Digitized at Georgetown University Law Library
Thriving at Work: What School Doesn't Teach You
โ Scribed by Dennis Mark; Michael Dam
- Publisher
- Marshall Cavendish International
- Year
- 2022
- Tongue
- English
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
"Technical" skills + "Soft" skills = Work and Career Success!
This book is for the young people who are beginning to dip their toes in the professional world as well as current professionals. It provides a proven roadmap to fast-track your career. In the increasingly global workplace of today, being conversant with international business culture is the key to success.
Thriving At Work is a smart and practical guide full of real-world examples and expert advice. Here are skills that are not usually taught in school and can otherwise take years to learn – often the hard way!
Chapters include:
โขHow to Write a Compelling Resume
โขHow to Prepare for Interviews
โขHow to Run and Facilitate Meetings
โขHow to Understand and Use Business Idioms
โขHow to Handle Conflicts
โขHow to Ask for a Raise
โขHow to Work with Your Managers
โขHow to Handle Workplace Politics
"An absolute gem... A personal bootcamp for invaluable soft skills. Every future-ready professional should read this!" ยฌ– Kian Chong Lee, Board Director, BNF/Boston Business School.
โฆ Subjects
Business; Careers; Nonfiction; BUS012000
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The second edition of Charles Fox s bestselling paperback guide, Working with Contracts: What Law School Doesn t Teach You, updates the original edition published in 2002. The perfect resource for new associates, law school students, business people, or anyone who frequently deals with complex contr
<P>During medical training there are certain parts of day-to-day tasks that are not taught at medical school nor inย the traditional referenceย books. There are some skills that medical students are expected to learn by โosmosisโ while on placement and under the guidance of junior doctors. These skill
<p><P>Essential information for all junior doctors.</P><P></P><P>You are close to qualifying or you have already qualified. You are prepared to take on the working world of referrals, hospital jobs and the pager. Medical school taught you clinical anatomy, but possibly not clinical diplomacy. You ha
<P>During medical training there are certain tasks that are not taught at medical school nor in the common reference books. There are some skills that medical students are expected to learn by โosmosisโ. These skills are never officially taught or examined in medical school, butย are, however, a fund