“I like restraint, if it doesn’t go too far.” — Mae West

Sunday links

[Originally posted on what used to be a separate blog 'On jobs, work and careers' and later was merged into this blog.]

Some interesting links to feed your Sunday surfing habit:

  • Brazen Careerist: Book excerpt: How to turn a bad boss into a good one:

    Want to deal with a bad boss? First, stop complaining. Unless your boss breaks the law, you don’t have a bad boss, you have a boss you are managing poorly. Pick on your boss all you want, but if you were taking responsibility for your career, you wouldn’t let your boss’s problems bring you down.

  • Seth Godin: Who should you hire?:

    There is a fundamental shift in rules from manual-based work (where you follow instructions and an increase in productivity means doing the steps faster) to project-based work (where the instructions are unknown, and visualizing outcomes and then getting things done is what counts.)

  • Micro Persuasion: The Most Essential Career Skill You Need to Succeed:

    So as I thought about it, the most important “tool” you can have today in business is insatiable curiosity. The minute you lose it, you’re dead.

  • Web Worker Daily: The Dangerous Myth of The Dream Job (by Timothy Ferris): I am not quite sure I fully agree with the main thesis of this article, but it is nevertheless a thought-provoking read.

    Converting passions into “work” is the fastest way to kill those passions. Surfing two hours on a Saturday to decompress from a hard week might be heaven, but waking up at 6 am every morning to do it 40 hours per week with difficult clients is a very different animal. Mixing business and pleasure can be a psychologically toxic cocktail.

July 8, 2007   Filed under: career, learning, management