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Paul A. Riecks, Smart CEO, September 1, 2014 Great CEOs come from dramatically different backgrounds with amazingly different skills. Every CEO you meet comes from a different starting point, but it’s possible for all manners of men and women to become...
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Michael Rosenwald, Columbia Journalism Review, August 19, 2014 The best-sourced reporter covering Apple Inc., one of the world’s most secretive companies, is a 20-year-old junior at the University of Michigan. His name is Mark Gurman. He makes more than six...
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Gonzaga University, September 9, 2014 Saying thank you has been among the commonest of cultural civilities for centuries. Now new research, conducted by social psychologists Monica Bartlett at Gonzaga University and Lisa Williams at the University of New South Wales,...
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Farhad Manjoo, The New York Times, September 9, 2014 Four times before in its history, at media events planned with military precision, Apple introduced a new invention that radically altered how the technology industry conceived of its future. The company hopes...
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Bill Vlasic, The New York Times, September 7, 2014 After General Motors emerged from bankruptcy and a government bailout five years ago, the board of directors of the “new G.M.” was expected to keep a more watchful eye on a company that had gone...
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Scott Berinato, HBR Blog Network, September 5, 2014 Executives have taken to using the military acronym VUCA–Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity, Ambiguity–to describe the world in which they operate and to ask that question: In a VUCA world, what’s the...