
Top News
Showrooming – the consumer practice of checking out a product in one store and buying it elsewhere at a better price – has always been a challenge in retail. But with the advent of smartphones and the expansion of online retailers like Amazon.com, showrooming has gone from being a headache for bricks and mortar retailers to a full-blown migraine. (Knowledge@Wharton)
Visit http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=3083 to view the full article online.
Career
This is why I worry when senior executives tell aspiring leaders that membership in global elites requires sacrificing an existence grounded in one place. Framing the struggle for home as a private reckoning with loss is simplistic and dangerous. It makes global elites more isolated and disconnected, less intelligible and trustworthy. It puts them in no position to lead. (Harvard Business Review)
Visit http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2012/10/moving_around_without_losing_your_roots.html to view the full article online.
If you and your boss disagree over a course of action but share a solid working relationship, you might be able to respectfully make your case by presenting data and engaging your boss in debate. However, what if your problem with your boss is more serious, resulting from repeated clashes rather than a onetime disagreement? In other words, what if you work for a bad boss? The answer is that you need to take the initiative in solving the problem, because your boss almost certainly won't. (Fast Company)
Visit http://www.fastcompany.com/3001856/how-deal-3-breeds-bad-bosses to view the full article online.
Diversity in the Workplace
Scroll through the titles and subtitles of recent books, and you will read that women have become "The Richer Sex," that "The Rise of Women Has Turned Men Into Boys," and that we may even be seeing "The End of Men." How is it, then, that men still control the most important industries, especially technology, occupy most of the positions on the lists of the richest Americans, and continue to make more money than women who have similar skills and education? And why do women make up only 17 percent of Congress? (The New York Times)
Visit http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/30/opinion/sunday/the-myth-of-male-decline.html?pagewanted=all&src=ISMR_AP_LI_LST_FB to view the full article online.
International
The crisis in the euro area is beginning to feel like a permanent piece of the world's economic landscape: a great red spot that just churns and churns and never goes away. It isn't, though. One day the crisis will be over, either because the euro zone managed to muddle through or because it didn't, and came apart. To avoid coming apart, the euro zone needs to accomplish three things. (The Economist)
Visit http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2012/10/euro-crisis to view the full article online.
Education
Applications for many M.B.A. programs are declining, but it isn't getting any easier to score a spot at a top school. Because of a tight labor market and ballooning tuition costs, many would-be students are trimming their lists of dream schools, turning the admissions cycle into an all-or-nothing contest that leaves applicants – and schools – scrambling into the winter months. (Wall Street Journal)
Visit http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444752504578024630362755020.html to view the full article online.
A growing number of top-ranked U.S. colleges say they are finding objectionable material online that hurts the chances of prospective freshmen. About a quarter of admissions officers at the nation's top 500 colleges have used websites such as Facebook and Google to vet applicants, according to an annual Kaplan Test Prep survey. Of those, more than one-third say they have found something that has hurt a student's chance of admission, up from 12% last year. (Wall Street Journal)
Visit http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390443768804578035500956712628.html to view the full article online.
NBMBAA
NBMBAA would like to thank all of our attendees, members, sponsors, partners and volunteers for making the 34th Annual Conference and Exposition such a great success. We also thank the city of Indianapolis and our Indy chapter for being such gracious hosts. We can't wait to see everyone next year. Mark your calendars now for the 35th Annual Conference, September 10-14, 2013 in Houston, Texas!
Visit http://www.nbmbaa.org to view the full article online.
Nationwide Insurance proudly announced today it has been awarded the Silver Torch Award from the National Black MBA Association (NBMBAA) for Nationwide’s workplace diversity initiatives encouraging minority professionals to advance in strategic organizational positions. The award is presented annually to the corporation or individual who has made the greatest gains to promote equal opportunities that challenge and encourage minority professionals to develop and advance in strategic positions within their organization.
Visit http://eon.businesswire.com/news/eon/20120927006363/en/workplace-diversity/diversity-awards to view the full article online.
Technology
When you send a link to someone in a private message on Facebook, just how private is it? A recent online video shows that the social networking site scans the links you’re sending – registering them as though you "Like" the page you sent. It’s just one example of how online messages that seem private are often actually examined by computers for data. (Wall Street Journal)
Visit http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2012/10/03/how-private-are-your-private-messages/ to view the full article online.
Entrepreneurship
When big companies offshore profits to dodge taxes, small business owners say they are left footing the bill – and they're not happy about it. A U.S. Senate panel recently reviewed how Microsoft and Hewlett-Packard shaved billions off their taxes in recent years by moving profits offshore. (Money)
Visit http://money.cnn.com/2012/10/03/smallbusiness/tax-avoidance/index.html to view the full article online.
Corporate America
The $6 billion blunder has turned out to be no more than a minor ding on JPMorgan Chase’s mighty balance sheet. The company’s stock has rebounded strongly, and the financial world has moved on to other obsessions. But for Ina Drew, this is a scorching moment of failure from which it could be hard to recover. (New York Times Magazine)
Visit http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/07/magazine/ina-drew-jamie-dimon-jpmorgan-chase.html?hp to view the full article online.
T-Mobile USA and MetroPCS have agreed to merge, joining together two of the nation's largest low-cost wireless carriers. Both companies have been struggling. Though each remains profitable, their smartphone offerings are lackluster (i.e., no iPhone), they are far behind the curve on network technology, and both are shedding customers. (Money)
Visit http://money.cnn.com/2012/10/03/technology/mobile/t-mobile-metropcs-merger/index.html to view the full article online.
Government
Crusading against frivolous lawsuits, the United States Chamber of Commerce has had no shortage of cases to highlight, like the man suing a cruise line after burning his feet on a sunny deck or the mother claiming hearing loss from the screaming at a Justin Bieber concert. Now, the lobbying group’s Institute for Legal Reform is showing a 30-second commercial that uses Blitz USA, a bankrupt Oklahoma gasoline can manufacturer, to illustrate the consequences of abusive lawsuits. (The New York Times)
Visit http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/05/business/in-a-shuttered-gasoline-can-factory-the-two-sides-of-product-liability.html?ref=business to view the full article online.
Leadership
In addition to weaving inspiration with real-world corporate mythology, the book offers a rich dataset of strategic decisions – from Ford’s decision to give workers a wage high enough that they could afford a Model T to 3M’s now oft-copied practice of giving engineers time to dream – to study. Here is what I learned from the book. (Fast Company)
Visit http://www.fastcompany.com/3001870/greatest-business-decisions-all-time to view the full article online.
Ellen Kullman is one of the most powerful women in business, coming in at number five on Fortune's 2012 list of the Most Powerful Women. From her perch at the top of the 210-year-old, $38.7 billion chemical company – number 72 on the 2012 Fortune 500– Kullman is engineering a transformation from chemicals into agriculture and life sciences. But during the dark days of the Great Recession, Kullman was a motivator above all else. (Fortune)
Visit http://management.fortune.cnn.com/2012/10/04/ellen-kullman-dupont-2/?iid=SF_F_River to view the full article online.
Lifestyle
In the 1990s, researchers came up with the phrase "time famine" to describe the feeling many Americans have of feeling overwhelmed by work obligations and the general pace of life. According to "The Quest for the 25-Hour Day," in the Boston Globe, this feeling has a powerful role in people’s underlying happiness: "If time famine can create a state of rolling personal crisis, studies have shown that feeling ‘time affluent’ can be powerfully uplifting, more so than material wealth." (MIT/Sloan Management Review)
Visit http://sloanreview.mit.edu/improvisations/2012/09/26/how-to-feel-more-time-rich/#.UG3UlFFP-cw to view the full article online.
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