Most people can make one phone call when things get serious.
The person who can make two, one to the boardroom and one to the block, holds a kind of power that no credential, no title, and no amount of money can fully replicate.
This book is about that person. More importantly, it is about how to become them.
Both Rooms breaks down the hidden structural advantage of being genuinely trusted in worlds that have nothing to do with each other. Drawing on decades of research from University of Chicago sociologist Ronald Burt and real examples from history's most resilient figures, it shows exactly why the person who bridges opposite worlds wins and how to build that position deliberately.
Inside, you will learn:
Why structural holes, the gaps between disconnected social worlds, are the single most underrated source of strategic advantage available to any individualHow the person who bridges two rooms always has more information, more options, and more leverage than anyone operating in only oneThe exact difference between shallow networking and the deep, cross-world trust that actually compounds over timeWhy range, not specialization, is the identity that survives every disruption, economic, social, and professionalHow to identify which rooms you already have access to and what it takes to become genuinely trusted in bothThe specific mistakes that make bridge-builders look fake in both rooms instead of credible in eitherThis is not a networking book. Networking is transactional. This is a book about range, and about the structural position that makes you irreplaceable in any room you walk into.
Range is the one advantage that compounds for life.
Related Subjects
Teen & Young Adult