
Top News
Whether the game involves competing every four years in the Olympics or every day in a business, winning brings advantages that make it easier to keep winning. To understand sustainable success, I compared perpetual winners with long-term losers in professional and amateur sports and then matched the findings to business case studies for my book Confidence. (Harvard Business Review)
Visit http://blogs.hbr.org/kanter/2012/08/ten-reasons-winners-keep-winni.html to view the full article online.
Got a business idea and up for a challenge? If so, register to compete in NBMBAA's Innovation Whiteboard Challenge®. The Innovation Whiteboard Challenge gives you the chance to pitch your great business idea with just a marker and a whiteboard. Take the chance and sell the concept you've been thinking off to a panel of distinguished judges at the 34th Annual Conference and Exposition in Indianapolis this September.
The winner will walk away with $10,000! Registration has been extended to August 8. Getting started is easy. Simply sign up by submitting a 60-second video showing your unique idea through our website. Don’t miss this great chance to advance your entrepreneurial dreams. Sign up today!
Career
The business world is abuzz with trend stories about unlimited vacation time. At Netflix, for example, they abolished their policy in 2004 and instead allow employees to take vacation whenever they need time (and as long as they get their work done). Gilt Groupe, a fashion-oriented deals site, offers up a similar policy, a sure way to attract talent in the competitive tech space. (Fast Comapny)
Visit http://www.fastcompany.com/1844184/traditional-vacation-is-dead-long-live-vacation to view the full article online.
Education
Business school may still be a man's world, but institutions are looking to shake things up by placing female talent at the helm. Eager to achieve – or at least approach – gender parity in their administrative ranks, many schools are "acting affirmatively" by picking women over similarly qualified men to fill deanship slots, says Lucy Apthorp Leske, a partner at search firm Witt/Kieffer. (Wall Street Journal)
Visit http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444130304577558962875402588.html to view the full article online.
In the past 10 years technology has made consumers more powerful than ever. Social media and smartphones have made it easy for customers to share feedback on the spot, and they expect companies to respond swiftly and courteously when things go wrong. If snafus aren’t serviced, they can quickly snowball, taking careers, profits, and market share with them. (Bloomberg/Businessweek)
Visit http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2012-08-02/customer-service-gets-the-b-school-treatment to view the full article online.
NBMBAA
Register now and don't miss early bird discounts for the NBMBAA® 34th Annual Conference & Exposition, September 25-29 in Indianapolis. Visit the Conference website for our new Pre-Conference Planning Guide and get all the information on why Conference is for you, what you get for your registration, costs, hotels, programs and more!
Register Now!
Visit the 2012 Conference Site
Technology
No doubt about it: Outlook.com looks great. The user interface for Microsoft’s just-announced Hotmail overhaul is crisp and clean – I’m a sucker for whitespace. The social and Skype integrations seem winning, and the newsletter filter looks like inbox salvation. Here’s the kicker: When you sign up, before you even see your inbox for the first time, Microsoft makes this promise: "Outlook is private – you’re in control of your data, and your personal conversations aren’t used for ads." (Wired)
Visit http://www.wired.com/business/2012/08/how-microsoft-will-profit-off-webmail-without-reading-your-inbox/ to view the full article online.
Entrepreneurship
If you are thinking about starting your own business, you need to have the stamina of a marathon runner. And once you start your career as an entrepreneur, a glass-half-full attitude will serve you well as you face a continuous stream of problems to solve and questions to answer. (Entrepreneur)
Visit http://www.entrepreneur.com/blog/224105?cam=Dev&ctp=Carousel&cdt=13&cdn=224105 to view the full article online.
Personal Finance
Maureen O'Brien told her daughter Emily Macri: dream big. She could pick any college she wanted and they would figure out a way to pay for it. Macri chose the University of Vermont, which costs more than $49,000 in tuition and fees per year for out-of-state residents. O'Brien and her daughter co-signed a private student loan from Sallie Mae for $24,000 and a $30,000 Parent PLUS loan, a federal loan program for parents. And that was just for Macri's first two years of college. (NPR)
Visit http://www.npr.org/2012/08/02/157657475/families-make-big-changes-to-pay-for-college to view the full article online.
Corporate America
Hiroshi Mikitani is not a typical Japanese CEO. He's at the head of Japan's largest – and the world's third largest – e-commerce company . Now he is starting a colossal offensive on Amazon's turf. (Fortune)
Visit http://tech.fortune.cnn.com/2012/08/02/destroy-amazon/ to view the full article online.
Lifestyle
Pssssst. Want some tips on how the pros travel? Just ask a corporate travel manager. These are the people who spend billions on travel each year and help companies set policies that dictate how millions of people fly. At the annual Global Business Travel Association convention in Boston last week, I gathered the best tips and juiciest secrets of corporate travel managers. Here are 10 ways to improve your travel. (Wall Street Journal)
Visit http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390443866404577563174176967822.html to view the full article online.
|