Thursday 6th June 2024
  • Successful Strategy and the Art of Timing - Inc.com (No paywall)

    When it comes to strategy, timing can be more important than the plan itself.

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  • Why lying on the internet keeps working

    A new book examines the "Invisible Rulers" who manipulate your attention online.

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  • The Lords of Silicon Valley Are Thrilled to Present a ‘Handheld Iron Dome’ - WIRED (No paywall)

    ZeroMark wants to build a system that will let soldiers easily shoot a drone out of the sky with the weapons they’re already carrying—and venture capital firm a16z is betting the startup can pull it off.

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  • Why Talented People Don’t Use Their Strengths - Harvard Business Review (No paywall)

    Experts have long encouraged people to “play to their strengths.” But based on my observations, this is easier said than done, because we often undervalue what we inherently do well. As a leader, the challenge is not only to spot talent but also to convince your people that you value their talents and that they should, too. Begin by identifying the strengths of each member of your team. You might ask them, “What compliments do you tend to dismiss?” since people often downplay what they do most easily. Once you’ve identified their key strengths, ask them, “Are you doing work that draws on your strengths? Are we taking on projects that make the most of your strengths?” If the answer is no, reassign people to new roles where their strengths will be put to better use.

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  • How Axe Body Spray is trying to move beyond teenage boys' lockers

    "The idea that you spray this on and you get the girl is sort of nonsense, really. I mean, they know it, we know it. … So why don't we just kind of play to that?" said John Hegarty, founder of Bartle Bogle Hegarty, a London-based advertising firm that worked with Axe between 1994 and 2017.

    "They were moving the needle maybe a little too far in terms of the brand pivot. That's a lot for a brand with that strong a DNA in the marketplace to achieve in that short period of time," said Stephan Kanlian, chairperson for the Fashion Institute of Technology's Cosmetics and Fragrance Graduate Program.

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  • If You Thought The Job Search Was Rigged Against You, Here’s Why You’re Not Wrong - Forbes (No paywall)

    There are questionable practices that employers deploy that may not be in the best interests of job seekers, including posting fake jobs, ghosting candidates, pulling a bait-and-switch, lowballing offers and other questionable tactics.

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  • 2024's summer solstice is Earth's earliest since 1796

    On average, the summer solstice occurs on June 21 of most years, as the Earth’s north pole is tilted maximally toward the Sun at a particular moment on that day. As the Earth revolves around the Sun over the course of a year, its axis remains pointed in the same direction, so that the orientation of Earth in space goes through a cycle:

    The equinoxes and solstices given here apply to the northern hemisphere; in the southern hemisphere, seasonal equinoxes and solstices are opposed, as seasons are determined by the direction that Earth’s south pole points, rather than the north pole.

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  • Skill-building to the max: Why fluid "scaffolding" is essential

    While we can go it alone when it comes to challenge, the research clearly shows that we often shouldn’t. As you get into a bit of hot water while trying to get better, you have to focus. Intently. And it’s often harder than we expect to maintain that focus and self-control in the right ways for the right amount of time to get better. With an expert’s help, we can take on more challenge and get more skill out of it. 

    This conclusion is central to the heap of rigorous research on how kids build skill. Early in the twentieth century, but in only the last few years of his short life, psychologist Lev Vygotsky introduced a powerful idea, which he called “a zone of proximal development.” Vygotsky spent many hours studying the effects of school instruction. He found that whatever the lesson—say reading—kids could do some things unaided, couldn’t do some things at all, but there was an interesting middle ground where they could do some tasks with guidance. He called this interesting middle a zone of proximal development and inspired generations of educational researchers to study how teachers could most effectively help kids enter this zone and get the most from it. Self-directed learning was all the rage back then—this was when Montessori and Waldorf-style schools surged in popularity—and he believed there was an important role for just the right kind of guidance on tasks. 

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  • Here's why China's economy is stumbling -- but not about to fall

    On January 29, 2024, a court in Hong Kong ordered Chinese real-estate giant Evergrande Group to begin liquidating its assets. The company, founded in 1996, had taken advantage of China’s decades-long real estate boom, quickly becoming the biggest developer in the world. But by 2024, it had also become the most debt-ridden. Prohibited from borrowing more money to complete its construction projects — 1,322 according to statistics from the China Index Academy — Evergrande’s empire crumbled, sending shockwaves throughout the Chinese economy and, by extension, the world.

    For years, it seemed like the only direction the Chinese economy could go was up. Once one of the poorest countries on Earth, China underwent an unprecedented transformation following the market-oriented reforms of CCP Chairman Deng Xiaoping, who, reminiscent of Vladimir Lenin’s short-lived New Economic Policy, opened up its state-owned markets to private enterprise. The growth kickstarted by these reforms, implemented in the 1970s, lasted well into the late 2010s. During this time, the Chinese economy consistently grew at a much faster pace than the U.S. or Western Europe, elevating the lion’s share of its 1.4 billion citizens from lower to middle class.

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