Don't avoid new career challenges | Nothing can ruin a career like these bad habits | The ins and outs of business card etiquette
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February 20, 2017
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Getting Ahead
Don't avoid new career challenges
Professionals who have begun a new challenge in the past two years reported positive benefits for doing so, with 88% of those surveyed saying the experience has been beneficial. "So, if you are considering giving up on your latest effort at self-improvement because it's just too hard or you don't have enough time, these survey results might offer a new incentive to stick with it," Karen Firestone writes.
Harvard Business Review online (tiered subscription model) (2/17) 
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Nothing can ruin a career like these bad habits
Among the bad habits that professionals sometimes exhibit at work, few are as toxic to your career potential as cutting corners on your work or failing to follow through or meet deadlines. You should also be careful not to exhibit a negative attitude and be willing to take responsibility for your mistakes, writes Marguerite Ward.
CNBC (2/17) 
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GW's 100% online Master's in Organizational Leadership and Learning program teaches students the practical skills needed to inspire success while developing and leading teams in diverse work settings. Learn More
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Making the Connection
The ins and outs of business card etiquette
Business card
(Pixabay)
Business cards are always good to have, but don't hand them to someone right away when you meet them, writes Marcelle Yeager. You should also avoid giving them to everyone you meet or handing out multiple cards to one person unless they ask for them.
U.S. News & World Report (2/16) 
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The Landscape
Calif. airport offers citizenship services to immigrant employees
San Jose International Airport in California is the first airport in the country to join a project with New American Workforce designed to help eligible immigrants apply for citizenship. Officials say about 800 of the airport's workers could be eligible to participate in the program.
San Jose Mercury News (Calif.) (free registration) (2/15) 
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Your Next Challenge
United Shore CEO on what matters for job seekers
Specific skills that can be taught fairly easily and the overall quality of your resume are not that important when companies are hiring, says United Shore CEO Mat Ishbia. Instead, Ishbia said his company looks for a positive attitude and a strong work ethic.
Business Insider (2/16) 
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Balancing Yourself
Learning boasts numerous life benefits
Reading
(Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images)
If you make the effort to continue learning, you'll not only be more successful at work, but also healthier and well-liked, writes Jessica Stillman. The best way to ensure that you continue to learn throughout your life is to schedule time for learning activities each week.
Inc. online (free registration) (2/17) 
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Most Read
The Water Cooler
Insects get creative to survive the winter
Most insects become dormant in winter, but others burrow into the ground or find shelter in tree trunks and elsewhere. Some species adapt to the colder temperatures by internally producing sugars to avoid freezing, while others migrate to warmer regions for the winter.
SmithsonianMag.com (2/15) 
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The important thing is this: to be able at any moment to sacrifice what we are for what we could become.
Charles Du Bos,
writer and critic
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