Works Well with Others: An Outsider's Guide to Shaking Hands, Shutting Up, Handling Jerks, and Other Crucial Skills in Business That No One Ever Teaches You
Ryan Schleicher
October 08, 2015
Ross McCannon sets out to get us passed the awkwardness and stress or workplace living.
Our book giveaway this week is featuring Ross McCammon's new book, Works Well With Others. To give you another taste of the book, we thought we'd share with you...
These were little things. But they added up to a lot of awkwardness and stress.
But I eventually got more comfortable on the big stage (... and on the street). Comfortable enough that I've written a book about my experiences navigating a new job, a new career, and, to a great extent, a new life.
Works Well With Others is about the social aspects of the professional landscape that no one ever talks about—things that produce anxiety but don't need to. I think you might enjoy it. I did. I mean, I only read it eight times. But I laughed and I learned.
I almost cried. But that might have been allergies.
Thanks for taking a look. Or at least putting it at the top of the pile.The good pile, I hope. Not the bad pile.
A NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR, ROSS McCAMMON
When I landed from my first big job in New York about ten years ago, I didn't feel ready. Not socially, at least. It was the little things that I couldn't figure out. How to speak in a meeting full of smart, competitive people. What to order at the bar after work. Why cars in New York honk at pedestrians.These were little things. But they added up to a lot of awkwardness and stress.
But I eventually got more comfortable on the big stage (... and on the street). Comfortable enough that I've written a book about my experiences navigating a new job, a new career, and, to a great extent, a new life.
Works Well With Others is about the social aspects of the professional landscape that no one ever talks about—things that produce anxiety but don't need to. I think you might enjoy it. I did. I mean, I only read it eight times. But I laughed and I learned.
I almost cried. But that might have been allergies.
Thanks for taking a look. Or at least putting it at the top of the pile.The good pile, I hope. Not the bad pile.