Buscar
Career Chess
Cód:
491_9780998830278

Por: R$ 125,86ou X de

Comprar
Live free and make money at the same time. Do what you always wanted to do.  Career Chess combines Game Theory, Martial Arts, Political and Economic Sciences, Corporate hierarchies and entrepreneurial spirit into an actionable handbook for a freedom-centric career leading to happiness and success.   Do a job you love you and never work a day in your life, Confucius said over two thousand years ago. That hasn’t changed yet, but it seems forgotten. Then again, it’s easier said than done. Maximilian LeRoux, author of Career Chess, states: "Nothing has distracted me more on an everyday basis than the constant thought around the question of what liberty means in a corporate world."  Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness has become a rat race for money and social sex appeal. Like hamsters on a treadmill, we are chasing the corporate carrot with a false sense of success and security. Without any real need. Freedom is the capability to “live a life that you know to value because of your own reasons” as Economics Nobel Prize winner Amartya Sen (*1933) described it.   Starting his career full of enthusiasm, just like most young professionals, very soon Mr. LeRoux was stunned that talent and hard work alone weren’t enough. At times they didn’t seem necessary at all. Looking around one can observe quite a few inept leaders, some of which are complete idiots. There must have been other reasons than talent that lifted them into their positions.  Why do some people who seem to have no skill make it, and others don’t? How can I make my way up? Main stream career literature is missing something. Career is usually narrowed down to an exhaustive hustle for money and job titles with no end. Yet, everyone follows some logic and some belief on how to make a successful career. This was the needed clue to start this book: it’s all a game! Life is a big ches
Veja mais

Calcule o valor do frete e prazo de entrega para a sua região

Quem comprou também comprou

Quem viu também comprou