
Now AvailableCommunication is a lost art and we need to resurrect it.Look around you. In our culture, we often fail at the fundamentals. Having a conversation without an electronic device involved. Writing a thank-you letter. Listening in earnest to a friend in need. Our human exchanges lead us to learn, transform, revolutionize, innovate, connect and love.This gap is crucial for leaders to understand.Those who learn how to connect with and harness the potential of this new generation of employees—will have a decided advantage as the Boomer generation retires over the next 15-17 years. If we fail to figure out this dilemma, our prospects are dim.Habitudes For CommunicatorsLike the other Habitudes books, this book is filled with images that represent timeless principles, to be read, discussed and applied on a team. The images in this book revolve around engaging and communicating with the next generation. You'll learn how to communicate effectively through images like Windows and Mirrors, #3 Pencil, House of Fire, the Faded Flag, School Yearbook and more.Here's to mastering the art of communicating with the next generation! |
$12 includes a free audio download of A New Kind of Leader.
You will receive A New Kind of Leader immediately and your copy of Habitudes for Communicators will ship by January 18, 2012.
For multiple/bulk orders, please click here or contact Elise Warner at
(678) 367-4189 or Elise@growingleaders.com
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We live in the "information age" but not the "communication age."
Look around you. In our culture, we often fail at the fundamentals. Having a conversation without an electronic device involved. Writing a thank-you letter. Listening in earnest to a friend in need. Our human exchanges lead us to learn, transform, revolutionize, innovate, connect and love.
Communication is a lost art and we need to resurrect it. People are getting lazier about truly connecting with each other, and the consequences of this trend will be grievous on a large scale. The emotional intelligence of adolescents has dropped in the last ten years. Their communication is reduced to the superficial via text, tweet or Facebook. The older generation struggles to understand how to "break through the filters" of young people. Back in the 1960s, America discovered we had a "generation gap" between adults and Boomer kids. Today, there's a "communication gap" between adults and Generation Y kids.
Contact Chloe Lufkin for information or to schedule a date: Chloe@GrowingLeaders.com
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