They Smiled at me the Whole Time
Uitgelicht
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15,43 |
Naar shop
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15,43 |
Naar shop
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15,61 |
Naar shop
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Beschrijving
Bol
They Smiled at Me the Whole Time A Memoir and Professional Survival GuideThey welcomed him. They mentored him. They smiled at him - the whole time.Then, in one conference room, one career-defining moment, his closest colleague let him fall.They Smiled at Me the Whole Time is the story of Marcus Webb - a Black man who made it from the east side of Kansas City to a VP seat at a regional investment firm, only to discover that making it through the door is not the same as being safe inside the room. When a high-stakes project review turns into a public ambush, Marcus is left standing alone, without allies, without cover, and with a choice every professional who has ever felt the gap between welcome and belonging will recognize: walk away quietly, or rebuild.He rebuilds.Methodically. In silence. Over two years.What follows is one of the most honest, practical, and compulsively readable accounts of corporate survival ever written. Marcus doesn't rage. He documents. He builds his reputation outside the room that tried to define him. And he draws on the deepest resource he has - his mother, Vivian Webb, a woman who cleaned the same offices he would one day run, and who knew more about power, patience, and professional endurance than any MBA program ever taught him.Each of the thirteen chapters pairs raw, cinematic storytelling with a concrete, actionable Lesson - making this simultaneously a gripping memoir and a genuinely useful guide. No jargon. No platitudes. Just hard-won wisdom, finally in print.If you've ever been the only one in the room - or smiled at by everyone in it - this book was written for you.
They Smiled at Me the Whole Time A Memoir and Professional Survival GuideThey welcomed him. They mentored him. They smiled at him - the whole time.Then, in one conference room, one career-defining moment, his closest colleague let him fall.They Smiled at Me the Whole Time is the story of Marcus Webb - a Black man who made it from the east side of Kansas City to a VP seat at a regional investment firm, only to discover that making it through the door is not the same as being safe inside the room. When a high-stakes project review turns into a public ambush, Marcus is left standing alone, without allies, without cover, and with a choice every professional who has ever felt the gap between welcome and belonging will recognize: walk away quietly, or rebuild.He rebuilds.Methodically. In silence. Over two years.What follows is one of the most honest, practical, and compulsively readable accounts of corporate survival ever written. Marcus doesn't rage. He documents. He builds his reputation outside the room that tried to define him. And he draws on the deepest resource he has - his mother, Vivian Webb, a woman who cleaned the same offices he would one day run, and who knew more about power, patience, and professional endurance than any MBA program ever taught him.Each of the thirteen chapters pairs raw, cinematic storytelling with a concrete, actionable Lesson - making this simultaneously a gripping memoir and a genuinely useful guide. No jargon. No platitudes. Just hard-won wisdom, finally in print.If you've ever been the only one in the room - or smiled at by everyone in it - this book was written for you.
AmazonPagina's: 146, Paperback, Independently published