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In this episode, Erin chats with Julie Holunga—a leadership advisor, executive coach, and TEDx speaker on a mission to help professionals amplify their influence and impact.
Julie spills her secrets on how some seemingly innocent phrases might be stealthily sabotaging your career and more golden nuggets you won’t want to miss!
Some of the things you'll hear are:
1.) What she learned while working at Harvard...and what she had to unlearn
2.) The biggest words and phrases that can sabotage your career
3.) Tips for influencing people NOT reporting to you
4.) The 3 biggest components to Lazy Leadership...and simple habits to change to be less lazy
5.) Simple replacement phrases for the 3 most dreadful (and commonly said) phrases in business
Ready to find out which common phrases you need to ditch—and what to say instead?
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/julieholunga/
Website: https://www.julieholunga.com/
If you’d like quick tangible tips and practical corporate career advice to level up your authentic leadership, download the 10 simple “plays” to stop selling out and start standing out at https://bauthenticinc.mykajabi.com/freebie
To connect with Erin and/or Nicole, email: [email protected]
If you like jammin' with us on the podcast, b sure to join us for more fun and inspiration!
Follow b Cause on Twitter (really it's mostly Nicole)
Follow Erin on LinkedIn or Instagram
Join the b Cause Podcast Facebook Group
Take our simple, fun and insightful"What’s your workplace superhero name?”quiz
Check out our blog for more no-BS career advice
Work with Us
Or just buy some fun, authentic, kick-ars merch here
DISCLAIMER: This episode is not explicit, though contains mild swearing that may be unsustainable for younger audiences.
Tweetable Comments
“Leaders who communicate with trust, see conflict as a necessity, and behave with integrity.”
“I wrote ‘pubic’ instead of ‘public’. So, spellcheck didn't catch that.”
“Even though they may be an expert in their company, we're an expert in what we do and we have to remind ourselves of that.”
"Instead of saying, 'I think,' say, 'I recommend' or 'I suggest.' If they're hiring you for your expertise, don't downplay that expertise."
5
6565 ratings
In this episode, Erin chats with Julie Holunga—a leadership advisor, executive coach, and TEDx speaker on a mission to help professionals amplify their influence and impact.
Julie spills her secrets on how some seemingly innocent phrases might be stealthily sabotaging your career and more golden nuggets you won’t want to miss!
Some of the things you'll hear are:
1.) What she learned while working at Harvard...and what she had to unlearn
2.) The biggest words and phrases that can sabotage your career
3.) Tips for influencing people NOT reporting to you
4.) The 3 biggest components to Lazy Leadership...and simple habits to change to be less lazy
5.) Simple replacement phrases for the 3 most dreadful (and commonly said) phrases in business
Ready to find out which common phrases you need to ditch—and what to say instead?
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/julieholunga/
Website: https://www.julieholunga.com/
If you’d like quick tangible tips and practical corporate career advice to level up your authentic leadership, download the 10 simple “plays” to stop selling out and start standing out at https://bauthenticinc.mykajabi.com/freebie
To connect with Erin and/or Nicole, email: [email protected]
If you like jammin' with us on the podcast, b sure to join us for more fun and inspiration!
Follow b Cause on Twitter (really it's mostly Nicole)
Follow Erin on LinkedIn or Instagram
Join the b Cause Podcast Facebook Group
Take our simple, fun and insightful"What’s your workplace superhero name?”quiz
Check out our blog for more no-BS career advice
Work with Us
Or just buy some fun, authentic, kick-ars merch here
DISCLAIMER: This episode is not explicit, though contains mild swearing that may be unsustainable for younger audiences.
Tweetable Comments
“Leaders who communicate with trust, see conflict as a necessity, and behave with integrity.”
“I wrote ‘pubic’ instead of ‘public’. So, spellcheck didn't catch that.”
“Even though they may be an expert in their company, we're an expert in what we do and we have to remind ourselves of that.”
"Instead of saying, 'I think,' say, 'I recommend' or 'I suggest.' If they're hiring you for your expertise, don't downplay that expertise."
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