Tips for easing the return to work after vacation | How introverts can enhance their careers | 4 reasons recipients warm to cold messages
Created for [email protected] |  Web Version
July 31, 2019
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Getting Ahead
Tips for easing the return to work after vacation
Prior to your vacation, meet with colleagues to review tasks requiring attention during your absence, writes Kathleen Murray Harris. Don't overwhelm your first day back by scheduling a slew of meetings or trying to respond to every email, she adds.
Real Simple online (7/19) 
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How introverts can enhance their careers
How introverts can enhance their careers
(Pixabay)
Introverts can give a boost to their careers by mastering body language to convey confidence and openness and making it a point to speak first when encountering colleagues, writes career expert Karen Burns. If introverts don't speak up for themselves in the office, they may miss opportunities for advancement and new projects, she advises.
The Seattle Times (tiered subscription model) (7/26) 
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Making the Connection
4 reasons recipients warm to cold messages
A recipient of a cold message is more likely to reply if you mention mutual friends or common interests and keep your subject line to three words or fewer, says Blair Decembrele, a career expert at LinkedIn. The message should be brief and end with a call to action, Decembrele suggests.
Business Insider (7/24) 
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The Landscape
Survey: Tight US labor market holding back hiring
US companies are struggling to fill key positions amid a tight labor market. Nearly 90% of firms are having difficulty hiring for high-skill positions, compared with 78% in April, according to a survey by the National Association for Business Economics.
Bloomberg (tiered subscription model) (7/29) 
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Your Next Challenge
These emotional cues indicate it's time for a change
If you're often bored or angry at work, talk to your boss about more interesting assignments and use downtime to develop professionally, writes Gwen Moran. "If the role is no longer laying the groundwork for your longer-term goals, you may have outgrown it," says career coach Sumayya Essack.
Fast Company online (7/26) 
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Focus on trust versus winning to make negotiations easier
People can overcome a lack of confidence when negotiating by focusing on building a rapport with the other party, writes Ranya Al Hussaini. Use the word "we" more often than "I", ask questions to understand their perspective and mirror their verbal and nonverbal cues to build trust, she advises.
Entrepreneur online (7/25) 
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Balancing Yourself
Seek meaning at work instead of happiness
Happiness is only a fleeting emotional state, while purpose allows work to support a more permanent state of well-being, writes career transition coach Susan Peppercorn. She describes four ways to find meaning at work, including journaling to identify your most-satisfying tasks.
Harvard Business Review online (tiered subscription model) (7/26) 
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The Water Cooler
Research: The Moon is 100M years older than past estimates
Research: The Moon is 100M years older than past estimates
(Pixabay)
The Moon was formed roughly 50 million years after the creation of the solar system, according to a study done by the Institute of Geology and Mineralogy at Germany's University of Cologne. Previous estimates of the Moon's age were believed to be approximately 100M years younger than the new research claims.
PhysOrg (7/29) 
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One sometimes finds what one is not looking for.
Sir Alexander Fleming,
physician, scientist who discovered penicillin
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