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| Talk Your Way to the Top: How to Address Any Audience Like Your Career Depends On It | 
enlarge | Authors: Kevin Daley, Laura Daley-caravella Publisher: McGraw-Hill Category: Book
List Price: $14.95 Buy New: $1.40 You Save: $13.55 (91%)
New (26) Used (19) from $0.01
Avg. Customer Rating: 6 reviews
Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 211 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.5 x 0.7
ISBN: 007140564X Dewey Decimal Number: 651.73 UPC: 639785383536 EAN: 9780071405645
Publication Date: August 12, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: SHIPS TODAY!! BRAND NEW BOOK
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Field-proven presentation tips and communication skills, from two of today's top corporate coaches Every business situation is both a presentation and a chance to leave a positive impression. In Talk Your Way to the Top, corporate communications gurus Kevin Daley and Laura Daley-Caravella give readers the know-how to recognize and maximize the opportunities they face throughout the day. Each chapter represents a specific situation, from running a meeting to disagreeing with the boss, and outlines the steps needed to handle it with poise, skill, and success. Communication has a tremendous impact on how professionals are judged. Talk Your Way to the Top gives them the skills they need to: - Know when and where to speak up--versus when to shut up
- Convey passion and make it contagious
- Connect with an audience on multiple levels
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
Tips for speakers-some ageless, some aging March 13, 2008 Kevin Daley and Laura Daley-Caravella's "Talk Your Way To The Top" is in some respects a period piece that still has relevance for speakers today. On any given day, luncheon speakers addressing crowds would do well to better heed their sage, often basic advice about how to stand, where to look, and how to tell a story. They've clearly seen and advised many presenters, and the tips are anchored in good experience. Their prescriptions, however, often offered as didactic "Do's and Don'ts", seem to miss the feeling side of persuasive presentations, and the increasing demand of audiences for an authentic, less manufactured listening experience. I found myself looking for heartfelt advice (for heartfelt presentations), and finding instead the vacuum that the era of the "Mad Men" of Madison Avenue had where the heart should be. Indeed, it all felt a bit manipulative. So on the one hand, I'm grateful to the authors for a clear summary of tips and techniques... but on the other hand, still searching for better ways to find common ground with presentation audiences.
Great advice! December 29, 2003 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I was quite amazed by this book. Let me tell you about myself - I'm a semester away from graduating and entering the workforce (as an engineer). I'm unsure of what to do, I have those gitters about *everything*. How do I talk to the boss, not be embarassed giving a presentation, among everything else racking my brain (e.g. where will I work?). So to me, this book built my self-confidence and told me how to handle special situations, such as business lunches.I disagree with a previous reviewer that it is an advertisement. Yes, he uses experience to convey the ideas, often in which he made a mistake and learned from it. Of course some would happen at his company, but many others are drawn from his previous jobs. His chapters are short and to the point, with great advice that don't leave you wanting more or ready to stop reading in the middle of a chapter. The book exemplifies his own advice: the quality of the paper, the nice layout, the personal experiences. He's addressing an audience and obviously put a great deal of thought into it. I loved this book, and its well worth your money.
Try these techniques now October 18, 2003 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
My career DOES depend on how I talk to an audience! This book was extremely beneficial to me. I present in front of groups all the time and started using some of these techniques, and they paid off beautifully. I also tend to be a hot-head when things don't go my way with my boss. After reading this book, I thought things through first, developed my game plan following the advice in the book and WON my argument, without my boss getting upset or even thinking it was an argument. Excellent.
Inspiring! Motivational! October 16, 2003 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
This book was great. Some business books provide rote information, can be difficult to get through and hard to pull something out of it. But Talk Your Way To The Top is loaded with interesting stories that helped me relate to similar situations in my business. Since they are stories that everyone can relate to, that makes it easy to put the writer's suggestions to use. I find that I use something from the book everyday. You should definitely read this!
At best an advertisement for his consulting business October 2, 2003 6 out of 14 found this review helpful
Albeit there are a handful of useful "tricks" to presenting before an audience in here, this book reads more like a commercial for his consulting business than anything else. The stories used to illustrate his points are trite and hardly enlightening. In one instance, he even brags about his own presentation about a military feat he accomplished, used for an inspirational talk. It reads very dry and certainly was not convincing. Perhaps Daley should stick to a live audience instead of attempting to put it down in writing. There is better material available on presentation skills--this one isn't worth the money.
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