![]() It is also a highly effective way to unite emotions with meaning and intention. ![]() Listening to each other tell our stories builds empathy, forges trust, and creates deeper connections. Quoting: Impact of story telling “One of the strongest ways for humans to bond has always been through storytelling. So what is your header image tells about wherefore you are known for?Īll of this doesn’t make sense if you don’t tell your story. Or tell you about the fact that 92% of B2B customers are willing to engage with sales reps who have positioned themselves as an industry thought leader. So better make a great (online) impression. Of course I now can get you more numbers to convince you about how much of the B2B decision making is done before a buyer engages directly with you (83%). And the fun fact is that 90% of the information that sticks, is visual. To bring your character alive you need to set the scene. And by the way I already have set a great profile picture, so why on earth are you making such a big deal about it?įair points, but just getting the face of the main character (you) of the movie doesn’t tell a story! It’s just your face expressing happiness, anger, fear or nothing (poker face). And maybe now you are thinking: dude I am not a book, nor a movie. Okay, we are on the same page now about that. What does your personal movie cover tell about your work story? Reasons why your cover story matters! The header image could be seen as the cover of a book or the poster promoting a movie or concert. So no it is not your profile picture (the one in the circle on the left side). Head.WriteSelectedRows(0, -1, page.Width / 8, page.Height - document.TopMargin + head.TotalHeight, writer.So first of all, what the hack am I talking about? The header image of your Linkedin profile is the upper image in your profile, size: 1540x396 (width x height) pixels. WriteSelectedRows() requires you to specify absolute position! Imghead.HorizontalAlignment = Element.ALIGN_LEFT PdfPCell imghead = new PdfPCell((path), true) add header image PdfPCell() overload sizes image to fit cell Public override void OnEndPage(PdfWriter writer, Document document) Private class _events : PdfPageEventHelper Is there a way that I can increase the header size? I referred this reference link.I have my logo on each page.But although I have it aligned left, I dont see it on the left side of my page.Īlso, on my next page, since the table I have is continued on next page.It overlaps with the image I have on header. HTMLWorker obj = new HTMLWorker(document) įtlbl = FontFactory.GetFont(FontFactory.HELVETICA, 9) PdfWriter writer = PdfWriter.GetInstance(document, new FileStream(strFileName, FileMode.Create)) Public void CreatePDFDocument(string strHtml) But still I am not getting desired results. Public override void OnOpenDocument(PdfWriter writer, Document document) PdfContentByte cb = writer.DirectContent Ĭbfoot.SetTextMatrix(document.Left, textBase) Ĭbfoot.AddTemplate(total, document.Left + textSize, textBase) Helv = BaseFont.CreateFont(BaseFont.HELVETICA, BaseFont.WINANSI, BaseFont.NOT_EMBEDDED) PdfTemplate tpl = cbfoot.CreateTemplate(273, 95) PdfContentByte cbfoot = writer.DirectContent PdfTemplate tp = cbhead.CreateTemplate(273, 95) PdfContentByte cbhead = writer.DirectContent imghead = (clsAppConfig.ReportHeaderImage) imgfoot = (clsAppConfig.ReportFooterImage) Public override void OnStartPage(PdfWriter writer, document) Public class itsEventsHandler : PdfPageEventHelper I've implemented that in one of my project checkout the source code below.
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