Author: Shane Kuhn
Cites
- Shane Kuhn (1)
- IN: Kill Your Boss (2014) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: Interns are invisible. You can tell executives your name a hundred times and they will never remember it because they have no respect for someone at the bottom of the barrel, working for free. The irony is that they will heap important duties on you with total abandon. The more of these duties you involuntarily accept, the more you will get, simultaneously acquiring TRUST AND ACCESS. Ultimately, your target will trust you with his life, and that is when you will take it.
FROM: The Intern's Handbook, (2014), Novel, US
- NULL (1)
- IN: The Intern's Handbook (2014) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: Interns are invisible. You can tell executives your name a hundred times and they will never remember it because they have no respect for someone at the bottom of the barrel, working for free. The irony is that they will heap important duties on you with total abandon. The more of these duties you voluntarily accept, the more you will get, simultaneously acquiring TRUST AND ACCESS. Ultimately, your target will trust you with his life and that is when you will take it.
FROM: The Intern's Handbook, (2014), Fictional, NULL
Cited by
- Shane Kuhn (1)
- IN: Kill Your Boss (2014) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: Interns are invisible. You can tell executives your name a hundred times and they will never remember it because they have no respect for someone at the bottom of the barrel, working for free. The irony is that they will heap important duties on you with total abandon. The more of these duties you involuntarily accept, the more you will get, simultaneously acquiring TRUST AND ACCESS. Ultimately, your target will trust you with his life, and that is when you will take it.
FROM: The Intern's Handbook, (2014), Novel, US