基本信息·出版社:Gotham ·页码:288 页 ·出版日期:2004年08月 ·ISBN:1592400736 ·条形码:9781592400737 ·版本:2004-08-19 ·装帧:精装 ·开本 ...
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If You've Raised Kids, You Can Manage Anything: Leadership Begins At Home |
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If You've Raised Kids, You Can Manage Anything: Leadership Begins At Home |
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基本信息·出版社:Gotham
·页码:288 页
·出版日期:2004年08月
·ISBN:1592400736
·条形码:9781592400737
·版本:2004-08-19
·装帧:精装
·开本:20开 Pages Per Sheet
·外文书名:家庭领导力: 跟家长学管理
内容简介 Book DescriptionThe acclaimed author of The Price of Motherhood applies the lessons of parenting to the business world, blowing away the myth that the job of raising children is not “real” work. After reading numerous bestselling management books, Ann Crittenden noticed that the advice was shockingly similar to that found in parenting books. After more than one hundred interviews, Ann also discovered that everyone felt the skills they learned as a parent made them better, more effective managers and workers. If You’ve Raised Kids, You Can Manage Anything illustrates the countless lessons learned from raising a child that are directly applicable to the workplace.
With insight from prominent women in a number of fields, Crittenden discusses how child-rearing:
o Calls for multitasking and sharpens focus in the midst of constant distractions
o Enhances interpersonal skills, including win-win negotiation
o Develops the ability to motivate and empower others
o Requires a keen sense of fair play and integrity
Full of positive, real-life stories and exploring whether corporate culture has begun to recognize the value of parenting, If You’ve Raised Kids, You Can Manage Anything is a groundbreaking book that validates what working mothers have known all along.
From Publishers WeeklyCrittenden (The Price of Motherhood) offers an engaging look at working mothers and how their parenting skills make them more adept managers. Based on interviews with 100 parents (mostly women) who were the primary caregivers in their family, the book offers an intriguing look at the changing face of American executives. Quoting her subjects directly, Crittenden illustrates how being a parent helps someone be a more creative, if sometimes unconventional, manager. One woman talked about a producer who shouted obscenities at her. The woman did nothing, viewing the behavior as the equivalent of a toddler's temper tantrum, and the producer apologized the next day. Sometimes, parents have added knowledge that has a direct impact on their job. Working parents in any field will readily identify with many of the scenarios discussed in this book by some visible CEOs including CNBC's Pamela Thomas-Graham, Oxygen's Geraldine Laybourne and actress Lindsay Crouse. Crittenden concludes that mothers are everywhere and they're "slowly changing the work world—its language, its atmosphere, and, more glacially, its norms." The book's theme is positive and its message inspiring. No doubt, the book will generate buzz because of the subject matter even if there's little startling to be found here.
From BooklistLeadership begins at home, Crittenden intones in this book that expresses the feeling of parents (mostly mothers) that if they can deal with the demands of raising a family, they can deal with virtually anything the business world can throw at them. Author of The Price of Motherhood (2001), Crittenden deconstructs the talents and skills needed for successful parenting and compares them to the talents and skills needed to succeed in a variety of professions. Based on interviews with 100 primary caregivers who have also been active in careers in business, law, politics, academia, and nonprofits, the book highlights skills that are directly translatable from parenting to professionalism. It focuses on four categories: multitasking, interpersonal skills, growing human capabilities, and habits of integrity. A conscientious parent has all the skills that corporations claim to value in their employees, including time management and a keen sense of fair play. Profiling many of her interview subjects, Crittenden offers a perspective on parenting that defies corporate biases against workers who are focused on child rearing.
Vanessa Bush
Book Dimension length: (cm)23.6 width:(cm)15.5
作者简介 Ann Crittenden is an award-winning journalist and the author of three previous books, including The Price of Motherhood, a New York Times Notable Book of 2001. Nominated for the Pulitzer Prize, she has written for Fortune, The New York Times, Newsweek, and many other national publications. She lectures before dozens of diverse organizations each year and is on the board of the International Center for Research on Women.
专业书评 Readers of Doran's amusing memoir about relocating from Los Angeles to the tiny Tuscan town of Cambione must first suspend their disbelief that a person in his right mind would actively resist such an opportunity. But resist Doran does—and when his sculptor wife buys a ramshackle, 300-year-old house there on a whim, she must drag him kicking and screaming out of his high-stress, low-reward life as a Hollywood writer and producer (among his hits:
Who's the Boss? and
The Wonder Years). What follows is rather predictable: the house turns out to be in even worse shape than anyone imagined, and the construction crew has no "discernable pattern" when it comes to showing up for work. Lines like "Things happen in Italy that don't happen anywhere else on earth. A magical friendliness is spread all over the place like pixie dust" don't do much to distinguish Doran's story from other books of its ilk, but the author's grudging optimism and dead-on ear for dialogue certainly do. Doran's brutally funny accounts of tangles with everyone (including the mayor, the police, an inefficient landlord and Doran's long-suffering wife) are enough to keep readers hooked until the last page. It may not be a surprise that he lives happily ever after, but how he gets there is certainly worth the ride.
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