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As a manager, you have many responsibilities. Keeping track of your employees' careers can be a burden. Your top employees are your pathway to growth and profit. They have many jobs, so treating them as valued partners is critical. You are responsible for helping them find their career path. Developing your talent is a profit-defining process. This book contains a simple, quick process for developing the talent working for you. You'll discover the secret to staff engagement, how to partner with staff, and how to collaborate on career journeys. You will learn how to adapt career-management…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
As a manager, you have many responsibilities. Keeping track of your employees' careers can be a burden. Your top employees are your pathway to growth and profit. They have many jobs, so treating them as valued partners is critical. You are responsible for helping them find their career path. Developing your talent is a profit-defining process. This book contains a simple, quick process for developing the talent working for you. You'll discover the secret to staff engagement, how to partner with staff, and how to collaborate on career journeys. You will learn how to adapt career-management strategies to your millennials through baby boomers while helping them create personal career maps. There's more to talent development than the obligatory end-of-year performance review. With stronger staff, you will be able to spend less time rehiring and more time hitting your organizational goals.
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Autorenporträt
Ana Russell grew up in Bogotá, Colombia. Her family moved to the United States when she was a teen. After obtaining her bachelor's in chemical engineering from the University of Oklahoma, she relocated to Austin, Texas. She works in a Tech company while also taking care of her two wonderful boys. Two Boys on a Sailboat was inspired by the questions her older son would ask her, as they did their day-to-day activities. When they were swinging in the park, the swings were not just swings, but airplanes, and their blocks were not mere toys, but bricks to build a whole city. It made her think how lucky she was to be able to be invited into their imagination. She wanted to share their world with the world, while also sharing a piece of her culture which she tries hard to keep alive.