A dear friend and colleague of mine–and fellow blogger!–Shari Cohen is leading a fabulous workshop here in NYC for anyone currently looking to jumpstart their career. Looking to make a move from an unsatisfying position to something more meaningful? Or between jobs and searching for what’s next? Then you seriously might want to check this out.
Shari’s Career Action Group is a 4-week career transition workshop starting on May 5. She’s doing it in partnership with Next Step Partners, a firm that is launching similar groups across the country, including in Philadelphia and the San Francisco Bay Area. Why is this workshop different from all other career workshops? Shari has an intense background in leadership development work, and she’s awesome at helping people figure out ways to contribute their talent and creativity in new directions. I should know. I’ve worked with her myself.
Here’s the formal bio:
Shari Cohen, Ph.D., a senior consultant with Next Step Partners, focuses on leadership development. She has been working for over ten years to help leaders in international development, health, philanthropy, advocacy, market research, technology and publishing, to access their potential, build their confidence and expand their creativity. She has consulted for the World Bank, Carnegie Corporation, Bain, Demos and Doctors without Borders. Previous experience includes senior management positions at two non-profits where she built leadership programs. She also served as a professor of international relations at Wellesley College. Shari holds a Ph.D. in political sociology from University of California, Berkeley, and a BA from Cornell University. She has a certificate in organizational and executive coaching from NYU.
For more info about the Career Action Group, go here. But whether you’re career-shifting or not, definitely check out Shari’s blog, Unstuck Future, where she’s been writing lately about thinking about your career from the inside out, and her own career transition, as well. Like me, and like many GWP readers I know, Shari is a postacademic, so her insights really resonate, if you know what I mean.
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