Search Results - "Your Friends
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The secret power of middle children : how middleborns can harness their unexpected and remarkable abilities /
Published 2011Table of Contents: “…The myth of middle child -- How do you know if you're a middle child? -- Middle children are brilliant negotiators -- Middle children are trailblazers -- Middle children are justice seekers -- Middle children in the workplace -- Middle children as friends and lovers -- Parenting a middle -- Middle children as parents -- Looking to the future.…”
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When a loved one falls ill : how to be an effective patient advocate /
Published 2011Table of Contents: “…Get a 'tude -- Get an advocate -- Issue a call to general quarters -- Revel in laughter and the love of friends -- Push the envelope -- Take care of the home front -- Keep on fighting -- Expect the unexpected -- Make your life worth living -- Recognize the gifts you've been given -- Epilogue -- The Monaghan Manual -- The Advocate's Notebook.…”
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Social media analytics : effective tools for building, intrepreting, and using metrics /
Published 2012Table of Contents: “…The conundrum of social media: where's the ROI? -- Targeting your customers: using data to find your customer -- Tracking international: multicultural social media -- Online social intelligence: extracting signal from noise -- Friends, fans, and followers: determining their worth -- Influence: finding it and measuring it -- Scorecarding: collecting and understanding social media data -- Advanced social analytics: implementation and monitoring scorecards -- Going beyond monitoring: content creation and content tracking -- Monitoring tools and technologies: the limits of what we can collect -- Convergence: mashing up data from disparate sources -- Where we're going: the future of social media analytics.…”
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Stop talking, start communicating : counterintuitive secrets to success in business and in life /
Published 2013Table of Contents: “…Back up to go forward : we are neglecting three essential communication habits -- Invert your expectations : expect less from technology and more from people -- Lose your friends : important relationships are being trumped by people you barely know -- Stop talking : hyper-communication is the problem, not the solution -- Don't be yourself : it's an excuse for neanderthal behavior -- Play dumb : don't pin the tail on the donkey -- Question your questions : questions make many conversations worse -- Ignore your (tell-tale) heart : it wants you to talk without a plan -- Don't solve problems : you are messing around with far too many issues already -- Blow things off : protect what matters by letting go of what doesn't -- Let difficult people win : stop trying to impose your will on tough communicators -- Respond with weakness : bring a stick to a knife fight -- Overlook people -- Change the underlying conditions, not the person -- Take things off the table : just because you can talk about something doesn't mean that you should -- Be boring : most conversations are exciting for all the wrong reasons -- Give people what they want : few things connect like a story.…”
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Stop talking, start communicating : counterintuitive secrets to success in business and in life /
Published 2013Table of Contents: “…Back up to go forward : we are neglecting three essential communication habits -- Invert your expectations : expect less from technology and more from people -- Lose your friends : important relationships are being trumped by people you barely know -- Stop talking : hyper-communication is the problem, not the solution -- Don't be yourself : it's an excuse for neanderthal behavior -- Play dumb : don't pin the tail on the donkey -- Question your questions : questions make many conversations worse -- Ignore your (tell-tale) heart : it wants you to talk without a plan -- Don't solve problems : you are messing around with far too many issues already -- Blow things off : protect what matters by letting go of what doesn't -- Let difficult people win : stop trying to impose your will on tough communicators -- Respond with weakness : bring a stick to a knife fight -- Overlook people -- Change the underlying conditions, not the person -- Take things off the table : just because you can talk about something doesn't mean that you should -- Be boring : most conversations are exciting for all the wrong reasons -- Give people what they want : few things connect like a story.…”
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Johns Hopkins medicine patients' guide to lymphoma /
Published 2011Table of Contents: “…First steps-I've been diagnosed with lymphoma -- My team-meeting your treatment team -- Taking action-comprehensive treatment considerations -- Be prepared-the side effects of treatment -- Straight talk-communication with family, friends, and coworkers -- Maintaining balance-work and life during treatment -- Surviving lymphoma-re-engaging in mind and body health after treatment -- Managing risk-what if my cancer comes back? …”
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Dad is fat /
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