Power is usually sold as a personal possession-something you earn through talent, confidence, money, or grit. But in modern life, influence doesn't rise in a straight line, and it doesn't belong to individuals in the way we like to imagine. It is granted through networks, reinforced by institutions, and amplified by technology-and the same architecture that elevates a person can quietly decide when their reach has become inconvenient. Too Influential to Survive examines a modern paradox: the more visible you become, the more vulnerable you are. Visibility creates reach-but it also creates exposure, scrutiny, and a permanent record. Credibility opens doors-but it can be re-framed, reduced, and professionally "managed" when your independence starts to look like risk. Access feels like freedom-until you realize it can function like a leash. This book walks you through the machinery behind public influence and reputational survival: how "individual power" is often a negotiated position; how legitimacy is assigned by gatekeepers; how access operates through silent contracts; how narrative warfare reshapes memory; how economic leverage punishes deviation; and how digital systems don't merely reflect public interest-they engineer it. Most importantly, it explains what happens at the tipping point-when influence stops being treated as an asset and starts being treated as a liability. Not through dramatic confrontation, but through subtle recalibration: fewer endorsements, shrinking invitations, shifting coverage, and credibility erosion that changes how the same visibility is interpreted. If you've ever wondered why certain people rise fast-and then fall in ways that seem strangely "organized"-this book gives you a framework to read power clearly, without superstition and without naïve optimism. Influence isn't just what you have. It's what the system still tolerates.
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Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. Power is usually sold as a personal possession-something you earn through talent, confidence, money, or grit. But in modern life, influence doesn't rise in a straight line, and it doesn't belong to individuals in the way we like to imagine. It is granted through networks, reinforced by institutions, and amplified by technology-and the same architecture that elevates a person can quietly decide when their reach has become inconvenient. Too Influential to Survive examines a modern paradox: the more visible you become, the more vulnerable you are. Visibility creates reach-but it also creates exposure, scrutiny, and a permanent record. Credibility opens doors-but it can be re-framed, reduced, and professionally "managed" when your independence starts to look like risk. Access feels like freedom-until you realize it can function like a leash.This book walks you through the machinery behind public influence and reputational survival: how "individual power" is often a negotiated position; how legitimacy is assigned by gatekeepers; how access operates through silent contracts; how narrative warfare reshapes memory; how economic leverage punishes deviation; and how digital systems don't merely reflect public interest-they engineer it. Most importantly, it explains what happens at the tipping point-when influence stops being treated as an asset and starts being treated as a liability. Not through dramatic confrontation, but through subtle recalibration: fewer endorsements, shrinking invitations, shifting coverage, and credibility erosion that changes how the same visibility is interpreted.If you've ever wondered why certain people rise fast-and then fall in ways that seem strangely "organized"-this book gives you a framework to read power clearly, without superstition and without naive optimism. Influence isn't just what you have. It's what the system still tolerates. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9789699797545
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Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. Power is usually sold as a personal possession-something you earn through talent, confidence, money, or grit. But in modern life, influence doesn't rise in a straight line, and it doesn't belong to individuals in the way we like to imagine. It is granted through networks, reinforced by institutions, and amplified by technology-and the same architecture that elevates a person can quietly decide when their reach has become inconvenient. Too Influential to Survive examines a modern paradox: the more visible you become, the more vulnerable you are. Visibility creates reach-but it also creates exposure, scrutiny, and a permanent record. Credibility opens doors-but it can be re-framed, reduced, and professionally "managed" when your independence starts to look like risk. Access feels like freedom-until you realize it can function like a leash.This book walks you through the machinery behind public influence and reputational survival: how "individual power" is often a negotiated position; how legitimacy is assigned by gatekeepers; how access operates through silent contracts; how narrative warfare reshapes memory; how economic leverage punishes deviation; and how digital systems don't merely reflect public interest-they engineer it. Most importantly, it explains what happens at the tipping point-when influence stops being treated as an asset and starts being treated as a liability. Not through dramatic confrontation, but through subtle recalibration: fewer endorsements, shrinking invitations, shifting coverage, and credibility erosion that changes how the same visibility is interpreted.If you've ever wondered why certain people rise fast-and then fall in ways that seem strangely "organized"-this book gives you a framework to read power clearly, without superstition and without naive optimism. Influence isn't just what you have. It's what the system still tolerates. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9789699797545
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Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. Power is usually sold as a personal possession-something you earn through talent, confidence, money, or grit. But in modern life, influence doesn't rise in a straight line, and it doesn't belong to individuals in the way we like to imagine. It is granted through networks, reinforced by institutions, and amplified by technology-and the same architecture that elevates a person can quietly decide when their reach has become inconvenient. Too Influential to Survive examines a modern paradox: the more visible you become, the more vulnerable you are. Visibility creates reach-but it also creates exposure, scrutiny, and a permanent record. Credibility opens doors-but it can be re-framed, reduced, and professionally "managed" when your independence starts to look like risk. Access feels like freedom-until you realize it can function like a leash.This book walks you through the machinery behind public influence and reputational survival: how "individual power" is often a negotiated position; how legitimacy is assigned by gatekeepers; how access operates through silent contracts; how narrative warfare reshapes memory; how economic leverage punishes deviation; and how digital systems don't merely reflect public interest-they engineer it. Most importantly, it explains what happens at the tipping point-when influence stops being treated as an asset and starts being treated as a liability. Not through dramatic confrontation, but through subtle recalibration: fewer endorsements, shrinking invitations, shifting coverage, and credibility erosion that changes how the same visibility is interpreted.If you've ever wondered why certain people rise fast-and then fall in ways that seem strangely "organized"-this book gives you a framework to read power clearly, without superstition and without naive optimism. Influence isn't just what you have. It's what the system still tolerates. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9789699797545
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Taschenbuch. Etat : Neu. nach der Bestellung gedruckt Neuware - Printed after ordering - Power is usually sold as a personal possession-something you earn through talent, confidence, money, or grit. But in modern life, influence doesn't rise in a straight line, and it doesn't belong to individuals in the way we like to imagine. It is granted through networks, reinforced by institutions, and amplified by technology-and the same architecture that elevates a person can quietly decide when their reach has become inconvenient.Too Influential to Survive examines a modern paradox: the more visible you become, the more vulnerable you are. Visibility creates reach-but it also creates exposure, scrutiny, and a permanent record. Credibility opens doors-but it can be re-framed, reduced, and professionally 'managed' when your independence starts to look like risk. Access feels like freedom-until you realize it can function like a leash.This book walks you through the machinery behind public influence and reputational survival: how 'individual power' is often a negotiated position; how legitimacy is assigned by gatekeepers; how access operates through silent contracts; how narrative warfare reshapes memory; how economic leverage punishes deviation; and how digital systems don't merely reflect public interest-they engineer it.Most importantly, it explains what happens at the tipping point-when influence stops being treated as an asset and starts being treated as a liability. Not through dramatic confrontation, but through subtle recalibration: fewer endorsements, shrinking invitations, shifting coverage, and credibility erosion that changes how the same visibility is interpreted.If you've ever wondered why certain people rise fast-and then fall in ways that seem strangely 'organized'-this book gives you a framework to read power clearly, without superstition and without naïve optimism. Influence isn't just what you have. It's what the system still tolerates. N° de réf. du vendeur 9789699797545
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Taschenbuch. Etat : Neu. Too Influential to Survive | The Cost of Power in a Controlled World | Danish Ali Bajwa | Taschenbuch | Englisch | 2026 | RK Books Publication | EAN 9789699797545 | Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, 36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr[at]libri[dot]de | Anbieter: preigu Print on Demand. N° de réf. du vendeur 134631083
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