Former FBI agent Robin Dreeke shares some tips on reading coworkers and clients.
Author’s archive
Book Review: “Kill Reply All: A Modern Guide to Online Etiquette, from Social Media to Work to Love”
In "Kill Reply All," author Victoria Turk serves up tips on how to communicate better via email and phones.
Author Tiffany Shlain makes the case for taking a weekly break from your phone.
After decades of avoiding or discriminating against the LGBT community, most corporations have realized that being a public advocate for LGBT rights makes business sense, writes author Carlos A. Ball.
The Ugly Truth" is that few organizations teach women of color how to deal with mostly-white workplaces, writes author Minda Harts.
To build the best staff and foster cooperation, you'll need to understand the four "primary personality types," writes author Thomas Erickson
“Becoming a Private Investigator (Masters at Work series)” by Howie Kahn c.2019, Simon & Schuster $18.00 / $25.00 Canada 144 pages You need to pick up one of those
Author Jean Chatzky urges readers to examine why they spend or save as they do.
Author Jason Hanson thinks that business and espionage have a lot in common.
Toys R Us, Sears, Macy’s, wow. What’s going on? Better question, as author Mark Pilkington asks in “Retail Therapy,” how can we stop it?
Last year’s sales were down at your business, and maybe that’s a good thing, explains author Paul Jarvis.
Authors Jay Baer and Daniel Lemin offer many, many case studies to nicely illustrate how to make people rave about your business by being slightly, smartly outrageous on a long-term basis.
This is a great book for the college-bound or for a new grad. Women who are returning to the workforce will get a lot out of it, as will those for whom indecision is the default mode.
If it’s your job to keep a finger on the checkbook, you’ll enjoy this book because it makes cents and you’ll laugh. If you’re not deep into money matters, then “None of My Business” will hold none of your interest.
Author Lyons says, in many ways, that chaos, brain-altering, and new ways of working are not working and that it’s time to step back. CEOs who’ve come around to that same conclusion may be ready to see what’s inside this book.
You get emails at all hours and there’s no time left for you, so read “How to Not Always Be Working,” by Marlee Grace and see how to disconnect.
Author A.J. Jacobs dissects gratitude with the help of science and research. As it turns out, being thankful is good for us and offers benefits that you may not realize.
If you are completely at a loss as to how to laser-point your business toward customers, or if you want to consider a new angle on an old idea, this might be your book.
There’s a right way and a wrong way to accept a job, author Tiffany Pham explains, but you should also know when to ask for more and when to take less.
Is jail a place to rehabilitate, or a place to please investors? Can it be both? Or neither?