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Confessions of an Introvert

The Shy Girl's Guide to Career, Networking and Getting the Most Out of Life

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Confessions of an Introvert is a must-read for any introvert seeking to excel in business and get the most out of life. Are you an introvert who wants to succeed in the business world? Do you:

Avoid unnecessary social interaction?

Keep to yourself or to your small group of friends?

Seek out time alone?

Confessions of an Introvert offers you practical advice, interspersed with real-life stories, that will help you overcome your shyness and find ways to have a satisfying future in the corporate world. Packed with valuable insights and personal anecdotes, Confessions of an Introvert will teach you:

Why business networking is the key to professional growth and how even the shyest person can learn how to network

That a little self-promotion goes a long way in showing others how good a businessperson you are

How to communicate with people in a way that is comfortable to you but still gets the results you need

That being an introvert is just a part of who you are and not a serious roadblock to your success

Confessions of an Introvert is a must-read for any introvert seeking to excel in business and get the most out of life.

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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 2, 2009
      Introverts will find more niche marketing than useful guidance in this slapdash self-help. Weir's suggestions are bland, obvious, often irrelevant and sometimes plain juvenile; helpful exercises include filling out the chart, "What do I want out of my life?" and selecting words from the "I Am vs. I Will Be" columns. Weir's observation that we get paralyzed by our routines is viable, but the model of success she provides-breaking out of her black boot routine by buying a pair of platinum shoes-would be laughable if it weren't so unhelpful. Unfortunately, all of Weir's examples come from her own life, diminishing the authority and practicality of her work, and many of her solutions (like hiring someone to buy the groceries and organize her closet) involve throwing money at the problem, hardly a viable solution for a reader still looking for her break. If, as she says repeatedly, Weir has such a wide circle of contacts, she probably should have used them to get some perspective-or at least some better anecdotes.

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  • Kindle Book
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Kindle restrictions

Languages

  • English

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