Sep 25, 2011 FunMovies11 Says:
If you like funny videos and movies check out Fun Movies on twitter - twitter(dot)com/funmovies1 =)
Aug 23, 2011 LiquidAffect Says:
... and positively affects others to change. :-)
Aug 23, 2011 LiquidAffect Says:
This really is good advice... here's hoping it's a ripple effect.
Aug 3, 2011 AlanKinNA Says:
Are you, AtGoogleTalks, engaged in a corporate or sub-contracted effort to closed-caption these talks? Thanks for a simple yes or no. Alan Kelly, of a service that provides closed-captioning... VerbatimIT dotc om
Jul 26, 2011 RicRagsLive Says:
I liked how the who asked the question about her getting complaints for stretching in inappropriate places didn't for a second think that maybe she was in the wrong for causing an awkward situation for people who are trying to eat. My advice to her would be get a gym next time and stop trying to draw attention to yourself by stretching in public hoping that guy would ask for your number. Did she really believe she was right to do that?
Jul 26, 2011 RicRagsLive Says:
I think this is a great talk with a lot of important information about learning to control yourself and not to identify with every negative thing that happens to you but rather to fix the problems that present themselves in a positive way.
I have to admit I got a little side tracked when we started talking about big boobies.
Jul 23, 2011 ok2pro Says:
he's just saying we should complain to the person who annoys you but that's the hardest part
Jul 23, 2011 paulmartin42000 Says:
@authorteamatgoogle - plz send me a copy of the book - squeakends
Jul 22, 2011 MarkoKraguljac Says:
Nice attempt at systematization, which assumes that we are rational and that complaint is just that and not tied in with anything else. It might work for consumer complaints or dealing with strangers. My opinion is that it wouldn't work for 99.99% of interpersonal problems. What we call complaint is ~90% something else, like: insecurities, power and responsibility issues, attention drawers, projections or plain inertia. Also, it needs effort, emotional maturity, objectivity, knowing thyself X2.
Jul 22, 2011 AtGoogleTalks Says:
We've added your website to the description. Thanks for visiting Google NY!
Jul 22, 2011 GuyWinch Says:
Guy Winch can be reached through his website at guywinch dot com
Video Details
"The Squeaky Wheel: Complaining the Right Way to Get Results, Improve Your Relationships and Enhance Self-Esteem"
http://www.guywinch.com
The Squeaky Wheel: Complaining the Right Way to Get Results, Improve Your Relationships and Enhance Self-Esteem (January 2011 by Walker and Company) is t... More
"The Squeaky Wheel: Complaining the Right Way to Get Results, Improve Your Relationships and Enhance Self-Esteem"
http://www.guywinch.com
The Squeaky Wheel: Complaining the Right Way to Get Results, Improve Your Relationships and Enhance Self-Esteem (January 2011 by Walker and Company) is the first science-based look at our complaining psychology.
Few of us give much thought to how we complain, yet our complaining behaviors affect our lives in every way—and none for the better.
Most arguments between friends or couples begin when a complaint is voiced incorrectly. When we encounter problems as consumers a staggering 95% of us fail to resolve them. And on the corporate side—companies rarely integrate complaining psychology know-how into their call-center employee training, customer service, or human resource practices—a failure that hurts customer loyalty, increases call-center employee stress and harms their bottom lines.
The Squeaky Wheel will teach you how to manage complaints well from others and turn your own complaints into tools that get you what you want. And that's nothing to complain about.
Guy Winch Ph.D. is a psychologist, author, speaker and occasional stand-up comic. His book The Squeaky Wheel—the first science based examination of our complaining psychology—has been featured on the CBS show The Talk, Martha Stewart Living Radio, NPR, Elle Magazine, Men's Health and other leading media outlets and is currently being translated for publication in countries such as China, Taiwan, South Korea, France & Russia. Guy has also written on topics such as consumer psychology, call-center complaint handling, customer service and corporate culture.
Directed by Lee Stimmel Less
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Youtube Comments (11)
FunMovies11 Says:
If you like funny videos and movies check out Fun Movies on twitter - twitter(dot)com/funmovies1 =)
LiquidAffect Says:
... and positively affects others to change. :-)
LiquidAffect Says:
This really is good advice... here's hoping it's a ripple effect.
AlanKinNA Says:
Are you, AtGoogleTalks, engaged in a corporate or sub-contracted effort to closed-caption these talks? Thanks for a simple yes or no. Alan Kelly, of a service that provides closed-captioning... VerbatimIT dotc om
RicRagsLive Says:
I liked how the who asked the question about her getting complaints for stretching in inappropriate places didn't for a second think that maybe she was in the wrong for causing an awkward situation for people who are trying to eat. My advice to her would be get a gym next time and stop trying to draw attention to yourself by stretching in public hoping that guy would ask for your number. Did she really believe she was right to do that?
RicRagsLive Says:
I think this is a great talk with a lot of important information about learning to control yourself and not to identify with every negative thing that happens to you but rather to fix the problems that present themselves in a positive way. I have to admit I got a little side tracked when we started talking about big boobies.
ok2pro Says:
he's just saying we should complain to the person who annoys you but that's the hardest part
paulmartin42000 Says:
@authorteamatgoogle - plz send me a copy of the book - squeakends
MarkoKraguljac Says:
Nice attempt at systematization, which assumes that we are rational and that complaint is just that and not tied in with anything else. It might work for consumer complaints or dealing with strangers. My opinion is that it wouldn't work for 99.99% of interpersonal problems. What we call complaint is ~90% something else, like: insecurities, power and responsibility issues, attention drawers, projections or plain inertia. Also, it needs effort, emotional maturity, objectivity, knowing thyself X2.
AtGoogleTalks Says:
We've added your website to the description. Thanks for visiting Google NY!
GuyWinch Says:
Guy Winch can be reached through his website at guywinch dot com