
Ever wonder how Jeff Bezos's executive assistant became Silicon Valley royalty? Ann Hiatt's "Bet on Yourself" reveals career-defining strategies from her time with tech titans, including surviving a helicopter crash with Bezos - a wake-up call that transformed her approach to professional risk-taking.
Ann Hiatt, bestselling author of Bet on Yourself: From Sidekick to CEO, is a Silicon Valley leadership strategist and executive consultant renowned for her expertise in scaling innovation and optimizing C-suite performance.
Drawing from 15 years as Chief of Staff to Google’s Eric Schmidt and Executive Business Partner to Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, her book merges career development insights with actionable frameworks for navigating high-stakes environments.
A frequent contributor to Harvard Business Review, Fast Company, and CNBC, Hiatt bridges Silicon Valley’s operational rigor with global leadership trends, consulting for Netflix, Starbucks, and Lockheed Martin. Her work emphasizes democratizing entrepreneurial mindsets, a theme amplified through keynote speeches at SXSW and lectures at Harvard Business School.
Bet on Yourself has been endorsed by industry leaders and adopted in executive training programs worldwide, solidifying its status as a modern career-acceleration classic.
Bet on Yourself by Ann Hiatt is a career empowerment guide drawing from the author’s 15+ years working alongside tech titans like Jeff Bezos (Amazon) and Eric Schmidt (Google). It teaches readers to seize opportunities, embrace risk, and build resilience through actionable strategies like reframing failure, prioritizing growth, and advocating for recognition. The book blends personal anecdotes, leadership frameworks, and daily habits to help professionals design purposeful careers.
This book is ideal for professionals at any career stage: entry-level employees seeking direction, mid-career individuals aiming for promotions, entrepreneurs scaling ventures, or those transitioning roles. It’s particularly valuable for readers interested in Silicon Valley leadership principles, overcoming self-doubt, or leveraging unconventional opportunities to advance their goals.
Key lessons include:
Hiatt provides frameworks for identifying transferable skills, creating opportunities in seemingly stagnant roles, and negotiating promotions. She emphasizes using lateral moves as steppingstones and shares tactics like “owning your narrative” to reframe past experiences during interviews or networking.
Hiatt reveals strategies observed at Amazon and Google, such as:
Hiatt’s firsthand accounts of Silicon Valley’s leadership culture and her actionable “playbook” for navigating corporate politics set this apart. Unlike generic advice, she offers specific scripts for self-advocacy and real-world examples of turning mundane tasks into career-defining opportunities.
While not directly criticized in sources, some readers might find the Silicon Valley-centric examples less relatable for traditional industries. However, Hiatt mitigates this by emphasizing adaptable principles like self-trust and proactive mindset shifts.
Hiatt’s 15-year tenure at Amazon and Google, coupled with her consulting work for global CEOs, grounds the book in proven strategies. Her experiences—from being an unconventional hire to leading high-stakes projects—provide credibility to lessons on resilience and strategic risk-taking.
Amid rapid AI adoption and shifting workplace dynamics, the book’s focus on adaptability, continuous learning, and self-advocacy remains critical. Hiatt’s frameworks help readers navigate remote/hybrid work challenges and recession-proof their careers by staying agile.
While both address career advancement, Hiatt focuses more on tactical workplace navigation (e.g., seizing projects, negotiating promotions) vs. Sandberg’s broader societal call for women’s leadership. Bet on Yourself offers more concrete daily habits for individual career growth.
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Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco
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Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco

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Ann Hiatt spilled Diet Coke all over her laptop while sitting next to Larry Page on a flight to Zurich. Turbulence hit, and there she was-Google's newest chief of staff, drenched in embarrassment at 30,000 feet. Most of us would have hidden in the bathroom for the rest of the flight. Hiatt did something different. She got a replacement laptop immediately and worked harder than she'd ever worked, turning her most mortifying moment into her most productive trip. That pivot-from humiliation to contribution-earned her the trust of executives she'd work alongside for the next nine years. This is the essence of betting on yourself: not avoiding failure, but learning to dance with it so quickly that failure becomes fuel. Hiatt spent twelve years at Amazon and Google, sitting three feet from Jeff Bezos and later working as Eric Schmidt's right hand. Her journey from military brat to Silicon Valley insider wasn't paved with Ivy League credentials or natural genius-it was built on calculated risks, relentless learning, and the courage to pursue dreams that exceeded her abilities. Her father's call sign was "Goose," an F-4 Phantom pilot whose squadron's cockpit recordings ended up in Top Gun. Her mother started a preschool in Alaska, creating richness from ordinary circumstances. From them, Hiatt learned something crucial: your ambitions should always exceed your natural abilities. That imbalance isn't a weakness-it's your competitive advantage.