Most Read, Shared, and Saved Blog Posts of 2025

You told me what resonated in 2025 – your clicks, shares and comments made it clear. Here’s a recap of Your Top Reads of 2025:

If You Hate Working With a Team, This Might Be Why
Why teamwork isn’t the problem—and what actually makes collaboration frustrating.
👉 https://chelliephillips.com/2024/03/20/if-you-hate-working-with-a-team-this-might-be-why/

50 Thoughts on My 50th Birthday
Still popular nearly four years later—because growth, reflection, and perspective never go out of style.
👉 https://chelliephillips.com/2021/02/09/50-thoughts-on-my-50th-birthday/

Unwrap a Better Workplace This Season: FREE Culture-Building Advent Calendar
A practical (and fun) tool leaders and teams loved using this year.
👉 https://chelliephillips.com/2025/12/01/culture-building-advent-calendar/

7 Strategies to Embrace Change at Work
Because change isn’t slowing down—and neither should you.
👉 https://chelliephillips.com/2021/06/10/7-strategies-to-embrace-change-at-work/

What’s Gratitude Got to Do With My Career?
Turns out… quite a lot. This one continues to spark meaningful conversations.
👉 https://chelliephillips.com/2021/11/24/whats-gratitude-got-to-do-with-my-career/

5 Benefits of Becoming a Team Player
A companion favorite to the teamwork conversation—focused on growth, influence, and opportunity.
👉 https://chelliephillips.com/2024/03/27/5-benefits-of-becoming-a-team-player/

Thank you for reading, sharing, and allowing me to be part of your professional journey this year. Your engagement, encouragement, and thoughtful messages mean more than you know.

Here’s to learning, growing, and building better workplaces together in 2026

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Rejection Isn’t a Stop Sign — It’s a Detour

Rejection Isn’t a Stop Sign — It’s a Detour

I was eleven years old when I mailed my first piece of writing to be published. It was typed on a typewriter, carefully addressed, and signed with hope. It was also rejected. Years later, my first novel was rejected again and again. Today, I’ve published eight books—proof that rejection doesn’t get to decide the ending unless you let it.