Increase your impact in your next job and accelerate your career with straightforward and proven workplace techniques
In Navigate Your Strategies for Success in New Roles and Promotions, career, organization, and leadership development expert Shveta Miglani delivers an original and exciting new guide to navigating your career. With anecdotes and real-life experiences from leaders at Amazon, the Boston Celtics, Mastercard and Adobe, the author walks you through seven key ways you can make your professional journey more rewarding and successful at every stage.
You'll find easy-to-implement advice you can use today to help you realize your work goals, including setting appropriate, realistic, and measurable goals to working with your organization's proprietary technology as a new hire. You'll discover how to learn about the business of your new company, understand your firm's culture, and how to meet your professional and personal development benchmarks.
Inside the
How to develop and maintain a sense of authenticity in the workplace that allows you to thrive without pretense Strategies for navigating remote, on-site, and hybrid work roles, and how to handle the unique challenges that come with each type of position Ways to build strong relationships with people at your new job, including how to find the right mentors Perfect for professionals stepping into a new role at a new company, Navigate Your Strategies for Success in New Roles and Promotions is also a must-read book for every ambitious person—at any stage of their career—who wants to maximize the impact they have on their organization and make their professional lives more rewarding.
This book is alright... I read it after reading The First 90 Days, and I appreciate the resources it offered for new hires to explore, such as volunteering programs and ERGs, but most of the book is lessons you can learn through internships and student jobs naturally. If you are going into your first EVER corporate/"big" role or internship, I'd recommend this; if you already have a varied depth of experience, either at school or through internships, I'd recommend skipping this one. I think Shveta's writing style is very warm and easy to understand, but I believe the book's material is a little bit too basic for a college grad.