Esta serie explora satíricamente las absurdidades y frustraciones de la vida corporativa moderna. Con agudo ingenio, expone la ineficiencia, la burocracia y las debilidades humanas que a menudo impregnan los entornos de oficina. Cada entrega ofrece una visión de los conflictos entre los intentos de progreso y los protocolos sin sentido. Es un comentario humorístico e perspicaz sobre la rutina diaria.
Now in paperback, this is an inside view of bosses, meetings, management fads and other workplace afflictions. Examining bizarre and hilarious situations in the world of work with growing absurdity, Adams reveals the secrets of management, including swearing one's way to the top, selling bad products to stupid people, trolls in accounts and more.
First published in 1997, the successor to The Dilbert Principle is this time written by Dilbert's canine, Dogbert. He teaches new managers vital skills such as how to be leaders without making any decisions and how to inspire employees by giving them worthless knick-knacks. Scott Adams combines the challenges at work with the challenges of life.
Step aside, Bill Gates! Here comes today′s real technology guru and his totally original, laugh-out-loud New York Times bestseller that looks at the approaching new millennium and boldly predicts: more stupidity ahead.In The Dilbert Principle and Dogbert′s Top Secret Management Handbook, Scott Adams skewered the absurdities of the corporate world. Now he takes the next logical step, turning his keen analytical focus on how human greed, stupidity and horniness will shape the future. Featuring the same irresistible amalgam of essays and cartoons that made Adams previous works so singularly entertaining, this uproariously funny, dead-on-target tome offers half-truthful, half-farcical predictions that push all of today′s hot buttons - from business and technology to society and government.Children - they are our future, so we′re pretty much hosed. Tip: Grab what you can while they′re still too little to stop us.Human Potential - we′ll finally learn to use the 90 percent of the brain we don′t use today, and find out that there wasn′t anything in that part.Computers - Technology and homeliness will combine to form a powerful type of birth control.
Broma oficinista NB: 44: Ruidos que vuelven locos a los companeros de trabajo. Usted podra producir ruidos en la oficina que volveran locos a sus companeros de trabajo. Puede ser muy divertido. Cada companero es diferente, asi que tal vez tenga que experimentar un poco para encontrar el ruido que mas moleste a su vecino. Vale la pena el esfuerzo.
Back after a four-year hiatus, New York Times best-selling author Scott Adams presents an outrageous look at work, home, and everyday life in his new book, Dilbert and the Way of the Weasel. Building on Dilbert’s theory that “All people are idiots,” Adams now says, “All people are idiots. And they are also weasels.” Just ask anyone who worked at Enron.In this book, Adams takes a look into the Weasel Zone, the giant grey area between good moral behaviour and outright felonious activities. In the Weasel Zone, where most people reside, everything is misleading, but not exactly a lie. Building on his popular comic strip, Adams looks into work, home, and everyday life and exposes the way of the weasel for everyone to see. With appearances from all the regular comic strip characters, Adams and Dilbert are at the top of their game—master satirists who expose the truth while making us laugh our heads off.