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Speaking to aging Americans who want to plan for the future, "New York Times" journalist Weisman reveals everything readers need to know to protect themselves legally and financially in later years.
The follow-up to Marshall Goldsmith's 500,000-copy bestseller The Leader of the Future, Global Leadership: The Next Generation systematically identifies what tomorrow's leaders will need to know, do and believe in order to successfully lead the global enterprise of the future. Drawing on the results of an extraordinary 2-year Accenture study of emerging business leaders, this book shows why the skills of today's global leaders won't be enough--and why tomorrow's leaders won't resemble today's. Goldsmith and his co-authors first identify five new "factors of leadership" and their implications: global thinking, appreciation of diversity, technological savvy, a willingness to partner and an ope...
The New PR Toolkit is a compelling preview of the present and the future of public relations, and a practical roadmap for becoming a strategic communicator.
The author shows how to use emotional intelligence tactics to survive when dealing with toxic managers and other impossible people in the workplace.
An in-depth look at how investors can reduce unnecessary risk by assessing business proposals and building partnerships with portfolio companies.
Recent events prove that you can't always trust the so-called experts. This book gives investors the smarts to pick market-beating stocks on their own. Domash goes beyond the basics, and includes never before published advanced analysis strategies.
In this title, Osenton offers readers a comprehensive programme for increasing profits when they can't increase revenue.
The authors show how to "manage" ingenuity--and "manufacture" the next great idea, in other words they tell what managers need to know about how artists and highly creative people work.
Readers can learn about deceptive financial reporting strategies to help avoid the accounting landmines that can destroy even the most successful business.
One of the world's leading healthcare economists offers a hard-nosed analysisof the frightening reality of soaring healthcare costs--and shows how it willfeel to be at the mercy of a system that can't afford to cure anyone.