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Radical Candor: How to be a Great Boss Without Losing Your Humanity
Radical Candor: How to be a Great Boss Without Losing Your Humanity | Kim Malone Scott
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
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vlwelser
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Pickpick

This is the feedback model we use at work. Some people are better at it than others. There are tons of suggestions and I definitely recommend this. Especially if you're a people manager.

#BookSpinBingo @TheAromaofBooks

TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!! 2mo
23 likes1 comment
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vlwelser
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Nerd alert at the library

28 likes1 stack add
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mhillis
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1. Current Reads
📚 Where the Wild Ladies Are
📚 Impractical Uses of Cake
📚 The Seven Necessary Sins for Women and Girls

2. Last Read of 2020
Tagged book - Radical Candor

3. Read 100 books, more books in translation, participate in Readathons and challenges #WeekendReads

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MinnieTimperley
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Pickpick

Kim Scott shares her approach to successful leadership with multiple vignettes from some of the most successful multinational corporations of the 21st century (she's worked at Twitter, Google and Apple). If you lead or manage anyone, you will learn something here and be better at your work.

Twainy I listened to this on a library app and then bought the hardcover. Agree 🙂 4y
MinnieTimperley @Twainy I've got it on Kindle too. 4y
58 likes1 stack add2 comments
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Antonsigurdur
Pickpick

A must read for any leader. I was galvanized by each chapter and every paragraph. Im a huge fan of this book and will most definitely read again after putting real thought and action into some of the initiatives

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janerzy
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New read!

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luv2read1977
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When you are reading a book and you come across an acronym you use all the time...GSD.

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RosieBoo65
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Pickpick

As a manager, I want to be someone who manages the whole person, not just the work portion of a person. This book talks about how to maintain humanity in the workplace where often people are looked at as just a number. The author cites stories from her own work life and gives practical advice on how to apply principles and tactics in the workplace to achieve radical candor. Honesty and compassion. Sometimes not two things that go hand in hand.

CouronneDhiver I know a boss who could use this... 😂 6y
3 likes1 comment
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ElectricKatyLand
Mehso-so

The basic premise of being a better manager by providing frequent, consistent, genuine feedback is good. The book felt like it could have been better as a Ted Talk, and the name dropping was slightly irritating to me.

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derr.liz
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Care personally. Challenge directly. #commuteread
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Started reading after hearing Kim's compelling keynote at #cornerstoneconvergence conference

1 like1 stack add
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Jeanne_S
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Pickpick

Interesting.

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lennearb
Pickpick

Good book for managers.

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Bookchipmunk
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Weekend TBR: I'm going to finally finish Thinking Fast and Slow which is excellent but very very dense. The bottom two books are my book haul from this week. My friends and family know I put myself on a book buying ban so they are giving me books! Winnie has her favorite carrot 🐶 Aloha Friday Littens 🌺🌅

RealLifeReading 😍😍 7y
JoeStalksBeck Awww omg! Too sweet . I want to cuddle that baby 7y
britt_brooke Winnie 💚💚💚 7y
42 likes4 comments
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BooksForEmpathy
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First meal home had to include kale. And some fries.

My partner received this book for Christmas and I was so excited because Book Riot talks about it all the time. I am feeling like something empowering and self-help-y so this might be just the ticket! I‘m not a “boss” but I do work with the staff at schools and kids all day, so maybe it will be applicable? Have YOU read it!?

Beckys_Books This sound good and right in line with today's trending management style. 7y
94 likes6 stack adds1 comment
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Ingridelaine82
Pickpick

I really enjoyed this audiobook. My only reservation was that the author‘s voice was a bit irritating, but with the stories, ended up feeling very right for the content. Dealing with people and managing how to give feedback is really in depth. I‘ll likely re-listen to it again because I could definitely use the information.

janerzy I just picked this book up! 5y
4 likes1 comment
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HollyB3
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I won these in a giveaway today! Woohoo. Totally unexpected and awesome! 🎉 Any recommendations on which to read first?!

RadicalReader @HollyB3 Never knew that Joe Hill was Stephen King‘s son!!!! Mind blowing glad to have two horror thriller authors to enjoy content from 7y
18 likes1 stack add1 comment
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starrdom
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Itching to read this one and learn a few things #giveawaysix @Liberty

13 likes1 stack add
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Maureen
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Kelly
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Orange cover bonanza for #riotgrams.

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Julsmarshall
Pickpick

Finally finished this on audio. Management books always take me forever to get through but slow and steady wins the race, right? Great work book, lots of good ideas and some I'll put into practice.

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Stylishbooknerd
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The key, as in any relationship, is how you handle the anger. When what you say hurts, acknowledge he other person's pain. Don't pretend it doesn't hurt or say it "shouldn't" hurt--just show that you care. Eliminate the phrase "don't take it personally" from your vocabulary--it's insulting.

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Stylishbooknerd
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"Covering for people is sometimes necessary for a short period of time--say, if somebody is going through a crisis. But when it goes on for too long it starts to take a toll. People whose work had been exceptional started to get sloppy."

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CKtheLibrarian
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Panpan

⭐️ I tried to give this 2 stars but it's too awful. I lost count how many times the author inserted smiley faces in the text. I mean--I do that in text messages and sometimes in an email--but I'd never put it in my book. The content is nothing new. I was not enlightened at all. Sometimes I even disagreed with the management style. In the Acknowledgments she even misspelled Gretchen Rubin's last name (Ruben), who wrote a blurb on the back cover.

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balletbookworm
Pickpick

There's a lot to think about in this book. Personally, I fail at the Care Personally bit (I'm really good at the "tell people exactly what you think bit"). I'm not a manager but I think that anyone in any sort of job could benefit from reading this since we all have places in the pecking order, regardless of direct reporting. I think once this comes out in paperback I'll probably pick up a copy to re-read/scribble in (this read was on audio).

16 likes1 stack add
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pocketmermaid
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An emoji! An emoji in a business management book! :)

398.2 lol I don't know what to think of that. Part of me that's funny and the other part thinks that's sad. 7y
pocketmermaid @398.2 I am mostly amused. And I'm wondering what it looks like in the print copy. Is it an old-fashioned emoji or an emoji 2.0 with an actual circle face? Anyway, regardless of the emoji, I am enjoying the book and am learning a lot! 7y
eekabook Okay but for real, no one who takes parking spaces like that will give a crap no matter how polite you are to them. This book is just encouraging you to confront an asshole??? 7y
See All 6 Comments
pocketmermaid @eekabook No, no. It's meant as a humorous/everyday/hyperbolic example to illustrate how managers should properly give feedback to their employees. She's not really suggesting you engage with a parking-spot stealer. 7y
eekabook @pocketmermaid aaaaah okay! ? I was just like "but that's putting yourself on the fast track to get beat up!" ? 7y
pocketmermaid @eekabook Definitely! I realize now that out of context that passage seems really bizarre! 7y
35 likes2 stack adds6 comments
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Julsmarshall
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Interesting! So far, a great listen on my commute.

CherylDeFranceschi I've seen her speak. She was very compelling. 8y
Bookchipmunk This is sitting in my cart and has been taunting me! (edited) 8y
42 likes2 comments
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avkreads
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Pickpick

As a person being in a relatively new managerial role, this book was extremely helpful to me! It really should be required reading for any and all leaders of people. It has made me take a hard look at myself and seriously consider where my strengths and weaknesses as a leader lie, as well as how I can help my team members develop in ways that are meaningful to them as well as to the company. Very compelling stuff!

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Noah
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Pickpick

Basically, Scott describes Radical Candor as a management style and culture that values the combination of challenging directly and caring personally. One thing I love about this book is that it draws on examples from famous companies such as Google, Twitter, and Facebook. I really enjoyed the anecdotal stories that Scott shares in this book as they are extremely relevant and add to the credibility of her message.

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Kelly
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Some light afternoon reading. Heh.

24 likes2 stack adds