Serving and Leadership
81
" We make a living by what we get, we make a life by what we give. " - Winston Churchill
Curated by donhornsby
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7 Steps to Become an Authority in Your Industry

7 Steps to Become an Authority in Your Industry | Serving and Leadership | Scoop.it
How developing your reputation as a leader can help boost your business and brand.
Via Anne Egros, David Hain
donhornsby's insight:

(From the article): "Becoming an authority in your industry can be a great way to promote your business and help you better serve your clients. It takes a consistent dose of education and risk, but the rewards can be well worth the effort."


Excellent suggestions contained in the article.

Anne Egros's curator insight, December 13, 2012 12:43 PM

The last point of this article (http://www.entrepreneur.com/blog/225225)  "Keep Learning", is for me the most important factor to become an expert in your field.

 

For organizing and sharing interesting articles I like Scoop.it. To discuss new topics and ideas with other experts I like Linkedin groups. I am not using yet the new Google+ feature, "communities",  but it seems something interesting.

 

If you have started a Google + community, please share your experience or wait for the next post after I learn how to use this new tool.

 

For organizing ideas and actually learn, I like to write in my blog. Learning by teaching is one of my favorite way to learn. I can't explain clearly something if I did not understand it fully.


What about you ? What do you do to be known as an expert in your industry ?

 

 

David Hain's curator insight, December 14, 2012 2:47 AM

Read also the thoughtful comments from Anne.

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People: Who Needs Them?

People: Who Needs Them? | Serving and Leadership | Scoop.it

Pop psychologists freely use words such as introvert and extravert. But as Curt and Anne Bartol point out, two out of every three people will score in the ‘average’ range on the extraversion dimension, thus disqualifying them from studies based on extraversion and introversion. Roughly 16 percent of the population are extraverts, and another 16 percent introverts, and the remainder (68 percent) are ambiverts.

 

It may be tempting to think of extraversion and introversion as two sides of a coin—that each of us is either one or the other—but this is simply not the case.


Via Gina Stepp
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