Author Jen Welter speaks to businesspeople and their teams, both on and off the field, and to women, with a personal story that’s timely and powerfully unforgettable.
Author’s archive
Research, says author Claudia Chan, shows that there’s a “competitive edge” for businesses that utilize a female workforce to its utmost. Doing so will not only help the individual, but it will resonate socially and culturally.
“Once you realize how important moments can be,” say the authors, “it’s easy to spot opportunities to shape them.”
Do you own the ideas you concoct on your own time? Or can your employer take them for free? Those are just two of the intriguing questions inside “You Don’t Own Me.”
Be ready to survive disaster, both personal and in business. Groom a good support network and be a mentor. Lean toward other women, but don’t make a “gender divide.” And finally, never run away from a job.
If you have anything to protect, or if you merely live and operate in today’s world, here’s your next book. “Rossen to the Rescue” does double-duty: it keeps you safe, and it makes you chuckle.
Remember summer afternoons with a pile of comics and a cold drink by your elbow? It’s hard to believe that the focus of that childhood memory was Big Business then, and even bigger now.
Pitching isn't just selling. It's a superpower.
Retirement lies ahead...someday. But how do you plan and act properly to get to that point?
From a dawn’s-early morning, to a starlit bedtime, author Siobhán Gallagher pokes lightheartedly at the average worker’s existence, which can be sharply hilarious and altogether too familiar.
“The Long Haul” is one of those rare books that peeks inside the trucking and logistics industry—which you almost never hear about—from a voice that’s more upbeat than hammer-down.
Author Mitch Prinstein makes us want to look inward to explain why we’re always invited for Happy Hour (or not), and why co-workers cheer or groan at certain names on team projects.
Who’s the best ad-rep to entrust your ad dollars? Are your ads working — or do you need “The End of Advertising”? What author Andrew Essex ultimately finds — and recommends — really could change the world.
The shirt you’re wearing now, the car you drive, the snacks you like, all purchased with more than just mere choice, which all means something to a marketer.