Sound more confident at work: Ditch these 5 phrases
The higher you climb the corporate ladder, the more you need to sound the part. If you use any of these five phrases, you could be holding yourself back.
The higher you climb the corporate ladder, the more you need to sound the part. If you use any of these five phrases, you could be holding yourself back.
Storyteller. Content gatherer. Alchemist. Are you able to handle all three? Kleenex, Stantec and Roche turned corporate lead into gold when they took on these challenges.
So, you and Simon both saw The Psychedelic Furs in concert. Great. Talk about that during your coffee break, and then make other friends to hang with on the weekends.
Talent management all too often takes a back seat to other workplace priorities. Without your top performers, though, your organization will founder. Heed these warnings.
Does video intimidate you? Are infographics starting to bore you? Check out this list of ideas for new ways to attract your audience through visuals.
As the year comes to an end, so begins our countdown of our top stories of the year.
You may deliver these familiar comments with the best of intentions, but that’s not how your listener will interpret them.
Vague subject lines, poor grammar and copying too many people on a message can ruin your professional reputation. Don’t let bad email etiquette hold you back—stop these annoying behaviors.
If you think it’s all about putting in 60-hour weeks, you’re going to be surprised—by some of these characteristics and behaviors, at least.
When you’re dealing with a reporter, are you flexible about a story your client wants handled in a certain way? Are you honest about your clients? If so, you’re warming journalists’ hearts.
Have you ever worried that an audience member would pose a question for which you don’t know the answer? If so, have these responses ready.
The English language changes constantly, but sometimes it retains sayings that use words and meanings that have fallen out of favor. That leads to inadvertent mistakes.
The online helpers determine your peak efficiency times and your professional strengths, as well as helping you gauge or format your content.
Working extra hours, maintaining a work/life balance in the office and coasting a bit more with each promotion are common fallacies in today’s working world, the author asserts.
In an age when customers are clicking on only 4 percent of emails, marketers have it rough. Try these tactics to write compelling messages with which your recipients actually want to engage.