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November 11, 2013 The First Step to Being PowerfulBy Nilofer Merchant The story you tell yourself shapes who you are — and what you can do. |
LeadershipThe Problem with the CEO's Job Title by Ludo Van der HeydenThe chief executive shouldn't be doing the executing. CustomersPret a Manger Wants Happy Employees — And That's OK by Bill TaylorSeriously? It worries some people that companies want their employees to be cheerful? Managing yourselfSix Drucker Questions that Simplify a Complex Age by Rick WartzmanThey'll help you challenge assumptions and reframe problems. Managing peopleThat Guy with a Thousand Inconsequential Objections by Neil BeardenA new term for the office lexicon. MoraleHow Women Respond to Frustration at Work, and Why by Kathryn HeathDo women feel more frustration, or just express their feelings more? Decision makingThe Six-Minute Guide to Making Better High-Stakes Decisions by Sarah CliffeIn very uncertain situations, traditional decision-support tools just won't cut it. InnovationControl Is for Beginners by Deborah Mills-ScofieldPractice improvising, and learn to let go. SalesWhy Sales and Marketing Don't Get Along by Andris A. Zoltners, PK Sinha, and Sally E. LorimerThe good news: tension between these interdependent functions can spark creativity. |
FEATURED PRODUCTThe First 90 Days App for iPhone and AndroidMAKE YOUR NEXT CAREER TRANSITION A SUCCESS.Download The First 90 Days App today to help you stay ahead of the game. Download on the App StoreDownload on Google Play |
FEATURED PRODUCTHBR Guide to Coaching Your EmployeesHBR Press BookWhen you're swamped with your own work, how can you make time to coach your employees—and do it well? If you don't help them build their skills, they'll keep coming to you for answers instead of finding their own solutions. Got a star on your team who's eager to advance? An underperformer who's dragging the group down? A steady contributor who feels bored and neglected? You'll need to agree on goals for growth, motivate your people to achieve them, support their efforts, and measure their progress. This guide gives you the tools to do that. You'll get better at (1) Matching people's skills with your organization's needs; (2) Creating realistic but inspiring plans for growth; (3) Customizing your approach; (4) Prompting with questions before you dispense advice; (5) Providing the support your employees need to achieve peak performance; (6) Giving them feedback they'll actually apply; (7) Tapping their learning styles to make greater progress; (8) Giving people room to grapple with problems and discover solutions; (9) Engaging your employees and fostering independence. Buy It Now |
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