Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 

Keywords

E-Commerce

2025-11-18 10:00:00| Fast Company

Whats one thing every leader can do to make sure employees are happy at work and engaged with their jobs? Make sure they can trust in you, your organization, and one another. Thats the finding in a 2024 meta-analysis of studies with more than 1 million participants. When leaders seek to improve employee well-being, they typically think about things like remote work, flexible schedules, and wellness offerings such as gym memberships. But trust may be the most valuable perk of all. A 2024 meta-analysis by an international research team led by Minxiang Zhao and Yixuan Li of the Renmin University of China psychology department examined 132 studies on trust from around the world. The studies had a total of more than 1 million participants. The researchers focused on two types of trust, interpersonal trust and institutional trust, exactly the two types that can occur in workplaces. They found that both types of trust correlate with social, psychological, and to a lesser extent, physical well-being. If trust is so important, how do you get more of it? Unlike some other things, you cant mandate trust, and you cant demand that employees trust you, your company, or one another. But you can provide a workplace culture where trust can flourish. Here are some ways to do that. 1. Be transparent If you want employees to trust you and your company, its obviously important to treat them fairly. But its almost as important to let them know whats going on. You may have to find a delicate balance between sharing competitive information and keeping too much to yourself. But half the employees in a recent survey said lack of information about what was going on at their companies was their biggest source of stress. Keep that in mind when considering whether to share bad news. 2. Be predictable Many years ago, a CEO known for turning troubled companies around told me that his employees should never have to guess how he would answer a question. He told them his top priorities so they could always predict what he would say. He never wavered from those priorities. We may be fascinated with leaders like Elon Musk who often change their minds. But we trust those like Warren Buffett, who consistently say the same things year after year. The more they can predict what you will say and do, the easier it is for employees to trust you. 3. Be trusting yourself It may be hard for employees to trust you if, say, they know youre using software to monitor their keystrokes. Admittedly, treating employees with trust can backfire in the short term if you trust the wrong person. But in the long term, research shows that more trusting organizations tend to perform better, even in the often mistrustful retail industry. I believe the reason for this is that, while we can easily see the cost of employee dishonesty when it happens, we dont always recognize that our mistrust comes at a high cost as well. If an employee has their bag searched every time they leave work, they wont feel the same trust or affection for the company that they otherwise might. And its human nature for them to try to figure out a way to sneak items out despite the search. 4. Help employees trust one another Setting up competitions that pit employees against each other for important things like compensation can bring about acrimony and mistrust among them. Here again, the short-term gain may not be worth the long-term loss. Employees who trust their coworkers are more likely to collaborate effectively with them. Theyre also likely to be happier, and to stay in their jobs. Relationships at work are often the biggest deterrent to leaving a company. You can help foster those relationships by asking people to collaborate on important projects and letting them share the credit equally. You can also create teams across different functions so that employees get to know their colleagues outside their immediate areas. And of course, any opportunity for employees to socialize, get together outside of work, or work together on community projects can help create those relationships and that trust. In my book Career Self-Care, I explore workplace happiness, and how relationships at work can contribute to that happiness or detract from it. The more employees can trust in you, your company, and one another, the happier and less burned out theyll be. Its your job as a leader to make that happen. Like this column? Sign up to subscribe to email alerts and you’ll never miss a post. The opinions expressed here by Inc.com columnists re their own, not those of Inc.com. Minda Zetlin This article originally appeared on Fast Companys sister publication, Inc. Inc. is the voice of the American entrepreneur. We inspire, inform, and document the most fascinating people in business: the risk-takers, the innovators, and the ultra-driven go-getters that represent the most dynamic force in the American economy.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-18 10:00:00| Fast Company

Tim Cook has led Apple for the past 14 years. In that time, the company’s market cap has jumped from $348 billion to $4 trillion. While his predecessor, Steve Jobs, might have been a leader in the field of innovation, few CEOs have shown the business acumen of Cook. But according to a report in the Financial Times, Cook’s run as CEO could be over as soon as next year. The report has set off a guessing game as to who will take over the tech giant when Cook departs. (Apple did not respond to a request for comment on the FT story.) The name most commonly mentioned is John Ternus, Apple’s senior vice president of hardware engineering, though reportedly no final decisions have been made yet. Ternus wasn’t always the first choice. Jeff Williams was once seen as Cooks most likely successor, but he ended his operational responsibilities in July and plans to retire in the next six weeks. Craig Federighi, Apples senior vice president of software engineering, and Greg Joswiak, senior vice president of worldwide marketing, have also been mentioned as possible successors in the past. However, both the Financial Times and Bloombergs Mark Gurman have said Ternus is the heir apparent. So who is the person who could inherit Apple as it approaches its latest crossroadswith product design more important than ever and AI coming to the forefront? Meet John Ternus At just 50, Ternus is the youngest top executive at Apple, but he’s hardly a newcomer. He has been with the company for nearly 24 years, leading the hardware engineering division since 2013. That puts him in charge of the teams behind the iPhone, iPad, AirPods, Mac, and more. Over the past five years, he has become a more visible presence at Apple events, unveiling the iPhone Air in early 2025 and showing off Apple’s first silicon chip, the M1, in 2000. His engineering background could assuage critics who have complained Apple has become a less revolutionary company under Cook’s leadership (despite the hundreds of products released during his tenure). Ternus started his career in tech at Virtual Research Systems, working on VR headsets for four years before joining Apple in 2001, which let him work on several products that would prove to be iconic for the company. By 2013, he was overseeing Mac and iPad development and added the iPhone hardware to his list of supervised products in 2020. He is said to be well-liked at the company and by Cook, helping to contribute to product road maps and future strategies for Apple. Will Cook retire? Cook turned 65 this month, which has warmed up the talk of his eventual retirement, but he has previously downplayed questions about whether he plans to step down. In January, Cook was a guest on the Table Manners podcast and said his retirement, whenever it should happen to occur, wont meet the traditional definition. He added he likely has many years left at Apple, though with the caveat that he doesnt want to be a CEO for the rest of his life. I dont see being at home doing nothing and not [being] intellectually stimulated and thinking about how tomorrow can be better than today, he said. I think Ill always be wired in that kind of way and want to work.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-18 10:00:00| Fast Company

If it seems like everything is getting more expensive, you’re right. Thanks to inflation (up 3%), which has affected goods from food to gas (for which prices are up 4.1%), you can now add the post office to the the long list of places where you’ll have to pay more. Here’s what to know. What’s happening? The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) is planning to increase the price of shipping. The good news is, the changes won’t affect your holiday packages and won’t raise the price of stamps. The changes go into effect next year on January 18, pending a review by the Postal Regulatory Commission (PRC). How much will prices go up? The move will raise prices approximately 6.6% for Priority Mail, 5.1% for Priority Mail Express, 7.8% for USPS Ground Advantage, and 6% for Parcel Select. Although mail price increases are based on the consumer price index, shipping prices are primarily adjusted according to market conditions, USPS said in a news release. Why is the post office raising prices? The price hike is aimed at generating revenue for the ailing U.S. Postal Service. It’s part of its 10-year “modernization and transformation plan” to make the agency financially sustainable over the long term, and able to continue delivering mail and packages at least six days a week. It comes as USPS posted a $9 billion loss for the 2025 fiscal yearwhich is actually a better financial outcome than last year, when it lost $9.5 billion. One thing to note: USPS relies on revenue from its postage, products, and services to keep it afloatnot tax dollars. How can I find out more about the new prices? The complete USPS price filing, with prices for all products, can be found on the PRC’s website at prc.arkcase.com/portal/filings, or on USPSs website at pe.usps.com/PriceChange/Index.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-18 09:30:00| Fast Company

Its happened to you countless times: Youre waiting for a website to load, only to see a box with a little mountain range where an image should be. Its the placeholder icon for a missing image. But have you ever wondered why this scene came to be universally adopted? As a scholar of environmental humanities, I pay attention to how symbols of wilderness appear in everyday life. The little mountain iconsometimes with a sun or cloud in the background, other times crossed out or brokenhas become the standard symbol, across digital platforms, to signal something missing or something to come. It appears in all sorts of contexts, and the more you look for this icon, the more youll see it. The icon has various iterations, but all convey the same meaning: An image should be here. [Image: Christopher Schaberg/CC BY-SA] You click on it in Microsoft Word or PowerPoint when you want to add a picture. You can purchase an ironic poster of the icon to put on your wall. The other morning, I even noticed a version of it in my Subarus infotainment display as a stand-in for a radio station logo. So why this particular image of the mountain peaks? And where did it come from? Arriving at the same solution The placeholder icon can be thought of as a form of semiotic convergence, or when a symbol ends up meaning the same thing in a variety of contexts. For example, the magnifying glass is widely understood as search, while the image of a leaf means eco-friendly. Its also related to something called convergent design evolution, or when organisms or cultureseven if they have little or no contactsettle on a similar shape or solution for something. In evolutionary biology, you can see convergent design evolution in bats, birds, and insects, which all utilize wings but developed them in their own ways. Stilt houses emerged in various cultures across the globe as a way to build durable homes along shorelines and riverbanks. More recently, engineers in different parts of the world designed similar airplane fuselages independent of one another. For whatever reason, the little mountain just worked across platforms to evoke open-ended meanings: Early web developers needed a simple shorthand way to present that something else should or could be there. Depending on context, a little mountain might invite a user to insert a picture in a document; it might mean that an image is trying to load, or is being uploaded; or it could mean an image is missing or broken. Down the rabbit hole on a mountain But of the millions of possibilities, why a mountain? In 1994, visual designer Marsh Chamberlain created a graphic featuring three colorful shapes as a stand-in for a missing image or broken link for the web browser Netscape Navigator. The shapes appeared on a piece of paper with a ripped corner. Though the paper with the rip will sometimes now appear with the mountain, it isnt clear when the square, circle, and triangle became a mountain. Two little mountain peaks are used to signal “landscape mode” on many SLR cameras. [Image: Althepal/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY] Users on Stack Exchange, a forum for developers, suggest that the mountain peak icon may trace back to the landscape mode icon on the dials of Japanese SLR cameras. Its the feature that sets the aperture to maximize the depth of field so that both the foreground and background are in focus. The landscape scene modevisible on many digital cameras in the 1990swas generically represented by two mountain peaks, with the idea that the camera user would intuitively know to use this setting outdoors. Another insight emerged from the Stack Exchange discussion: The icon bears a resemblance to the Microsoft XP wallpaper called Bliss. If you had a PC in the years after 2001, you probably recall the rolling green hills with blue sky and wispy clouds. The stock photo was taken by National Geographic photographer Charles ORear. It was then purchased by Bill Gates digital licensing company Corbis in 1998. The empty hillside in this picture became iconic through its adoption by Windows XP as its default desktop wallpaper image. [Image: Microsoft] Mountain riddles Bliss became widely understood as the most generic of generic stock photos, in the same way the placeholder icon became universally understood to mean missing image. And I dont think its a coincidence that they both feature mountains or hills and a sky. Mountains and skies are mysterious and full of possibilities, even if they remain beyond grasp. Consider Japanese artist Hokusais 36 Views of Mount Fuji, which were his series of paintings from the 1830sthe most famous of which is probably The Great Wave off Kanagawa, where a tiny Mount Fuji can be seen in the background. Each painting features the iconic mountain from different perspectives and is full of little details; all possess an ambiance of mystery. I wouldnt be surprised if the landscape icon on those Japanese camera dials emerged as a minimalist reference to Mount Fuji, Japans highest mountain. From some perspectives, Mount Fuji rises behind a smaller incline. And the Japanese photography company Fujifilm even borrowed the namesake of that mountain for their brand. The enticing aesthetics of mountains also reminded me of the environmental writer Gary Snyders 1965 translation of Han Shans Cold Mountain Poems. Han Shanhis name literally means Cold Mountainwas a Chinese Buddhist poet who lived in the late eighth century. Shan translates as mountain and is represented by the Chinese character , which also resembles a mountain. Han Shans poems, which are little riddles themselves, revel in the bewildering aspects of mountains: Cold Mountain is a houseWithout beams or walls.The six doors left and right are openThe hall is a blue sky.The rooms are all vacant and vague.The east wall beats on the west wallAt the center nothing. The mystery is the point I think mountains serve as a universal representation of something unseen and longed forwhether its in a poem or on a sluggish internet browserbecause people can see a mountain and wonder what might be there. The placeholder icon does what mountains have done for millennia, serving as what the environmental philosopher Margret Grebowicz describes as an object of desire. To Grebowicz, mountains exist as places to behold, explore, and sometimes conquer. The placeholder icons inherent ambiguity is baked into its form: Mountains are often regarded as distant, foreboding places. At the same time, the little peaks appear in all sorts of mundane computing circumstances. The icon could even be a curious sign of how humans cant help but be nature-positive, even when on computers or phones. This small icon holds so much, and yet it can also paradoxically mean that there is nothing to see at all. Viewing it this way, an example of semiotic convergence becomes a tiny allegory for digital life writ large: a wilderness of possibilities, with so much just out of reach. Christopher Schaberg is a director of public scholarship at Washington University in St. Louis. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-18 09:00:00| Fast Company

What does it mean to be smart or dumb? Few questions are more deceptively complex. Most of us have strong opinions about what those words mean, but scratch the surface and it becomes clear that smart and dumb are slippery, subjective constructs. What seems smart to one person may strike another as naive, arrogant, or shortsighted. Worse still, our own perception of whats smart can shift over time. Yesterdays clever decision can look like todays regrettable blunder. Take Jay Gatsby, for instance. His grand plan to reinvent himself, amass a fortune, and win back Daisy once seemed like the height of romantic intelligence; but in the end, it revealed itself as delusional folly, built on illusions as fragile as the dream he chased. {"blockType":"mv-promo-block","data":{"imageDesktopUrl":"https:\/\/images.fastcompany.com\/image\/upload\/f_webp,q_auto,c_fit\/wp-cms-2\/2025\/10\/tcp-photo-syndey-16X9.jpg","imageMobileUrl":"https:\/\/images.fastcompany.com\/image\/upload\/f_webp,q_auto,c_fit\/wp-cms-2\/2025\/10\/tcp-photo-syndey-1x1-2.jpg","eyebrow":"","headline":"Get more insights from Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic","dek":"Dr. Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic is a professor of organizational psychology at UCL and Columbia University, and the co-founder of DeeperSignals. He has authored 15 books and over 250 scientific articles on the psychology of talent, leadership, AI, and entrepreneurship. ","subhed":"","description":"","ctaText":"Learn More","ctaUrl":"https:\/\/drtomas.com\/intro\/","theme":{"bg":"#2b2d30","text":"#ffffff","eyebrow":"#9aa2aa","subhed":"#ffffff","buttonBg":"#3b3f46","buttonHoverBg":"#3b3f46","buttonText":"#ffffff"},"imageDesktopId":91424798,"imageMobileId":91424800,"shareable":false,"slug":""}} For a famous path reversal (from allegedly dumb to obviously smart), consider Forrest Gump, whose simple, seemingly naive choices (e.g., running across America or investing in some fruit company) looked foolish to everyone around him. Yet his lack of overthinking and unpretentious sincerity led him to happiness, wealth, and a kind of quiet genius that outsmarted all the so-called smart people. In hindsight, we often discover that our supposed genius was merely luck, and our dumb mistakes were actually learning opportunities in disguise. In short: Being smart isnt a fixed trait; its a moving target defined by outcomes, context, and time. In line with that, we tend to withhold judgment until weve seen enough evidence. After all, anyone can have flashes of brilliance or moments of foolishnesswhat matters is the overall pattern. Thats why we evaluate intelligence not by a single act, but by the consistency of choices and behaviors over time. The science of adaptability Charles Darwin famously noted, It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent, but the one most adaptable to change. Along the same lines, psychologists (who are often largely footnotes to Darwin) have a relatively simple and more objective way to define smart versus dumb behavior: adaptability. In that sense, what we call “intelligence” is largely the capacity to adjust ones behavior to achieve desired outcomes in a changing environment. In other words, smart behavior increases your chances of success, survival, or well-being. Dumb behavior does the opposite. When faced with different options, the smartness of your choice can be judged by its consequences. If your decision enhances your opportunities, relationships, reputation, or resilience, its smart. If it narrows your prospects or makes your life worse, its dumb. Crucially, this definition also accommodates social consensus. One persons opinion may be biased, but when many independent observers agree that an action was wise (or foolish), that consensus is usually a good proxy for truth. You can fool some people some of the time, but not everyone all the time. IQ vs. EQ: 2 pathways to smart behavior When it comes to predicting whether people will behave intelligently or not, two psychological constructs stand out: IQ and EQ. IQ (intelligence quotient) reflects cognitive abilitythat is, how effectively you learn, reason, and solve abstract problems. Its the single best predictor of performance in well-defined, rule-bound contexts such as school exams, technical analysis, programming, or chess. People with higher IQs tend to make better decisions when the problem has a right answer. EQ (emotional quotient), on the other hand, captures the capacity to understand and manage emotions, both your own and others. It predicts success in less structured, interpersonal domains: leading teams, negotiating, managing conflict, or handling stress. In these fuzzy, ambiguous situations, there are rarely clear right answers, and emotional intelligence helps navigate the gray zones. Both forms of intelligence matter. IQ helps you see patterns; EQ helps you see people. False stereotypes: book-smart vs. street-smart Part of the reason people resist IQ is that they equate it with cold, academic, or impractical intelligence: the book-smart but clueless archetype. Think of high-IQ figures who made disastrous real-world choices: the Enron executives with MBAs from top schools who engineered their own collapse, or Nobel laureates who lost fortunes day-trading because they overestimated their models. Brilliant analysts but poor decision-makers. Conversely, high-EQ individuals (likable, empathetic, persuasive) are often celebrated as street-smart. They can read a room, defuse tension, and influence others. Yet this doesnt mean they always make wise choices either. Importantly, research shows that IQ and EQ are largely uncorrelated. You can be high on both, low on both, or excel in one and lag in the other. Theyre complementary toolslike having both a hammer and a screwdriver. One wont replace the other, but together they let you handle a wider range of problems. Why high-IQ people do dumb things So why do objectively intelligent people sometimes behave foolishly? A few recurring patterns explain it. Overconfidence in reasoning. High-IQ individuals often trust their logic too much, ignoring emotional or contextual cues. This cognitive arrogance leads to blind spots, especially in social or moral dilemmas. Complexification. Smart people can overcomplicate simple problems, mistaking verbosity or abstraction for insight. They build intricate arguments to justify poor decisions. True intelligence is making complex things simple, rather than vice versa. Confirmation bias. The cleverer you are, the better you become at rationalizing your mistakes. Intelligence amplifies self-deception when ego is at stake. Too often, smart people are more interested in lubricating their egos than in making the right decisiontheir desire to feel smart may surpass their appetite for getting to the solution of a problem. Risk illusion. Intelligent people often feel they can outsmart uncertainty, taking reckless bets (financial, professional, or personal) under the illusion of control. In particular, when intelligence combines with narcissistic tendencies, it may lead to intellectual underperformance at the expense of grandiosity. Narrow optimization. They focus on optimizing a specific variable (e.g., efficiency, profit, prestige) while ignoring broader consequences. A smart business strategy that erodes trust or well-being isnt smart in the long run. In short, high IQ can make you better at justifying dumb ideas, as well as defending your arguments and actions against others, leading to the smartest person in the room syndrome. When emotional intelligence backfires EQ provides no immunity against stupidity either. In fact, its virtues can become liabilities when taken too far. Empathy surplus. Being too attuned to others emotions can make you overly accommodating or reluctant to deliver hard truths. Agreeableness overdrive. High-EQ people often avoid conflict, even when confrontation is necessary to prevent bigger problems later. And people who focus on avoiding conflict end up causing a great deal of conflict in the long run. Emotional manipulation. The dark side of EQ is Machiavellian charm, using emotional awareness to manipulate rather than connect. Compassion fatigue. Caring too much can lead to burnout, especially in leadership or caregiving roles. In any job or organization, especially in competitive settings, if you optimize for getting along, you will impair peoples appetite for getting ahead. Emotional suppression. Some emotionally mature individuals regulate so well that they disconnect from their authentic feelings, losing spontaneity and creativity. In essence, EQ without boundaries can make you a nice foolliked by everyone, exploited by many. The meta-skill: coachability and learning If IQ and EQ help you make smart choices, what helps you stay smart? The answer is coachability, the willingness and ability to learn from mistakes. This meta-skill distinguishes the chronically dumb from the progressively smart. Everyone makes errors; only the adaptable learn from them. Here are five evidence-based ways to improve your decision-making intelligence. Seek feedback relentlessly. Smart people solicit criticism before failure makes it unavoidable. The goal isnt to be right; its to actually get better (evolve, develop, grow, etc.). Distinguish process from outcome. A good decision can lead to a bad result, and vice versa. Evaluate how you decided, not just what happened. Question your certainties. Treat your beliefs as hypotheses to test, not truths to defend. Balance emotion and logic. Before major decisions, ask: Am I thinking clearly and feeling right about this? IQ and EQ can actually work together to improve outcomes, but you will need to manage this tension and turn them into allies. Study your own patterns. Keep a decision diary, record choices, predictions, and outcomes . . . or at least reflect, get feedback, assess, and recalibrate. Over time, youll see which biases or emotions trip you up. In short, the smartest people arent those who never err; theyre the ones who systematize their learning from errors. What ultimately separates wisdom from folly isnt intellect or emotion alone, but the capacity to adaptto learn, recalibrate, and improve. As author and Harvard professor Amy Edmondson compellingly illustrates: In the end, smartness is less about having the right answers and more about asking better questions after youve been wrong. The truly intelligent person is not the one who avoids dumb mistakes, but the one who refuses to repeat them. {"blockType":"mv-promo-block","data":{"imageDesktopUrl":"https:\/\/images.fastcompany.com\/image\/upload\/f_webp,q_auto,c_fit\/wp-cms-2\/2025\/10\/tcp-photo-syndey-16X9.jpg","imageMobileUrl":"https:\/\/images.fastcompany.com\/image\/upload\/f_webp,q_auto,c_fit\/wp-cms-2\/2025\/10\/tcp-photo-syndey-1x1-2.jpg","eyebrow":"","headline":"Get more insights from Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic","dek":"Dr. Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic is a professor of organizational psychology at UCL and Columbia University, and the co-founder of DeeperSignals. He has authored 15 books and over 250 scientific articles on the psychology of talent, leadership, AI, and entrepreneurship. ","subhed":"","description":"","ctaText":"Learn More","ctaUrl":"https:\/\/drtomas.com\/intro\/","theme":{"bg":"#2b2d30","text":"#ffffff","eyebrow":"#9aa2aa","subhed":"#ffffff","buttonBg":"#3b3f46","buttonHoverBg":"#3b3f46","buttonText":"#ffffff"},"imageDesktopId":91424798,"imageMobileId":91424800,"shareable":false,"slug":""}}

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-18 07:00:00| Fast Company

The most enduring leaders arent the ones with flawless résumés. Theyre the ones whove been tested, humbled, and reshaped by failure. From an early age, I trained intensively to become a professional ballet dancer. Ballet wasnt just a passion. It was my identity, my future, my entire world. Until an audition in Vienna changed everything. A sudden injury ended the career I had spent years building. That moment could have marked the end of my story. Instead, it became the beginning of a new one. I pivoted into finance and marketing, building a career at American Express and Amazon. Today, I advise boards and CEOs on succession, governance, and talent strategy at Egon Zehnder, one of the worlds preeminent global leadership advisory firms. One truth has stayed with me throughout this journey. Setbacks arent detours. Theyre gifts. And if you havent failed in a meaningful way, you may not be ready to lead yet. Setbacks clarify what matters When things dont go as planned, its a moment that forces reflection. Perhaps youve been passed over for a promotion, convinced you were the most qualified candidate. Or the product you thought would set a new sales record didnt perform as well as expected, and customers were underwhelmed. Suddenly, you start asking different questions. Are you communicating your impact clearly? Have you built strong sponsorship? Are you recognized as a leader or just as someone who executes well? Can you pivot quickly and creatively based on changing circumstances? Failure shakes our sense of certainty and exposes how fragile our narratives about ourselves can be. It reminds us that success isnt always linear, and performance doesnt speak for itself. These moments are hard, but they also teach us the difference between doing good work and being seen as ready to lead. Resilience isnt built in moments of triumph. Its forged by challenges Mary Barra, now CEO of General Motors, rose through engineering and manufacturing at a time when few women held those roles. Her experience proved essential in 2014, when GM faced a major crisis over ignition-switch failures. Barra didnt deflect blame. She addressed Congress directly, took responsibility, and began reshaping the companys culture. That could have been a defining failure. Instead, it became a defining moment. Barras story is a reminder that leadership isnt about never being questioned. Its about responding to challenges with clarity, consistency, and a willingness to grow. Ultimately, resilience is built in the quiet, difficult moments when no one is cheering you on. Conviction without listening is arrogance Jeff Bezos once said Amazon succeeds by being stubborn on vision, flexible on details. That mindset helps explain how even a product like the Fire Phone, a commercial failure, still served a strategic purpose. Rather than doubling down on a misfire, Amazon listened to customer feedback, learned from the experience, and used those insights to develop Alexa. The distinction matters: Conviction without listening is arrogance. But conviction that adapts based on what customers are telling you? Thats leadership. Passion, unfortunately, doesnt replace market truth. Tenacity can easily turn into tunnel vision. As leaders, our job is not just to have ideas. Its to make sure those ideas matter to someone else. If were not listeningto our teams, to our customers, to the world around usthen were building in a vacuum. Ideas only matter if others believe in them In my work advising CEOs and boards, I meet leaders with really good ideas who struggle to influence others. They know what needs to be done, but they cant bring people along. Thats not a strategic problem. Its a leadership problem. Influence starts with empathy. The ability to see what others value, where they hesitate, and how to connect with them. Often, that empathy is forged through failure. When leaders fall short, theyre forced to see blind spots, hear hard truths, and confront the real impact of their decisions.  Consider Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. After early stumbles in Microsofts mobile strategy, he leaned into a more collaborative, learning-oriented culture that valued listening over ego. That shift helped him rebuild trust internally and reposition Microsoft as a more agile, empathetic company. Nadellas story is a powerful reminder that failure isnt just a test of resilience. Its a chance to become the kind of leader others actually want to follow. Failure builds humanity. And humanity builds leadership Many of todays most respected leaders have careers marked by public missteps and personal reinventions. In the process, theyve developed resilience and deeper empathythe foundations of strong leadership. Because setbacks dont just humble you, they humanize you. And leadership without humanity doesnt last. Ballet is still a part of me. I attend performances. Some of my closest friends are dancers and choreographers. In a twist of lifes full circle, I now have a daughter who is already a more talented dancer than I ever was. Watching her on stage reminds me that what I once thought was the end of my story was really the beginning of hers. Thats the unexpected gift of setbacks. They dont just close doors. They open better ones. But only if youre willing to walk through them without the armor of perfection. Your best chapter may begin in your hardest moment As I advise CEOs and boards navigating complexity, I see a clear pattern. The most effective leaders are the ones whove been tested by hardship and hold their conviction while remaining open to challenge. Theyre the ones who understand that every stumble is an opportunity to rethink, reframe, and reemerge more strongly. In a world of relentless disruption, we need leaders who can metabolize failure into progress. We need leaders who understand that credibility isnt built on being right all the time, but on how you respond when youre wrong. So if youre facing a setback, dont rush to move past it. It could very well be the greatest gift you receive on your leadership journey. Embrace it, learn from it, and let it remake you. Because the story you planned might not be the story youre meant to live. And your best chapter may be the one that begins right after your biggest setback.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-18 07:00:00| Fast Company

Its been 70 years since Douglas McGregor sketched a management theory at MIT Sloan that leaders still ignoreand their teams pay the price. Known as Theory X and Theory Y, McGregors framework built on Abraham Maslows work on employee self-actualization, and it quickly became one of the foundational texts of modern management thinking.  In McGregors theory, leaders fall into two camps. Theory X managers assume that employees are inherently lazy, need constant supervision, and would rather coast along than contribute. Theory Y managers, by contrast, see employees as self-motivated, responsible, and capable of growth if given the right environment. And the kicker is that both kinds of managers usually get exactly the employees they expect, no matter who they originally hired. What McGregor was tapping into was the fact that certain beliefs have an uncanny way of turning into real, measurable effects on human behavior. Whether its placebo studies in medicine or examining how teachers’ expectations impact classroom performance, the science is unambiguous about how far-reaching effects simple expectations can have.  The psychology behind high expectations Psychologists were among the first to observe and take note of the feedback loops that expectations set off.  Take the now-famous study by Rosenthal and Jacobson in 1968. Elementary school teachers were told that a group of randomly selected students had been identified as “late bloomers” who were about to show remarkable academic growth. The result surprised even the researchers themselves. Those students did indeed outperform their peers, in part because the teachers, subconsciously or not, started treating them differently by offering more encouragement, more patience, and more challenging material.  The students responded in kind, rising to the challenge now that someone in authority believed them capable of meeting it. The only thing that had changed was the expectations.  Journalist David Robson chronicles just how far this phenomenon goes in The Expectation Effect, a book that should be required reading for leadership. From placebo heart surgeries that deliver real relief to workouts that burn more fat just because people believe theyre working harder, Robson lays out the scientific evidence showing how our expectations construct reality around us. The psychology behind the effect is simple: Your brain doesnt sit around waiting for input like a neutral recordkeeper. It ceaselessly guesses and simulates what might happen so that you can be prepared for whatever comes across your desk. At each moment, the brain is busy constructing an internal map of whats likely to happen, and then it updates that map based on whatever comes next.  Its no surprise to find that our expectations prime the brains sensory and emotional circuits almost as if its already happening. If you are expecting pain, the amygdala lights up before you even stub your toe. If you expect failure, your cortisol rises, your attention narrows, and your working memory takes a hit before youve even started the task. Expect a sense of existential dread and meaninglessness at work? Here you go, says the brain, lowering your dopamine levels until motivation plummets because your brains prediction model no longer sees a reason to invest cognitive effort. Thats why a sugar pill can relieve chronic pain, why sham surgeries produce real outcomes, and why a warm-up jog feels harder if you think it’s the workout. The experience conforms to the prediction, and belief becomes biology.  When leaders talk about setting the tone or creating a culture of excellence, theyre not that far from hitting upon something truly powerful. If we accept that expectations change biology, cognition, and motivation, then leveling them appropriately becomes one of leaderships central tasks.  Be careful what you expect, because you might get it If you walk into a boardroom assuming your team lacks ambition, youll subconsciously act like it by designing processes that assume failure. Your team, in turn, will riseor in this case, sinkto the level you’ve set. Welcome to management by cynicism. Nelson Repenning, an MIT Sloan School of Management professor and coauthor of the new book Theres Got to Be a Better Way, has spent his career helping leaders break out of this cycle. He advises leaders to expect moreand betterfrom their people as a starting point. When people fail, we treat it like a character flaw. But in most organizations, failure is a design problem, he says. The question every leader should ask isnt why did they screw up? Its what about our system made it easy to screw up? Repenning and his longtime collaborator Don Kieffer argue that modern management has become too disconnected from the work itself. Youd be amazed how many executives cant describe how the work actually gets done, Kieffer says. Its like trying to fix a car without opening the hood. These leaders cant set a good expectation because theyre so far removed from reality to begin with. Without that intimacy, leaders default to assumptions, not expectations. Before long, youre managing caricatures of your team instead of the real people doing the work. Anyone can ask for a 17% increase in revenue and expect it to happen, Repenning says. But thats not a healthy way to set goals, let alone a culture of expectations. Leaders need to know what they are asking for, and they need to understand how powerful the expectations they set are. This is where too many leaders trip over their own lofty visions. They expect more, but enable less. Perhaps some even care less.  Repenning calls this the paradox of servile leadership: Great leaders dont set expectations and step back. They ask, What do you need from me to get there? Then they go and move those boulders. The accompanying leadership model isnt that much more complicated. Set the target, communicate belief, and then roll up your sleeves to start fixing whats brokenwhether its systems, workflows, org charts, tools or, yes, your assumptions. McGregor and Maslow would be nodding along if they were still with us. Decades before we started talking about psychological safety and employee empowerment, they argued that the job of management was to unlock people’s natural drive. Give them autonomy and show them how their work connects to a bigger picture. Eliminate the management by the stopwatch, and start practicing management by the soul. Expectation is freedisappointment is expensive If you expect your team to take shortcuts, youll create a culture of cutting corners. If you expect your team to challenge ideas, theyll innovate. If you expect mediocrity, youll be surrounded by it. And the inverse holds, too. When leaders believe in their people, when they really believe in their capacity to achieve, something remarkable happens. People stretch to meet the expectations, and trust begins to compound. Done right, simply expecting greatness might do more than any retreat or bonus ever could, Repenning ays. But expecting isnt enough. You still have to earn it. Thats the fine print of McGregors theory, and the trap too many leaders fall into. They want the results of Theory Y, but still manage like they believe in Theory X. The message that sends is: I dont really think youve got it in you. But prove me wrong. Thats not leadership. Thats abdication. And now you know how to do better.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-18 05:30:00| Fast Company

It should be shocking to nobody that were dealing with an absolute surplus of AI consumables. Breakthroughs. Policy changes. New tools that promise to “10x your productivity.” Most of it is either too technical, too abstract, or just plain filler. You don’t need another wall of text, you need the signal. Luckily, there are a handful of AI newsletters that consistently deliver real value without taking up half your morning. (My editor wanted to make sure you knew about Fast Companys own such newsletter, by senior reporter Mark Sullivan: AI Decoded. You can sign up for it here.) The Rundown AI: The Daily Scan If you have exactly five minutes between pouring your coffee and jumping on your first call, The Rundown AI is for you. All business, no fluff, it gives you the full, daily landscape in a highly digestible format. If something major drops from OpenAI, Google, or Meta, you’ll know about it. This is best for the busy professional or anyone who just wants the highlights without having to chase links all day. Superhuman AI: The Productivity Power-Up The Superhuman AI newsletter runs the gamut from grand philosophical debates of AI to the tools that make your job easier. At its best, its practical, actionable, and focused on handing you the tools, tips, and tutorials to integrate AI into your daily tasks. Think prompt engineering tips and how to use the latest AI to automate something you hate doing. This one is ideal for individuals looking to boost their personal productivity and executives focused on operational efficiency. The Neuron: Connecting the Dots If The Rundown is the summary, The Neuron is the analysisthe one that tells you what the news means. Expect a thoughtful analysis with a touch of dry humor. The Neuron is excellent at connecting the technical developments to the real-world impact. This is excellent for strategy leaders and those who need to understand the implications of AI for their industry. Ben’s Bites: For the Builders Bens Bites is less about the press releases and more about what the AI community is actually building right now. Curated by Ben Tossell, its a daily digest packed with new tools, product launches, and startup funding news. If youre a founder, developer, or just love being the first to try a new app, this is your resource. The Batch: The Educational Authority When you need to go beyond the chatter and understand the foundational elements of AI, The Batch is authoritative, educational, and reliable. This weekly digest strikes a nice balance, covering the major research breakthroughs alongside the applied use cases. It keeps you current without oversimplifying the complex subject matter. This is best for anyone transitioning into a technical AI role or the leader who needs to speak confidently about AI.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-17 22:35:00| Fast Company

Last week, Congress released more than 23,000 pages of documents from the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epsteins estate to the public. Since then, the bombshell release has garnered commentary from the Trump administration, thousands of internet users, Saturday Night Live, and, now, merch sellers on Etsy. In recent years, a certain contingent of ultra-niche online merch sellers (and, most likely, dropshippers) have decided that any notable event is fodder for potential T-shirts, mugs, and bumper stickers. In recent months alone, sellers have profited off of merch designed to covertly signal anti-Trump messaging; merch promoting “Alligator Alcatraz,” the Trump administrations migrant detention facility in the Florida Everglades; and merch based on a series of New Jersey drone sightings that spawned conspiracy theories across the internet.  Just days after the new Epstein documents were released, merch sellers on sites including Etsy and Amazon have already turned the disclosures into NSFW statements. Etsy and Amazon flooded with merch inspired by the Epstein emails Of all the information included in the documents revealed by Congress (including one message in which Epstein claimed that Trump knew about the girls), most merch sellers are focusing on a specific email exchange in March 2018 thats become a major subject of internet scrutiny. In the exchange, Epsteins brother, Mark Epstein, asks Epstein how hes doing. When Epstein responds that hes with Steve BannonTrumps former White House chief of staffMark Epstein follows up, Ask him if Putin has the photos of Trump blowing Bubba?  Given that Bubba is a well-known nickname for former president Bill Clinton, netizens have begun speculating that the comment might refer to a sex act between Trump and Clinton. The comment even got some national airtime on Saturday as part of SNLs cold open on November 15. (Both Trump and Clinton have denied any knowledge of Epstein’s abuse or sex-trafficking operations and neither appears to have been explicitly implicated of wrongdoing in the emails.) Mark Epstein has since gone on record to multiple publications claiming that he was just jokingbut thats not stopping merch sellers from capitalizing on the theory. A look into the NSFW merch designs Out of the dozens of new Etsy and Amazon listings that have popped up since the files were released, one of the most common themes is a riff on the phrase Big beautiful bill, which Trump used to describe a major tax and spending law that he signed in July. In these merch items, however, the bill in question is Clinton. The items, many of which are not safe for work and potentially offensive, feature President Trump and former president Clinton along with a variety of suggestive phrases. (See here, here, here, and here for examples, but click at your own risk.) While most of the merch is fairly predictable, a few sellers have opted for more creative designsincluding one image of Trump and Clinton inspired by the iconic film Brokeback Mountain. Etsy and Amazon did not immediately respond to Fast Companys request for comment on whether its aware of an uptick of merch in this vein, and whether the merch fits within their terms for seller designs.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-17 22:00:00| Fast Company

It’s not just executives or knowledge workers in offices who are using artificial intelligence. It’s being adopted in fields like healthcare, retail, hospitality, and food services, too. But frontline workers often aren’t prepared for AI adoption. In fact, many are completely unaware that it’s being implemented in their workplaces at all.  Workplace management platform Deputy surveyed 1,500 frontline workers across the U.S., U.K., and Australia for its “2025 Better Together Survey: How AI and Human Connection Will Transform Frontline Work.” The survey found that nearly half of workplaces (48%) use AI. However, only 1 in 4 workers say they regularly interact with it. But, surprisingly, 10% don’t know if their workplace is even using the technology to begin with.  That could be due to the fact that employers aren’t being totally transparent about whether their companies have adopted AI. Just 17% of shift workers say their employer was open about the company’s AI use. Likewise, only 15% say they were consulted about new AI tools in the workplaceeven though they want to bewith 63% of frontline workers saying that communication about AI is essential. “Employees are sending a clear message: They want to be part of the conversation about how AI is used and introduced in their organizations,” Dan Schawbel, managing partner at research and advisory firm Workplace Intelligence, said in a press release.  “When workers feel informed and included, trust growsand thats what unlocks the full potential of AI. Empathy, transparency, and inclusion arent just soft skills; theyre the foundation of successful AI adoption,” he said. While AI’s role in the workplace isn’t always clear, what is clear is that the workers using it are having positive experiences with the technology. In fact, 96% of shift workers say they are happy with the technology’s role, which shows up in tasks like scheduling, in AI-powered kiosks for ordering, as well as streamlining administrative tasks, and more, in their workplace. Likewise, 94% say it makes their job easier. That’s likely why nearly 1 in 4 employees who were surveyed said they’d rather have more AI support than an extra week of PTO (23%) or even a promotion (24%). And that’s likely why workers want to be in the know when it comes to how their organization is using the technology: 27% say they desire more transparency and communication about the technology and how it’s being used.  “New tech arrives. We’re supposed to just figure it out,” one food worker who took part in the survey said. In retail, the statistic is even higher, with 31% saying more communication is needed, likely because the technology is so visible to customers. “They put in self-checkout without even telling us why,” one retail worker explained. “Customers ask us questions we can’t answer.” Interestingly, while workers report positive experiences with AI, only 37% feel optimistic about the technology’s future at their workplace, which could point to how the technology is implementedoften with little communication. As another worker put it: Employees can’t integrate AI properly if it’s never been introduced to them, which leaves employees feeling the need to push back rather than use the tools to their advantage.  “If you explain it, we’ll accept it,” that same worker said. “If you don’t, we’ll resist.”

Category: E-Commerce
 

Sites: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] next »

Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .