Set boundaries when working from home | Don't hog the conversation at networking events | Labor Dept. reports strongest wage growth since 2009
Created for newsletter@newslettercollector.com |  Web Version
 
November 7, 2018
CONNECT WITH SMARTBRIEF LinkedInFacebookTwitter
SmartBrief on Your Career
SIGN UP ⋅   FORWARD
Getting Ahead
Set boundaries when working from home
Create boundaries when working from home and make sure others in the house understand those in order to stay productive. Be aware of your most common distractions, such as TV or engaging in non-work activities, and design your boundaries around eliminating them during work hours.
Fast Company online (11/5) 
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
Making the Connection
Don't hog the conversation at networking events
Be an active listener and show genuine interest in the person you're engaging with at networking events, rather than scanning the room for your next target or hogging the conversation. Ask easy questions that gently steer the conversation in the direction you're seeking, suggests Kitty Boitnott.
Forbes (11/6) 
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
Give up your reserved parking space
Give up your reserved parking space
(Mladen Antonov/AFP/Getty Images)
It's not uncommon for leaders climbing the corporate ladder to develop an inflated ego, and this can negatively affect how a leader learns from mistakes, as well as narrow their vision, suggests executive Jennifer Woo. Avoid an inflated ego by consciously practicing humility and letting go of unnecessary perks, such as a company parking space, that may be feeding your ego.
Harvard Business Review online (tiered subscription model) (11/6) 
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
 
The Landscape
Labor Dept. reports strongest wage growth since 2009
The Labor Department has released wage-growth data that show private workers make an average of $27.30 hourly, the strongest annual gain since 2009. Europe also has seen wage growth, but an arrangement that gives most workers a "13th salary" makes it tough to see to what extent pay has improved.
The Washington Post (tiered subscription model) (11/5) 
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
Your Next Challenge
Best practices for choosing between competing offers
Be polite with all companies involved and aim to commit to a position within a couple days, but no longer than a week, as was found acceptable by data collected by CV-Library. Avoid pitting companies against each other or basing the decision solely on pay, suggests recruiter Andrew Cruickshank.
The Telegraph (London) (tiered subscription model) (11/6) 
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
Balancing Yourself
Stress is as bad as secondhand smoke, research says
Work stressors, such as more than 40 hours per week or high productivity demands, are as harmful to workers' health as secondhand smoke, research suggests. Work-related and personal stress causes increased cortisol in the body, and this incrementally leads to a multitude of physical and mental health issues.
Psychology Today (11/5) 
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
The Water Cooler
Scientists test flu vaccine containing llama antibodies
Scientists test flu vaccine containing llama antibodies
(Joe Maher/Getty Images)
According to new research published in the academic journal Science, the antibodies in llama blood can be used as a protection from the influenza virus. Testing was successful in using the new vaccine on mice, so a nasal spray made for humans would theoretically work successfully as well.
Popular Science (11/5) 
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
 
  
  
All serious daring starts from within.
Eudora Welty,
writer
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
  
  
Sign Up
SmartBrief offers 200+ newsletters
Advertise
Learn more about the SmartBrief audience
Subscriber Tools:
Contact Us:
Jobs Contact  -  jobhelp@smartbrief.com
Advertising  -  Laura Engel
Editor  -  Janet Kahler
Mailing Address:
SmartBrief, Inc.®, 555 11th ST NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC 20004
© 1999-2018 SmartBrief, Inc.®
Privacy Policy (updated May 25, 2018) |  Legal Information