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The boy never thought he’d be able to communicate with others. He developed a stutter that was so severe, he chose not to speak at all. As a matter of fact, he remained functionally mute for eight years--until a high school English teacher took notice of the boy’s gift for poetry. That teacher forced him to recite every day in class to improve his confidence and his public speaking ability. That teacher’s success is evident, as you’ll readily admit if you’ve ever heard James Earl Jones intone "This is CNN" on the cable news channel of the same name. (Fast Company)
Visit http://www.fastcompany.com/3013106/create-your-own-charisma-and-supercharge-your-personal-brand to view the full article online.
In business and in life, the most critical choices we make relate to people. Yet being a good judge of people is difficult. How do we get better at sizing up first impressions, at avoiding hiring mistakes, at correctly picking (and not missing) rising stars? The easy thing to do is focus on extrinsic markers – academic scores, net worth, social status, job titles. (Harvard Business Review)
Visit http://blogs.hbr.org/tjan/2013/06/becoming-a-better-judge-of-peo.html to view the full article online.
Ben Jealous was appointed president and CEO of the NAACP at a time when its membership was in decline. Jealous, however, has spent the last five years reversing that decline, increasing the number of donors and focusing on current hot-button issues like elimination of the death penalty. What's important, he said during a Wharton leadership lecture, is to "sit with people whom you disagree with 99 out of 100 times and find the one thing you can agree on." (Knowledge@Wharton)
Visit http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=3284 to view the full article online.
Career
Warning: Your personal life may disrupt your job search. A former finance chief of a heavy-equipment maker failed to get hired this spring after a hospitality business discovered he had filed for personal bankruptcy in 2000. An outside prospect for chief operating officer of a professional-services firm was knocked out of the running when the firm learned her husband had pled guilty to union payoffs. A man seeking a senior post at a real-estate concern got turned down after management learned he had sexually harassed the wife of a prior business partner. (The Wall Street Journal)
Visit http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323734304578543930818885730.html to view the full article online.
After promising your boss you would complete an important assignment on time, you realize you're behind and it's going to be late. You unintentionally leave a colleague out of the loop on a joint project, causing him or her to feel frustrated and a bit betrayed. On the subway, you aren't paying attention and accidentally spill hot coffee all over a stranger's expensive suit. It's time for a mea culpa. (Harvard Business Review)
Visit http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/06/the_most_effective_ways_to_mak.html to view the full article online.
It happens all the time: you're trying to solve a tough problem and you get stuck. You rack your brain but the answer just won't come. Asking around doesn't help. Neither does the internet. Bummer. We all know what that's like. It's damn frustrating. But when it happens to your career, it's far worse, especially if you're one of those people who expect a lot of themselves. (Inc.)
Visit http://www.inc.com/steve-tobak/stuck-in-your-career-3-simple-steps-to-get-unstuck.html to view the full article online.
Diversity in the Workplace
African-Americans fought for years to enter professions that were dominated by white people, like medicine, business and law. Now, experts say some of those gains have leveled off since the recession. Guest host Celeste Headlee speaks with The New York Times' Nelson Schwartz, and lawyer Lisa Tatum, about why minorities struggle to gain ground in elite professions. (Audio and transcript) (NPR)
Visit http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=189208138 to view the full article online.
Anyone who has hiring responsibilities in 2013 would like to think that the U.S. is tackling diversity head-on. But how far have American companies really come? We have been examining what has happened to equal opportunity in the private sector since the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Our data show that progress has stalled, many firms are showing signs of increased gender and racial employment segregation, and few firms monitor equal employment opportunity progress. (Harvard Business Review)
Visit http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/06/is_your_firm_really_an_equal_o.html to view the full article online.
International
Aracelis Upia Montero bounds through the front door of her wood and cinderblock house, calling out for her children. The bubbly 41-year-old Montero – whom everyone calls Kuki – proudly shows guests around her cramped single-story home in Villa Altagracia in the Dominican Republic. Montero points out her new living room furniture. In the past couple years, she has added two bedrooms and now has indoor plumbing. She has also built a little apartment at the end of her dirt driveway that she rents out. (NPR)
Visit http://www.npr.org/blogs/parallels/2013/06/20/193491766/can-this-dominican-factory-pay-good-wages-and-make-a-profit to view the full article online.
Education
The National Black MBA Association provides financial support to students pursuing careers in business, academia and related professions. Scholarship awards range from $1,000 to $20,000 however award amounts are contingent upon funding for the current year. The application period through June 30.
Visit http://www.nbmbaa.org/Education/ScholarshipPrograms/Default.aspx to view the full article online.
The Leaders of Tomorrow National Business Case Competition is a challenge like no other competition in the world. High school students analyze an MBA-level graduate school business case and present recommendations before panels of senior corporate executives and business school faculty. In the process, they must master advanced math, critical thinking, analytical, writing, research, and public speaking skills, and then present detailed financial projections and implementation plans.
Visit http://www.nbmbaa.org/LotCaseNew/lotBusCase.aspx to view the full article online.
NBMBAA
Early Bird Discounts End June 28! Register Now for NBMBAA's 35th Annual Conference and Expo
Save big when you register now to join us September 10-14 for our 35th Annual Conference and Expo, "Courageous Leadership: Owning Your Own Success." Register today to take advantage of early bird pricing, get first crack at hotel rooms and set yourself up for an unforgettable networking, career building and professional development experience in Houston.
Register Now
The Economy
Can you alleviate poverty by just giving money to the poor? It seems like a tautology, sure. But for development experts, it is a subject of serious research. Say you give $100 to a poor person in a developing country with no strings attached, rather than providing goods or services like food or schooling, or $100 to use for a specific purpose. Does the money simply provide a one-time boost to her consumption? (The New York Times)
Visit http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/06/20/ending-poverty-by-giving-the-poor-money/?ref=business to view the full article online.
Personal Finance
The American Dream isn't dead. It's just moved to Denmark. Now, we like to think of ourselves as a classless society, but it isn't true today. As the Brookings Institution has pointed out, America has turned into a place Horatio Alger would scarcely recognize: we have more inequality and less mobility than once-stratified Europe, particularly the Nordic countries. It's what outgoing Council of Economic Advisers chief Alan Krueger has dubbed the "Great Gatsby Curve" &ndsah; the more inequality there is, the less mobility there is. As Tim Noah put it, it's harder to climb our social ladder when the rungs are further apart. And it's getting worse. (The Atlantic)
Visit http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2013/06/rip-american-dream-why-its-so-hard-for-the-poor-to-get-ahead-today/276943/ to view the full article online.
Corporate America
Big Data is big business. Sensors, GPS tracking, math modeling, and artificial intelligence offer companies real-time market insights at massive scale and open the door to unprecedented ways of monitoring, targeting, and measuring employees and customers. Analyst firm Gartner predicts that enterprises adopting Big Data technologies will "outperform competitors by 20 percent in every available financial metric." (Fortrune)
Visit http://management.fortune.cnn.com/2013/06/20/big-data/?iid=SF_F_River to view the full article online.
Leadership
Paulett Eberhart is no shrinking violet. Brought in to turn the ship around at Philadelphia-based engineering and technology firm CDI, the executive told her team to be "brutally honest, but in a respectful way," even if they had to pound their fists on the table to get her attention. A big problem at many businesses, Eberhart recently told The New York Times, is that people don't spend enough time communicating, especially if they see something going wrong. (Fortune)
Visit http://management.fortune.cnn.com/2013/06/18/taking-the-brutality-out-of-brutal-honesty/ to view the full article online.
Lifestyle
Twenty-seven-year-old Trish Gallagher is very clear about the milestones that made her think, "Finally, I'm an adult." One was paying for her first solo vacation in 2010 to visit a college friend in San Francisco. Another was buying her first dog, a husky-hound puppy, at a shelter and raising him to age 4½, says the Fairbanks, Alaska, cartographer. The third: "Getting kicked off [her] parents' insurance into the shark-infested waters" of managing her own medical bills. (The Wall Street Journal)
Visit http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324520904578553252413297028.html?mod=WSJ_Careers_CareerJournal_9_1 to view the full article online.
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