CREATE ACCOUNT

FORGOT YOUR DETAILS?

MM SELF-IMPROVEMENT COMMUNITY POSTS

This Community is for self-improvement professionals, peers & consumers exchanging experiences of mentoring, coaching, programs, webinars, events, tools, websites.

To participate we invite you to go to our Forum

Comments may be moderated.

by Brian Moran for American Express: If you’re ready to “get your butt off the couch and get into the game of life,” it’s time to get inspired by this successful entrepreneur and leadership expert. The first time I read I Feel Great and You Will Too! by Pat Croce was shortly after it came

 

by George Kao If I started over today, this is what I would do… Gratefully, I now have a full-time coaching business. But if I were starting from scratch today, here are three simple strategies I would implement Learn more from George here  

 

by Stephen Balzac for ivyexec.com Have you ever worked with a Prince Charming? Someone who could tell you that “everything’s alright,” while the company was at risk of going down in flames? Below is my own experience with a Prince Charming who we will name “Joe,” and how you can determine if your company is

 

by Elaine Pofeldt for ivyexec.com It’s easy to talk yourself out of making a career change if you’re in your forties or beyond, by telling yourself it isn’t practical or realistic. Not so fast! A recent study by the American Institute of Economic Research, an independent research firm in Great Barrington, Mass., had some good

 

How To Find A Mentor In Your Career

Tuesday, 23 June 2015 by

by Ryan Clements for ivyexec.com No one ever succeeds alone. We are all influenced by other people, and the fastest way to get what we want in our career often involves modeling the effective attitudes and actions of others. We can learn what successful people do and think by reading books, watching inspirational videos and

 

by Elena Bajic, Founder and CEO of Ivy Exec, a selective online career network for top performers Many job candidates believe finding their next step on the career ladder is a numbers game. They apply for as many appropriate, next-level-up positions as possible and figure the odds are they’ll wind up with something good—and if

 
TOP