Book picks similar to
The Articulate Executive: Learn to Look, ACT, and Sound Like a Leader by Granville N. Toogood
business
leadership
non-fiction
nonfiction
On Speaking Well
Peggy Noonan - 1999
Acclaimed presidential speechwriter Peggy Noonan shares her secrets to becoming a confidence, persuasive speaker demystifying topics including:Finding you own authentic voiceDeveloping a text that interest youAcing the all-important first paragraphUsing logic to move your audienceCreating, developing, and reinventing the "core speech" for diverse audiencesStrengthening your speech with a vital element: humorWinnowing your thought down to the essentialsHandling professional jargon, clichés, and the sound bite syndromePresenting your speech in the best wayCollecting intellectual income--conversing your speech treasuresBreaking all the rules and still succeedingReading for inspiration--how to use the excellence of othersComplete with lessons, tips and memorable examples, On Speaking Well shows us how to create forceful, persuasive, relevant speeches that will resonate with our audiences. Engaging, informative, and always entertaining, this is undoubtedly the authoritative how-to guide for anyone writing or giving a speech
The 12 Bad Habits That Hold Good People Back: Overcoming the Behavior Patterns That Keep You From Getting Ahead
James Waldroop - 2001
The fact is, most people learn their greatest lessons not from their successes but from their mistakes. The 12 Bad Habits That Hold Good People Back offers the flip side to Stephen Covey’s approach in The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, zeroing in on the most common behavior that can impede a career. Based on over twenty years of research as business psychologists, the authors claim that the reasons people fail in their jobs are the same everywhere. Only after these detrimental behaviors have been identified can the patterns that limit career advancement be broken. Using real-life accounts of clients they have worked with at Harvard and as executive coaches at such companies as GTE, Sony, GE, and McKinsey & Co., Waldroop and Butler offer invaluable–and in some cases, job-saving–step-by-step advice on how readers can change their behavior to get back on track. For anyone seeking to achieve his or her career ambitions, The 12 Bad Habits That Hold Good People Back is a powerful tool for unleashing true potential.