Preparing For Your Next Promotion?
Ten things to keep in mind
When To Take On And When To Let Go
How can we know?
Loosen The Grips Of Fear
Live your most fulfilling life possible
The Art Of Networking
Tips to become a successful networker
Preparing For Your Next Promotion?
Ten things to keep in mind
When To Take On And When To Let Go
How can we know?
Loosen The Grips Of Fear
Live your most fulfilling life possible
The Art Of Networking
Tips to become a successful networker
The situation would have sent any leader who cared running for aspirin. I asked Mark, the Senior VP, "Are you okay? Are you stressed? What needs to happen next?" Mark responded, "Karin, I don't get stressed. There's no use in that. But as it turns out I'm a stress carrier."
When pundits write or talk about today’s “Interruption Culture,” they bemoan it. They blame it for all kinds of modern ills: Bad manners, inefficiency, lost profits, unhappy relationships, neglected children, inferior scholarship, poor nutrition – you name it. Even if they exaggerate, this much is true: We live in a culture where our time is rarely our own, where Quiet Time is mistaken for idleness and interruptions no longer carry the taint of rudeness or rupture.
Most people have a negative mindset about office politics. The mere mention of the subject stirs up intense emotional reactions, especially with women. While doing research for my book, The Politics of Promotion: How High Achieving Women Get Ahead and Stay Ahead, I interviewed hundreds of women to learn more about their feelings as well as their challenges with politics. The conversations were charged with stories of betrayal, anger, and frustration.