New Girl On the Job: Advice from the Trenches


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Product Description Let's face it--the work world is tough. There are a million other young women out there who do what you do, just as well as you do it. Competition for the best jobs is fierce, office politics are tougher than you thought, and the road to success is not always an easy one. So how will you handle the pressure of your first real job and climb the ladder to success? Through interviews with some of the best and brightest businesswomen in the country such as Soledad O'Brien, anchor of CNN's American Morning, and Jill Herzig, executive editor of Glamour magazine, meticulous research, and one-on-one chats with hundreds of New Girls starting out in their careers, New Girl on the Job provides you with all of the information you always wanted to know about workplace success but were afraid to ask. Inside, you'll find valuable tips and information you can put to use right away: Assistantized--How not to get stuck with all the administrative tasks The Sweet Spot--Finding the middle ground between bitch and doormat It's Just Business--How to develop the ultimate office tool--a thick skin Mistakes Happen--How to deal with them when they do Perpetual Perfectionist--Why staying late at the office could sabotage your career
Spotlight Customer Reviews:
Summary:
FAKE REVIEWS suspicion
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Comment:
Since most reviews were written around May-June 2007, I suspect they were fake. Only the two reviews from September 2007 seem credible, and they give lower ratings than the fake ones. I'm going to check this book out from the library.
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Summary:
Great Advice for Young Career Women
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Comment:
This book is a great read for young career women. It has excellent advice and is extremely relatable. The interviews with other women in the workforce are fantastic! The workforce examples could have been more diverse. It seemed concentrated on one or two industries. Also each section could have had more descriptions and examples. After each chapter was over, I found I wanted more!
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Summary:
Seligson has cracked the code for New Girls
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Comment:
I love this book--read it cover to cover and found it hard to put down. It's a must-read for all ambitious young women and an utterly fresh, insightful refresher course for veterans. "New Girl on the Job" is my newest favorite gift list item. Give it to your friends, sisters, nieces, and daughters--I have. We all should have had Seligson's book when we were starting out. Oh, and clearly Seligson is no longer The New Girl. Can't wait to read her upcoming books. ~ Dr. Debra Condren, author of amBITCHous, a woman's guide to reclaiming ambition as a virtue, not a dirty word amBITCHous: (def.) A Woman Who: 1. Makes more money 2. has more power 3. gets the recognition she deserves 4. has the determination to go after her dreams and; founder, Manhattan Business Coaching and the Women's Business Alliance.
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Summary:
Good, practical advice for young women in the work force
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Comment:
Although I'm clearly not in the demographic that this book has targeted -- young women just entering the work force -- I work in an industry that is, by many estimates, 75 percent female.
I found this book to offer good, solid advice that in many cases would apply to new employees of both genders. There is a good chapter on how to deal with a bad boss. Seligson is especially strong when she advises her readers to be unafraid to be self-promoters at the right moment and to "always be thinking beyond your job title."
Seligson tailors some of her advice to specific stereotypes and issues that can disproportionately beset young women. How to fend off romantic advances by a superior is an obvious one; other, less obvious issues include how to stay away from harmful office gossip and how to avoid being "assistant-ized" -- unconsciously placed into a pigeonhole as a useful assistant rather than someone with substantive solutions to business problems.
This book is easy to read and written in a clear, workmanlike style. I can't give it five stars, though, because of some occasional grammatical errors and because of some tone-deafness in matters of language. Seligson recommends that instead of telling a boss that "I'm feeling like I might have trouble meeting my deadline," an employee could say, "I have reassessed my project deliverables." Well, no, don't say that -- not if you want anyone to understand you.
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Summary:
Excellent guidebook for young women enterting the workplace
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Comment:
I wish I had had access to New Girl On The Job: Advice from the Trenches before applying for my first job. High school did not include work-readiness classes. Our graduation keynote speaker proclaimed that life was so hard we "would not make it, but become long-term failures." He told us we had no chance at all during a time of war in the Mideast and parts of Asia. Unfortunately, many of my class did fail in the workplace, especially the women, because of lack of preparation and support.
Ms. Seligson's book illustrates practical ways to avoid such career failures and how to ensure women's success in the world of work. She took her own horror of being first ill-trained and then fired from her first job, turning it into an effective lesson for new workers. This book arms the new workforce with a strong first step toward success to stand against lack of information and support, discrimination, isolation, and bullying. It took me 20 years to learn this the hard way.
The author thoroughly interviewed workingwomen of all ages in order to create an encyclopedia of experiences, with instructions regarding how to expand the good and stem the tide of the horrific. Information was willingly provided by women such as Soledad O'Brien of CNN's American Morning and the cosmetics tycoon Bobbi Brown, as well as newer recruits on the front lines of the career battle. Hannah pulls no punches: a sense of entitlement, gossip, and see-through clothes are big-time no-no's on the job; but so are bad bosses and sexual harassment. Hannah gives directions, "Takeaway" notes to keep handy, and even the correct language to use at work.
If such books as New Girl On The Job had been available in my earlier years, perhaps our keynote speaker would have said, "Work is serious but rewarding and you must leave part of the child behind and embrace the adult inside yourself. Older workers, both women and men, will be there to help guide you."
Armchair Interviews says: All women in high school, college, or transition from disability, divorce or public assistance will consider this book as gold.
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