In the past 45 years, intangible assets have steadily and quickly replaced physical capital as the most valuable asset class (see graphic 1). Employees are the stewards of these intangible assets as they bring the unique experience, knowledge, networks, and know-how that are voluntarily shared or withheld and codified in company culture. Indeed, the various drivers of culture, including leadership, policies, decision rights, organizational design, people development, and relevancy, determine the extent to which employees share or horde these intangible assets. And, since the decision to do so unfolds, employee-by-employee, on a continuous basis, culture’s contribution to company performance in the intangible economy has markedly grown. READ MORE
Top 10 Crooked CEOs
Bernie Madoff, who is scheduled to be sentenced June 29 for perpetrating history's biggest Ponzi scheme, is just be the latest in a long line of industry titans turned crooks READ MORE
Companies can no longer silence laid-off employees in exchange for severance
If your company lays you off, your employer might offer you severance pay — but only if you agree to adhere to a number of restrictions.
Staying quiet is often one of them. READ MORE
6 Strategies To Determine The Right Business Model For Your Startup
It's essential for the success and expansion of a company to choose the most appropriate business model. This model will effectively lay the groundwork for a company's overall strategy as well as its day-to-day operations. It will prove crucial to determining the course for how a firm generates, delivers and retains value for its customers.
Yet with so many options to pick from, it may can be difficult to identify which business model works best for your startup. Here are six strategies I recommend to help leaders choose the appropriate business model for their own company. READ MORE
Tech Layoffs Are Feeding a New Startup Surge
Henry Kirk always thought he would eventually leave his job as an engineering manager at Google and start his own company. But when he became one of the 12,000 employees let go by the tech giant in January, he decided his time had come—albeit in an earlier and unexpected fashion.
Kirk and five others laid off from Google are now working on launching their own software design and development studio. He announced his ejection from Google and the new venture in a LinkedIn post that garnered more than 15,000 reactions. Kirk says he’s received a staggering 1,000 messages since making the post from people looking to work with the new agency or simply wishing him well on his attempt to conjure opportunity from a setback. READ MORE
Diversity, equity and inclusion jobs slashed at higher rate than others in recent layoffs
Corporate roles focused on diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) may not hold the job security they used to.
A recent study conducted by Revelio Labs shows the companies that laid off workers in 2022 slashed DEI positions at a higher rate than others, indicating those dedicated roles become lower-priority when times get tough. READ MORE
More than 60 companies tried a four-day work week and results show why 92% are keeping it
Employees at companies that adopted a four-day work week without pay cuts said they were happier and healthier, while revenues did not fall READ MORE
Bill Gates says AI poses threat to a popular search engine
Billionaire Bill Gates said on Sunday that the artificial intelligence industry will likely come to threaten Google.
The Microsoft co-founder said in an interview on the "In Good Company" podcast that the search engine's profits "will be down." READ MORE
Justices 'completely confused' during arguments in Section 230 case against Google that could reshape internet
The Supreme Court heard oral arguments Tuesday in the first of two cases this week that explore the extent of the legal protections given to tech companies that provide a platform for third-party users to publish content.
The case in question, Gonzalez v. Google, deals with recommendations and algorithms used by sites like YouTube that go further than simply allowing users to post content, but arrange and promote the content to users in a certain way. YouTube and Google are facing litigation over allegedly recommending videos created by ISIS and used to recruit new members. READ MORE
Walmart sees weaker 2023 results, cautious on economic outlook
Walmart Inc struck a cautious note in its economic outlook for 2023 on Tuesday, as the retail bellwether forecast full-year earnings below estimates and warned that cautious spending by consumers could pressure profit margins.
Shares of the world's largest retailer fell 4.6% to $139.75 in premarket trading, as the company continued to battle price hikes from many of its product suppliers in a high-inflation environment. READ MORE
AI is starting to pick who gets laid off
Days after mass layoffs trimmed 12,000 jobs at Google, hundreds of former employees flocked to an online chatroom to commiserate about the seemingly erratic way they had suddenly been made redundant.
They swapped theories on how management had decided who got cut. Could a “mindless algorithm carefully designed not to violate any laws” have chosen who got the ax, one person wondered in a Discord post The Washington Post could not independently verify. READ MORE
ChatGPT creator Sam Altman says the world may not be 'that far away from potentially scary' AI and feels 'regulation will be critical'
Sam Altman, the CEO of ChatGPT creator OpenAI, warned the world may not that "that far from potentially scary" artificial intelligence, and said regulating it will be "critical."
In a series of tweets on Sunday, Altman said a transition to an AI-enabled future is "mostly good" and can happen fast — like the transition from "pre-smartphone world to post-smartphone world." READ MORE
Every part of Biden's economic agenda is inflationary
Before we go "ballooning" again tonight—and we'll be speaking with Senator Tom Cotton in just a moment — a few words about today's hotter than expected consumer price index. It wasn't a disaster, but it wasn't so great either.
Basically, the Federal Reserve is still a one-man band getting no help from Joe Biden's inflationary fiscal policy, but the central bank is making progress. Today's topline number was 6.4%. Excluding food and energy the core rate was 5.6%. READ MORE
Goldman Sachs CEO on probability of economic soft landing
David Solomon on Tuesday discussed the probability of the U.S. economy experiencing a soft landing.
"What I’d say is, while it’s still very, very uncertain, the consensus has shifted to be a little bit more dovish in the CEO community that we can navigate through this in the United States with a softer economic landing than what people would have expected six months ago," the Goldman Sachs CEO said at the Credit Suisse Financial Services Forum. READ MORE
“Corporate Citizen, Police Thyself”: How the DOJ Is Changing Its Corporate Enforcement Policy to Encourage Self-Policing
Few executives expect to interact with the Department of Justice (DOJ) during their careers, but the current DOJ has given companies some homework, and the assignment applies to everyone. Recent changes to the DOJ’s corporate enforcement policy are designed to encourage companies to self-monitor for illegal activity and to self-report misconduct to authorities. Given the implications of the changes, even smaller companies and those in lightly regulated industries should be paying attention. READ MORE
Laid-off tech workers seek leverage on the way out
For some tech workers, everything is negotiable, including the severance package that comes with a layoff.
As tech companies shed tens of thousands of jobs, staffers at different levels are pushing back on the terms of their departures. Some employees are hiring lawyers or other advisers to press for more money or an extension of their health benefits before agreeing to deals—adopting the type of tactics traditionally used by senior executives haggling over their severance terms. READ MORE
Happiest Jobs Of 2023: Top 5 Most Satisfying Careers
When we’re young, we often grow up dreaming of who we want to be. As we get older, those dreams start to shift – reality sets in and our paths often turn out much different than what we imagined as a child. A variety of factors can influence our career, such as access to opportunity, changing interests and skill sets, or other life events like starting a family. Usually people who find meaning in their work tend to be happier, as their passion and drive for what they do keeps them motivated. The happiest jobs for each person will vary according to their individual strengths and unique personality. READ MORE
The mystery of the disappearing vacation day
Did you know that Americans are about half as likely to be taking vacation in any given week as they were 40 years ago? Neither did we! When we spotted this alarming trend in an obscure government time series, our eyebrows shot up so far our ears popped.
Where have our vacations gone? READ MORE
How to Use an Account-Based Strategy to Drive Revenue Growth
In an uncertain economy, driving revenue simultaneously becomes mission critical and increasingly difficult to accomplish. In 2023, every business — regardless of its size or industry — is worried about hitting its number.
When the purse strings tighten, efficiency becomes a top priority. I talked about this in my last piece, “Driving Sales Efficiency When Facing a Downturn.” For starters, that means getting your tech stack right and tight. Consolidation is the name of the game here. Get rid of those single-point tools that don’t work well together and instead opt for more comprehensive solutions that integrate data and processes across the revenue lifecycle. READ MORE
'Quiet hiring' shuffles responsibilities and roles: Here's how it may help workers, companies
While some employees are practicing "quiet quitting," some companies are focused on "quiet hiring."
Quiet quitting has been a workplace trend in which employees do the bare minimum at work as a result of job burnout. READ MORE