
Diversity in the Workplace
What will it take for men to get it? In the last five years, women and minorities actually lost ground in U.S. corporate boardroom representation, despite solid evidence that greater women's representation in corporate leadership correlates directly with improved business performance. (Harvard Business Review)
Visit http://blogs.hbr.org/hbr/hewlett/2011/05/women_on_boards_america.html to view the full article online.
International
A novelist once wrote that: "You can tell the ideals of a nation by its advertisements." Nigeria’s ideals vary from place to place: the north is mostly Muslim, the south is mostly Christian or animist. Young and old, rural and urban, Ibo, Hausa and Yoruba: each group sees the world differently. So Nigerian advertisers must be both deft and sensitive. (The Economist)
Visit http://www.economist.com/node/18621345 to view the full article online.
Education
London Business School this month will unveil a new center to study innovation. It is a prospect about which the school's dean, Andrew Likierman, is particularly keen. "Innovation, as far as we're concerned, is one of the key drivers of everything that goes on in business," Sir Andrew said. "I wouldn't have the nerve to get up in front of a group of sophisticated people and say something that didn't relate to the world that actually is." (Wall Street Journal)
Visit http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704740604576301181974037002.html to view the full article online.
Technology
According to IHS-owned market research firm iSuppli, revenues from major mobile app stores will grow 77.7% to $3.8 billion this year. iSuppli estimates that major app markets like those offered by Apple, Google, Nokia and RIM sold $2.1 billion worth of apps in 2010 and just $830.6 million in 2009. (BGR)
Visit http://www.bgr.com/2011/05/05/major-mobile-app-store-revenue-will-grow-77-7-in-2011/ to view the full article online.
Entrepreneurship
A growing number of specialized, market-specific business accelerators are helping entrepreneurs around the country get their businesses off the ground. (Entrepreneur)
Visit http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/219485 to view the full article online.
The Economy
If you're a bank customer, you could soon be facing higher ATM fees, a $50 spending limit on your debit card, or a 30% late payment penalty on your credit card. And those debit rewards you've been enjoying? Say goodbye to those. (CNN/Money)
Visit http://money.cnn.com/2011/05/04/pf/banks_interchange_fees/index.htm to view the full article online.
Corporate America
They may be Masters of the Universe now, leaders of Fortune 100 companies, commanding tens of thousands of employees and pulling down multi-million-dollar pay packages every year. But when these Fortune chief executives were mere MBA students, they felt as overwhelmed, as intimidated, as dumb, and, in some cases, as completely broke as many of today’s MBA candidates. (Poets and Quants)
Visit http://poetsandquants.com/2011/05/04/fortune-100-ceos-when-they-were-mba-students/ to view the full article online.
Government
New Jersey is granting Panasonic a $102.4 million tax credit to move its North American headquarters – nine miles. The incentives, announced on Apr. 20, will help defray the cost of leasing a new high-rise office tower to be built in Newark to replace Panasonic's digs in Secaucus, which the Japanese electronics maker has outgrown. (Bloomberg/Businessweek)
Visit http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/11_20/b4228029534552.htm to view the full article online.
Lifestyle
Last year Vijay Govindarajan, of Dartmouth College’s Tuck School of Business, along with Christian Sarkar, a marketing expert, issued a challenge in a Harvard Business Review blog: why not apply the world’s best business thinking to housing the poor? (The Economist)
Visit http://www.economist.com/node/18618271 to view the full article online.
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