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Building personal networks [videorecording] /

By: Baron, James
Material type: Visual materialSeries: Stanford executive briefings. Publisher: Mill Valley, CA : Kantola Productions, c2005.Description: 1 x DVD ; 56 mins.Subject(s): Interpersonal | Networking | People | Influence
Summary:
Program HighlightsThe connections that are most likely to advance your career. Strategy versus sincerity: how care and concern build credibility. Networks that obsolesce quickly, and those that appreciate over time. It goes without saying that networks can be powerful career tools, helping to drive performance and build influence. But they benefit organizations as well, enhancing productivity and improving communication between disparate business units and functions. Networks also provide cultural benefits, including our identity, well-being and sense of purpose. The best networks allow access to unexpected, non-redundant information by creating ties to a wide spectrum of otherwise unconnected individuals. Therefore, networking requires that you change the way you think about people even in settings where it doesn't appear that anything of value can happen. In this insightful talk, Professor Baron offers concrete suggestions for building an effective and efficient personal network.
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Item type Home library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
DVD University of Wollongong in Dubai
Main Collection
650.1 BA BU (Browse shelf) Available T0037792
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1 x DVD.

Program HighlightsThe connections that are most likely to advance your career. Strategy versus sincerity: how care and concern build credibility. Networks that obsolesce quickly, and those that appreciate over time. It goes without saying that networks can be powerful career tools, helping to drive performance and build influence. But they benefit organizations as well, enhancing productivity and improving communication between disparate business units and functions. Networks also provide cultural benefits, including our identity, well-being and sense of purpose. The best networks allow access to unexpected, non-redundant information by creating ties to a wide spectrum of otherwise unconnected individuals. Therefore, networking requires that you change the way you think about people even in settings where it doesn't appear that anything of value can happen. In this insightful talk, Professor Baron offers concrete suggestions for building an effective and efficient personal network.

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