Charles Duhigg is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter for The New York Times and the author of The Power of Habit. He is a winner of the National Academies of Sciences, National Journalism, and George Polk awards. A graduate of Harvard Business School and Yale College, he lives in Brooklyn with his wife and two children.
This is not just a riveting read about how to understand others
better. It’s also a revealing look at how to be understood. Charles
Duhigg delivers a winning combination of stories, studies, and
guidance that might well transform the worst communicators you know
into some of the best.
*Adam Grant, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Think Again
and Hidden Potential*
Our personal and professional success depend upon our ability to
understand and be understood, and yet, we typically leave this up
to intuition. In Supercommunicators, Charles Duhigg goes through a
mountain of research — and some riveting stories — and unearths
practical tactics to show that anyone can become a more effective
listener, speaker, and even social media poster.
*David Epstein, bestselling author of Range and The Sports
Gene*
Charles Duhigg does it again, with a book we all need to read.
Using his unique mix of stories and science, he gives us
Supercommunicators, a guide to better conversation and deeper human
connection. If you want to improve your communication skills at
work and in life, this book is the place the start.
*Arthur C. Brooks, Professor, Harvard Kennedy School and Harvard
Business School, and #1 New York Times bestselling author of FROM
STRENGTH TO STRENGTH and co-author (with Oprah Winfrey) of BUILD
THE LIFE YOU WANT*
This is one of those books that stays with you for days after
reading it . . . What makes us happiest in life is the quality of
our connections and the relationships we forge . . . and that might
just start with being able to understand what someone else is
really trying to say. For as Duhigg himself points out, the right
conversation at the right moment can change everything.
*Daily Mail*
Duhigg offers diligently sourced evidence and opinion from
psychologists and neuroscientists. He also knows how to tell a
story. As he did in his successful book The Power of Habit, he
weaves in inspiring anecdotes — tales of so-called
supercommunicators . . . a thoughtful and entertaining book. I even
think it could make me a slightly better human.
*Sunday Times*
[Duhigg] introduces us to the potential power of conversation
through his riveting stories . . . Duhigg's excellent book aims to
explain how conversations work so we can connect more meaningfully
in our relationships . . . As you would want in a book on
communication, Duhigg is clear and engaging, linking research with
his own interviews as he explores what really happens in successful
- or difficult - conversation.
*New Scientist*
Duhigg’s conversations with neurologists, psychologists and
negotiation experts led him to learn that superior
conversationalists have a lot in common . . . Following his tips to
pay closer attention to non-verbal cues got me out of my thoughts,
out of my apartment, and off the cursed Slack.
*Guardian*
I have been spinning like a top since reading The Power of Habit,
New York Times journalist Charles Duhigg's fascinating best-seller
about how people, businesses and organizations develop the positive
routines that make them productive-and happy.
*Washington Post*
Few [books] become essential manuals for business and living. The
Power of Habit is an exception. Charles Duhigg not only explains
how habits are formed but how to kick bad ones and hang on to the
good.
*Financial Times*
[The Power of Habit] is a first-rate book - based on an impressive
mass of research, written in a lively style and providing just the
right balance of intellectual seriousness with practical advice on
how to break our bad habits.
*Economist*
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