The top 5 must-read books for graduates
If you’ve just finished your
university studies, you may be a little worried over what to do next – after all,
not everyone knows exactly which direction to take after education. Leaving
your friends behind to enter the working world can be a lonely and confusing
time, but students all over the world will be in the exact same situation and
some of these have turned their past experiences into words. Business
card designer Where The Trade Buys have provided this list of the top five
must-read books for graduates.
1. How to Win Friends and Influence People
Okay, so once you’ve managed to land a job, despite the fact
it may only be a stop-gap, you need to make friends, otherwise your journey is
going to be an incredibly tedious one. Unlike university, this isn’t going to
be an easy experience. The first day in a new job isn’t going to be like the
first day walking into university, because frankly, at this stage, not everyone
will be in the same boat. You might be the most likeable person on this side of
the Atlantic but that doesn’t mean everyone will warm to you.
In 2018, Warren Buffet was ranked as the third richest
person in the world, and he credits this 1936 book with transforming his life.
The American businessman and philanthropist found up a copy of Dale Carnegie’s
guide on his grandfather’s bookshelf and suggests he has applied it through his
career. Having shifted over 15 million copies worldwide, the book is ranked
within the top 100 best-selling books ever and is certainly a must read,
regardless of your situation.
2. So What are You Going to Do With That?
The title of Susan Basalla and Maggie Debelius’ self-help
style script is something you’re going to have to get used to hearing over the
next matter of months. For an adult, who has ‘got their life sorted’, this is
their favourite question. Coming towards the end of your final academic year,
and throughout the following year, unless you have already landed the job of
your dream, you are going to be debating staying on in education. As the
authors explain, remaining with academia is in no means a negative, however
don’t feel afflicted to stay, and certainly don’t if you’re only doing so to
fill time. The book goes on to respond to the question with a solid answer,
giving you clarity in what your post-graduate life will entail.
3. The 2-Hour Job Search: Using Technology to
Get the Right Job Faster
Steve Dalton’s 2012 manual will prove a trusted companion to
graduates, and anyone currently seeking work alike. Despite the fact the
internet has provided us with the opportunity to sift through a wide range of
jobs that previously we might never have known about — actually managing to
find the one for us can prove to be a rather complex task. Organisation is the
key focus of Dalton’s piece of work, as he points to the different ways in
which technology can be used to whittle down their search.
4. The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up
Not all the successes in your graduate life will hinge upon
your ability to develop a killer curriculum vitae. At university, you may have
realised that you ended up putting yourself under unnecessary stress, simply
because you couldn’t find the book you were looking for. As opposed to tidying
on a daily basis, Marie Kondo walks us through her guide in how cleaning up once
and for all will have one of the most significant impacts on our day to day
lives. The author suggests how a thorough decluttering will translate into
massively increased productivity.
5. Make Your Bed: Little Things that Can Change
Your Life
Admiral William McRaven, a retired US Navy SEAL, delivered a
speech to the University of Texas, which has received more than ten million
views on YouTube. Talking about his career, he noted how when he was training,
he seen the task of making a perfect bed every morning fairly mundane and in some
respects pointless, as he was going on to become a fighter. Now however, William,
the author of Make Your Bed, sees
carrying out that simplistic task at the start of each and every day as the
most important thing — as that is the first challenge of the day achieved. The
book goes on to talk the reader through the ten ‘life-changing principles’
which Admiral McRaven picked up during his time in service, and how these steps
will help create a better you and give you a better relationship with the
world.
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