What's Stopping Me from Getting Ahead?

1st Edition
0071741275 · 9780071741279
An expert management coach with over thirty years of experience helping professionals get to the next stages of their careers, identifies—and helps readers break—the 12 unconscious habits and behaviors that are holding them back from the corner o… Read More
US$18.00
Request Review Copy
Download file to PC or Mac desktops or laptops

Step 1. Download Adobe Digital Editions Both PC and Mac users will need to download Adobe Digital Editions to access their eBook. You can download Adobe Digital Editions at Adobe's website here.


Step 2. Register an Adobe ID if you do not already have one. (This step is optional, but allows you to open the file on multiple devices) Visit account.Adobe.com to register your Adobe account.


Step 3: Authorize Adobe Digital Editions using your Adobe ID. In Adobe Digital Editions, go to the Help menu. Choose “Authorize Computer.”


Step 4: Open your file with Adobe Digital Editions. Once you’ve linked your Adobe Digital Editions with your Adobe ID, you should be able to access your eBook on any device which supports Adobe Digital Editions and is authorized with your ID. If your eBook does not open in Adobe Digital Editions upon download, please contact customer service

Introduction: Unconscious Mistake #; Chapter 1. Not demonstrating their true personal integrity; Chapter 2. Not taking enough time to make sure their boss looks good; Chapter 3. A laser-like focus on getting the job done well without appreciating the contributions of others; Chapter 4. Using too much humor to build camaraderie and to foster collegial work environments; Chapter 5. Lacking real passion for change; Chapter 6. Relying solely on intellectual analysis with little reliance on "gut" feelings; Chapter 7. Focusing on problems rather than solutions; Chapter 8. A reluctance to properly manage former peers and supervisors; Chapter 9. Under-appreciating the enormous value of diversity in the workplace; Chapter 10. Not fully acknowledging the contributions of others on their teams; Chapter 11. Always swinging for the fences and winning every battle, instead of taking a long range view of the situation; Chapter 12. Conclusion
An expert management coach with over thirty years of experience helping professionals get to the next stages of their careers, identifies—and helps readers break—the 12 unconscious habits and behaviors that are holding them back from the corner office.

About the Book
For more than 30 years, Robert W. Goldfarb has advised and coached managers on five continents in organizations of every type who got to a certain level of success in their careers and then stalled. They were smart, had the right experience and a good track record, and had put in the time and energy to get them to where they were. But something was holding them back from getting to the highest level of management, and despite their obvious intelligence, they couldn't tell what it was.

Now, in the tradition of What Got You Here Won't Get You There, Robert Golfarb isolates the 12 top behaviors that mid- to upper-level managers exhibit at work that keep them from getting to the corner office. Some of these traits—a drive for results, strong knowledge of their industries, and networking with their peers—may have gotten them where they were, but need to be altered and adapted in order for them to get to the higher levels of management. The book is organized in an ingenious "What You Do" and "What Others See" structure, helping readers truly understand how their well-intentioned behaviors can wind up sabotaging their careers. Using case histories and actual examples from corporations, along with specific, actionable strategies for breaking these bad behaviors, Robert Goldfarb will help professionals everywhere break through their career plateaus and break into the corner office. These self-defeating behaviors are:

  • Not demonstrating their true personal integrity.
  • Not taking enough time to make sure their boss looks good.
  • A laser-like focus on getting the job done well without appreciating the contributions of others.
  • Using too much humor to build camaraderie and to foster collegial work environments.
  • Lacking real passion for change.
  • Relying solely on intellectual analysis with little reliance on “gut” feelings
  • Focusing on problems rather than solutions
  • A reluctance to properly manage former peers and supervisors.
  • Under-appreciating the enormous value of diversity in the workplace.
  • Not fully acknowledging the contributions of others on their teams.
  • Always swinging for the fences and winning every battle, instead of taking a long range view of the situation.