Labour government in Britain secured itself a quick win this week.
Cameron: What I'm saying is that we need a quick win.
It is rare to see Tomic enjoy a quick win, his style is a strange combination of elegance and attrition.
Similar(14)
"It's what I call a quick-win decision," she said.
Whether it was naive of Pauline to think she could become party president in such a short space of time is not the point; the real scandal was that she feels, with some justification, that she was used as a quick-win media tool to fool black and minority voters into thinking that the party was serious about diversity.
Tory party media spinners have portrayed the abolition of the Human Rights Act as a dramatic "quick win" for the incoming majority Conservative government, newly liberated from their Liberal Democrat coalition partners.
Training statisticians on programming and programmers on statistics is a great "quick win" that can be extended more broadly.
And she said in an era where the NHS was being asked to save money, tackling this issue could be a "real quick win".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com