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You Can't Fire Everyone:

And Other Lessons from an Accidental Manager
Front Cover
26 Reviews
Penguin Group US, Mar 17, 2011 - Business & Economics - 224 pages
When Hank Gilman started his career, he aspired to be a great journalist. But just a few years later, he became an editor and suddenly found himself in charge of a slew of difficult reporters—without a clue how to manage them.

Plenty of managers start out this way, never asking, expecting, or training to be responsible for others. These accidental bosses often find that learning to manage is like learning to swim by being dropped into the deep end of the pool.

Now the deputy managing editor at Fortune, Gilman learned the hard way about what makes a good boss. He shares his insights from the good, bad, ugly, entertaining, and sometimes just plain bizarre stories from more than two decades in the management trenches.

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Review: You Can't Fire Everyone: And Other Lessons from an Accidental Manager

User Review  - Gatzby - Goodreads

This is the sort of book you might pick up if you were an insecure manager looking or validation that you're not doing such a bad job. Which is to say, I'm not sure anyone is going to learn much from ... Read full review

Review: You Can't Fire Everyone: And Other Lessons from an Accidental Manager

User Review  - An Shun - Goodreads

A down-to-earth read about dilemmas that all managers will face in the course of their management career. The book offers general guidelines especially on the Do-Nots of management based on the past ... Read full review

All 23 reviews »

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About the author (2011)

Hank Gilman is the deputy managing editor of Fortune. Over his career, he has worked at The Boston Globe, The Wall Street Journal, Newsweek, and The Beaufort Gazette (South Carolina). (His favorite job.) He has also been a regular commentator on The Nightly Business Report on PBS.

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