Created for newsletter@newslettercollector.com |  Web Version
April 6, 2021
CONNECT WITH SMARTBRIEF LinkedInFacebookTwitter
SmartBrief on Your Career
SIGN UP ⋅   SHARE
 
Getting Ahead
LinkedIn users are being lured by phishing attacks disguised as bogus employment opportunities tailored to their skillsets, per analysis from cybersecurity company eSentire. Malware groups reportedly customize their attacks with scraped data from a profile to convince users to execute a more_eggs backdoor script, which lets hackers access devices and inject malware.
Full Story: Dark Reading (free registration) (4/5) 
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
Is it normal to not be ready for normal?
(WPA Pool/Getty Images)
As vaccines roll out and case counts decline, people in many regions are looking ahead to a return of pre-pandemic life: in-person visits, restaurant dining and regular travel. But if you find yourself feeling anxious at the prospect of resuming normal social interactions, you're not alone. "Re-entry fear" is normal after a year of letting social skills slip, psychology experts say. It's important to know your limits -- and accept that they may have changed. Take your time, start small and acknowledge your own feelings of grief and frustration.
Full Story: The Associated Press (4/3),  National Public Radio (4/4),  The Santa Fe New Mexican (tiered subscription model) (4/3) 
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
Early in his career, Indeed CEO Chris Hyams quit his job to become a rock star -- and failed -- but wouldn't change that decision for anything. In this interview, Hyams shares how he found his love for computers before the dot-com industry took off and how he works every day to help people get one of the five million jobs listed on the job site, which has more jobs now on it than before the pandemic.
Full Story: The Wall Street Journal (4/5) 
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
The process of making a decision and what happens afterward can be more important than the decision itself, writes Jennifer Davis, Learfield IMG College's chief marketing and communication officer. "If making a choice is an act of convergence, immediately the tasks diverge, into multiple workstreams, across multiple groups, functions, levels, and geographies to make the decision right," she writes.
Full Story: Graziadio Business Review (Pepperdine University) (4/2) 
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
Making the Connection
Not everyone is motivated by the big picture at work, so leaders must find new ways to keep their teams motivated. Strategies to keep your team moving include: Create and celebrate quick wins, encourage work location changes, and make contests with rewards personalized to the winner, writes Bob Van Rossum, president of MarketPro.
Full Story: Business 2 Community (4/5) 
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
The Landscape
Amazon overshadows S&P 500 with hires
(Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images)
Amazon captured the top spot for employee hires among the S&P 500 list of businesses filing annual reports between July 1 and March 31 with 500,000 additions to its global payroll, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis. Beth Galetti, Amazon's senior vice president for human resources, says the hiring enabled the company "to deliver essential items for our customers during a critical time, but also provide an opportunity to those who lost their jobs or saw their hours cut because of COVID."
Full Story: The Wall Street Journal (4/4) 
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
Your Next Challenge
Smart leaders manage conflict well by reframing it as a misalignment and using their boss as a mentor and guide, among other tactics, writes Marlene Chism. "Although no leader enjoys conflict, competent leaders understand that conflict is not the problem: Mismanagement is," she writes.
Full Story: SmartBrief/Leadership (4/5) 
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
The Water Cooler
A sunken US warship was found deep, deep underwater
The USS Johnston from the Battle of Leyte Gulf in World War II has been identified on the floor of the Philippine Sea. Only 141 of the 327-man crew survived when the Fletcher-class destroyer -- the deepest shipwreck ever found at more than 20,000 feet below the surface -- sank during battle with nearly two dozen Japanese ships.
Full Story: Navy Times (4/3) 
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
Sharing SmartBrief on Your Career with your network keeps the quality of content high and these newsletters free.
Help Spread the Word
SHARE
Or copy and share your personalized link:
smartbrief.com/yourcareer/?referrerId=hCgswturix
The path of sound credence is through the thick forest of skepticism.
George Jean Nathan,
drama critic, magazine editor
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
 
SmartBrief publishes more than 200 free industry newsletters - Browse our portfolio
Sign Up  |    Update Profile  |    Advertise with SmartBrief
Unsubscribe  |    Privacy policy
CONTACT US: FEEDBACK  |    ADVERTISE
SmartBrief, Inc.®, 555 11th ST NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC 20004