Partners In The Field | Interviews and discussions with professionals across a variety of career fie

Latest Episodes
NFL Dad Sam McNabb on fatherhood
See the full show notes at: http://partnersinthefield.com/nfl-dad-sam-mcnabb-on-fatherhood Samuel McNabb husband to Wilma Char McNabb, father to Sean and NFL QB Donovan McNabb. Retired Electrical Engineer, worked for Exelon in Illinois. Retired...
The Pomodoro Technique... you need this just like me :)
The Pomodoro Technique... This time management technique was developed by Francesco Cirillo in the late 1980s and is still very useful today. The premise of the technique is to set your timer to a specific interval - 25 minutes is recommended - and...
Focus on building your strengths more than your weaknesses
Focus on building your strengths more than your weaknesses
Why you should operate in a deficit | Community Activist Silas H Grant
greatest moment seeing the consistent growth in a person he was able to help recent failure/setback missed an opportunity to appropriately delegate tasks to the right people personal definition of success knowing that the effort that he puts in...
5 Steps To Have a Productive Meeting
We tend to speak a lot about relationships here on the podcast and that is very intentional. Today, let's talk about steps to have successful and productive meetings. A good meeting can certainly influence a professional relationship. Here are...
Give up on trying to be perfect and try more to be authentic
Give up on trying to be perfect and try more to be authentic Please rate this podcast right now while you're looking at this. Your support is so valuable and helps others discover the podcast!
"Failure is not fatal, but failure to change might be." - John Wooden
This week's Sixty Second Thought comes from the quote, "Failure is not fatal, but failure to change might be." - John Wooden
How is your follow up? Here are 3 tips to improve and automate it.
How is your follow up? Here are 3 tips to improve and automate it.
The danger in setting goals
The greater danger for most of us lies not in setting our aim too high and falling short; but in setting our aim too low, and achieving our mark. - Michelangelo