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2025-12-22 11:41:00| Fast Company

When I talk with business leaders about Gen Z, the same frustration often bubbles up: They wont stay. Its said with a kind of bewildered shrug, as if the younger generation has suddenly rewritten the rules out of thin air. I heard it again last week during a radio segment I did about generational dynamics at work. The host asked why Gen Z feels so comfortable moving on so quickly. Heres what Ive learned after a decade teaching them, coaching them, and watching them navigate the workplace: Gen Z doesnt think theyre doing anything unusual. And frankly, once you look at the data, its hard to argue with them. A new Youngstown State University study of 1,000 full-time U.S. professionals found that nearly half of Gen Z workers are already planning to leave their jobsnot for higher pay, but for better growth. That is the highest rate of all generations surveyed. Its not impulsiveness. Its not disloyalty. Its something far more reasonable. Its “growth hunting.” What Companies Assumeand Whats Actually Happening Theres a familiar script about young workers: Theyre too quick to leave, too impatient, too everything. That narrative has been around for so long that many leaders use it as the default explanation without thinking. But when nearly one out of two early-career workers say they cant picture a future where they are, that points to something systemicnot personal. Heres what the data actually shows. Eighty-six percent of Gen Z say they wont pursue upskilling unless their employer helps pay for it. Thats not a lack of drive. Thats the reality of trying to build a career while carrying historic student debt and paying rent that climbs faster than wages. Forty-three percent say theyre too burnt out to take on education outside of work. Thats not an excuse. Thats a sign that the modern workload has pushed people to their limit long before you ever ask them to add night classes. And seventy-six percent say the main thing blocking their advancement is costnot interest, not effort, not ambition. Cost. Taken together, the message is straightforward: This generation isnt avoiding responsibility. Theyre asking employers to share it. Why Growth Hunting Makes Sense Right Now Older generations built careers around staying put and climbing step by step. That path made sense when wages matched living costs and companies offered predictable ladders. Gen Z is coming of age in a completely different economy. Careers dont unfold in neat lines anymore. Skills expire quickly. Entire industries shift in a few years. And the price of staying competitive keeps climbing. So Gen Z does the logical thing: They move toward the places where they can grow. Theyre not chasing titles. Theyre chasing momentum. Every semester, I watch students who are smart, thoughtful, and deeply motivated figure out how to build a career in a landscape that changes constantly. Theyre not waiting for permission. But they will absolutely walk if an employer refuses to invest in them. And honestly, thats rational. Growth hunting is not about impatience. Its about survival. The Leadership Miss That Keeps Repeating For years, companies have preached the language of development and continuous learning. Theyve told young employees to take initiative, expand their skills, stay ahead. Gen Z listened. And now they want to know why the bill for that development keeps landing on their doorstep. You cant ask workers to level up and then close the door to the support they need to do it. You cant talk about retention and then offer no path forward. You cant position upskilling as essential and then make it unaffordable. This is where the generational disconnect becomes obvious. Companies say they want a future-ready workforce. Gen Z is asking them to mean it. A Cultural Standoff That Was Bound to Happen This feels like the moment where the values of Gen Z and the habits of corporate culture finally collide. Not because Gen Z is rebelling, but because theyre taking organizations at their word. If you say you value growth, you have to create it. If you say you care about development, you have to invest in it. Otherwise, Gen Z will simply walk toward someone who does. And heres the twist: They dont feel guilty about it. Theyre not sneaking out the back door. Theyre leaving through the fronthead highbecause the expectations were never mutual to begin with. What Employers Can Do This doesnt require an overhaul. It just takes intention. And while every organization is different, here are a few approaches that can make a real difference. Put money behind upskilling. Even partial funding shifts the relationship. Make advancement transparent. When people have to guess, they eventually stop trying. Tackle burnout before talking development. Growth cant happen when people are running on empty. Promote based on readiness rather than time served. Tenure alone doesnt tell you whos capable. Ask employees what growth actually means to them. The answers are often more practical than leaders expect. These arent the only steps, but theyre a meaningful start. And theyre far more achievable than most leaders realize. The Future Belongs to the Growth Hunters Gen Z isnt running from work. Theyre running toward growth. They know what it costs to stay still, and theyre not willing to pay that price. Not anymore. They arent rejecting the workplace. Theyre asking it to evolve with them. When employers offer real development, this generation will show up with incredible commitment. When they dont, Gen Z moves on with the same honesty and clarity they bring to everything else. That clarity is a gift if leaders choose to use it.Because building a workplace where people can grow isnt just good for Gen Z. Its good for everyone.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-12-22 11:30:00| Fast Company

If a single type of building could define our present time, it would undoubtedly be the data center. Underpinning the increasingly online way we work, shop, and entertain ourselves, data centers provide the computing power and storage to handle all the Zoom calls, Amazon purchases, and Netflix streams a person can cram into their day. And now as compute-hungry artificial intelligence dominates the future of nearly every sector of the economyand possibly society as a wholethe data center will become even more ubiquitous. A headlong data center building boom is already underway. One report finds that average monthly spending on data centers has increased 400% in the last two years, adding up to more than $50 billion in 2025 alone. One tally contends that there were more than 1,200 data centers either built or approved for construction in the U.S. by the end of 2024; another suggests the total number of data centers in the U.S. is now more than 4,100. The scale and spread of data center building is staggering, and there seems to be no end in sight. All of this is why it’s so disappointing that the design of data center architecture is, by and large, very, very boring. [Photo: halbergman/Getty Images] The typical data center looks something like this: a cluster of large, rectangular warehouses 15 or 20 feet tall, each covering about the area of a professional soccer field. The building’s walls are usually made from tilt-up concrete panels with little adornment. There are few windows, and if there were more they would look out on large outdoor clusters of equipment for cooling equipment, electricity generation, and wastewater treatment. Increasingly, the entire complex is surrounded by security fencing or even opaque walls. For anyone passing by or living in their vicinity, there may be little to see beyond the data center’s unending nighttime glow. For what could be considered the most important buildings of the decade, this is a decidedly dull aesthetic. It is the architecture of value engineering and the minimum viable product. The companies behind these facilities would argue that data centers are more like utilities or infrastructure and therefore don’t need the kind of design a more public-facing building would. But even when these data centers are not located near large communitiesthough many actually arehow they look can send a powerful message about their owners’ sense of responsibility for their many downsides. A missed opportunity By now, the negative externalities of big data centers are well known. From their excessive energy use to their inflationary impacts on local electricity rates to their deep thirst for water to the sheer size of their sprawling campuses, the costs of the data center building boom can feel excessively high, especially in the face of hallucinating chatbots, disinformation campaigns, and unavoidable AI slop. In this light, the warehouse design approach of most data centers is the architectural equivalent of burying one’s head in the sand, a supermax prison tucked out in the boondocks, far from any discourse over mass incarceration or human rights. The boring design of data centers is a missed opportunity to counter their negative externalities with at least a little upside. [Photo: courtesy of Gensler] There are some data centers that are offering glimpses of what a better design could be. Some data companies and spec builders are turning to large and renowned architecture firms to add an extra layer of design to what can be fairly cookie cutter buildings meant primarily to house computers. Some designs are emphasizing natural light and natural materials in their small but important human-centric office and entry spaces. Others are prioritizing new building materials and server cooling equipment that lowers both the embedded and operational carbon impacts of the facilities. Still others are blending themselves into dense urban locations, bringing smaller scale data centers closer to specific types of users. Some look like modern office complexes. If they weren’t so big, some even look like they could hold a high end restaurant or retaier. But for every data center trying to soften its blow on society, there are dozens, if not hundreds, that are spreading as much computing power over as large an area possible that can draw in the enough resources to get the servers up and whirring as soon as possible. This looks to be the predominant developmental strategy. Design is largely an afterthought. [Photo: Gerville/iStock/Getty Images Plus] AI companies and other so-called hyperscalers are scrambling for suitable building sites near electricity generation and transmission lines, making it likely that data centers will edge closer and closer to preexisting communities. This proximity will increase the need for more sensitive design approaches. Some better design is happening now. As the building boom carries on, much more will be needed.   The companies behind the AI race have been unambiguous about AI’s potential to dramatically reshape society. If that’s true (the jury is still very much out), perhaps those companies could spend a bit more effort signaling AI’s importance by making its vast and growing physical footprint less of a total bore.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-12-22 11:20:00| Fast Company

A few weeks ago, I led a leadership workshop for a group of executive women leaders in Birmingham, Alabama. Before I begin leadership workshops, I ask the participants what they want out of our time together. This year, one answer has emerged consistently on top: connection.This isnt surprising. As executives rise to higher levels of leadership, they often report increased feelings of loneliness. One Harvard Business Review survey found that 55% of CEOs acknowledge experiencing moderate but significant bouts of loneliness, while 25% report frequent feelings of loneliness. As your expertise becomes more specialized, it can be harder to find other leaders who understand the unique challenges of the corporate environment, with whom you can connect, learn from, and grow alongside. This is especially true for women leaders, as finding them in the senior ranks becomes less frequent the higher they climb. According to McKinsey, only 29% of C-suite leaders are women. As an entrepreneur, I’ve felt this, too. As my business grew, I realized that I didn’t have any coworkers to confide in, lean on, and seek counsel from. I had to create this network on my own. I’ve joined business groups, leadership retreats, and mastermind groups to create this support circle. THE IMPORTANCE OF A LEADERSHIP SUPPORT STRUCTURE As you advance at work, you can find yourself feeling more alone in the decision-making rooms. For example, if you manage the people who were once your peers and your relationship has evolved, this often means you can no longer rely on them for support as you used to.  Challenging emotions also arise as your level of decision-making becomes larger and the stakes rise. Neuroscience research shows that when people make decisions under pressure, the brain shifts from thoughtful, deliberate thinking to more automatic, emotion-driven responses. This makes leaders more vulnerable to biased or short-term choices. However, research also shows that strong social support actually dampens the brains threat response under pressure, helping leaders think more clearly and make better decisions.In the era of AI, nurturing relationships is even more essential. One large-scale study on 6,000 UK employees found that technologies like AI are associated with a poorer quality of life. A 2023 analysis in Business Insider also warns that AI tools may make us lonelier at work by replacing quick check-ins with colleagues. Many of my clients echo this sentiment, saying things like, With the rise of AI, I am constantly wondering if things are fake. Because of this, I crave real relationships more than ever.Relationships are not only essential for combating loneliness, but they are also how deals get done, projects get awarded, and people get promoted. Here are some ways to prioritize them, even in the face of digital distraction. LEVERAGE YOUR SUPPORTERS Your supporters are the people in the organization who would advocate for you when you are not in the room (and you know it). They have your best interests at heart, and you have built solid relationship capital with them. Supporters are also the people who will give you unfiltered feedback that is focused on helping you advance.  A good way to leverage your supporters is by asking them to socialize and support initiatives you may be launching. They can also play a critical role in helping you build new relationships in the organization and nurture strained relationships. However, before reaching out, consider what you can offer the relationship in return. CULTIVATE RELATIONSHIPS WITH NEUTRALS Neutrals are people in the organization whom you dont know yet, or dont know well. Maybe they are new, you are new, or you just havent crossed paths yet. Organizational network scholars like Ronald Burt have repeatedly shown that people whose relationships bridge otherwise disconnected groups (what he refers to as structural holes) receive higher performance evaluations and compensation, because they sit at key points of information and influence in the network. This is why neutrals in key stakeholder positions are critical to build relationships with. One strategy my clients enjoy using to build relationships with neutrals is called a 30:30 meeting. This is an opportunity to invite someone to a meeting or coffee. Thirty minutes are spent understanding them, their vision, goals, and offering your expertise in a way that might help them. The remaining 30 minutes are spent focused on your needs or area of expertise. The key to success in thee meetings is that the focus is always on advancing shared goals and values.  REBUILD CONNECTIONS WITH CHALLENGING PARTNERS Nearly every executive client I work with has one or two leaders with whom there exists some tension. It could be because individuals frequently stand in the way of their project implementations, or they consistently deny the resources they need to accomplish the work. Strained relationships are a normal occurrence when you work with people whose personalities differ from yours. However, as you advance in leadership, rebuilding these relationships will be essential to accomplish work and leverage organizational resources.  To rebuild relationships, ask yourself: Do my challenging partners have good relationships with any of my supporters? Your supporters can often be bridge builders here. If you dont have supporters who can act as bridge builders, this can be a good opportunity to cultivate and strengthen your relationship with neutrals. In times of conflict with challenging partners, it can also be helpful to focus on shared business goals and values, rather than defaulting to your fundamental differences. NURTURE YOUR NETWORK BEYOND WORK As an executive coach, the first place I direct clients to is their immediate network of leaders (old colleagues or current colleagues). However, there are also great connection opportunities that you can leverage from your loose network. The next place I encourage them to look is their industry or professional affiliated groups. Because there is a shared common interest of the type of work you do, this is a great place to foster connection through participating in conferences, meet-ups or even online forums. Another example is asking a mutual friend for an introduction to someone whose work you admire.  The most effective leaders are not the most self-sufficient, but they often are the most connected. In a world where digital technology and AI are shrinking everyday interactions, relationships become your most valuable and tangible resources.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-12-22 11:13:00| Fast Company

The recent announcement by McKinsey & Company that it plans to cut roughly 10% of its workforce has sent ripples through the consulting world, reigniting debate about the future of the industry. This is not about one firm, one round of layoffs, or one business cycle. It signals an irreversible shift in how value is created in consulting. Having spent a significant part of my career at McKinsey, I saw it grow and flourish in an era when information was scarce. Even basic market intelligence required large teams working for months to gather and synthesize data. The digital age brought a data explosion and democratized access, and McKinsey adapted again by expanding its capabilities into advanced analytics and technology-enabled transformation. That advantage is now under pressure in the AI age. The existential threat in the AI age While the digital age reduced information asymmetry, the AI age goes further. It increasingly equalizes analytical and recommendation capabilities. Firms like McKinsey built a powerful competitive moat by hiring the best analytical minds from top universitiesexcelling at data synthesis, first-principles problem-solving, and translating insight into recommendations. In the AI age, however, that advantage is becoming commoditized. This shift is part of a broader transformation of white-collar work. Contrary to early assumptions, AI is impacting knowledge work more than blue-collar roles. I expect that over the next five years, nearly 300 million white-collar jobs will be impacted globally, with around 100 million at risk of becoming obsolete. Work that is highly cognitive and already digitized is particularly susceptible. Consulting sits squarely within this zone of disruption. As the traditional consulting model faces growing pressure, the premium for future talent will no longer rest on analytical horsepower alone. The center of gravity has shifted: Consulting is being redefined The need for consulting services is not disappearing, but the source of value is shifting decisively. Traditionally, firms like McKinsey, BCG, and Bain (MBB) sat at the top of the consulting value chain through high-value strategy work. Over the years, McKinsey has invested significantly in building technology and execution capabilities, but structural challenges remain. In contrast, execution-centric firms like Deloitte, EY, and Accenture, built with a different DNA, were able to more naturally combine advisory with technology and large-scale execution. The growth numbers speak for themselves. While the MBB firms have reported slower growth, averaging approximately 5% to 6% compound annual growth rate, implementation-led firms such as Accenture, Deloitte, and EY have grown approximately 11% to 12% in recent years (average growth estimated based on revenues from company websites, annual reports, press releases, and analyst reports), reflecting the direction of client spend. Historically, strategy was viewed as the highest-value activity, and execution was treated as a follow-onlargely organizational and operational in nature. In the digital and AI age, execution is deeply technology-driven, and strategy and execution are no longer sequential but iterative and continuous. From being an enabler, technology has become the primary driver of both strategy and execution. Clients increasingly want partners who can bridge strategy, technology, and operations, and execute change at scale. Consulting firms, including the Big Four, have responded by reshaping their talent and operating models around large-scale execution and organizational transformation. The Battle of Relevance in the AI age: Where does McKinsey stand? The key question now is: Who will emerge as winners in this new consulting landscape? As the center of gravity shifts toward execution depth and the ability to drive continuous change, success will depend on how effectively firms rewire their DNAbuilding the operating model and talent engine required to implement and scale tech-led transformation. While strategy remains critical in the AI age, it demands a higher bar. As AI takes over analysis and recommendations, strategic advantage shifts from problem-solving to sense-makingfrom humans “in the loop” to humans “above the loop.” My bet is that two types of firms are best positioned to win. First, there are firms like Accenture, Deloitte, and EY, which have built strong execution capabilities and successfully strengthened their technology foundations. Second, there are industry specialists with exceptional domain expertise, where deep contextual understanding becomes the primary source of differentiation. Where does that leave McKinsey? While its brand, client relationships, global reach, and intellectual capital remain as formidable strengths, the transformation challenge it faces may be far greater than what it advises its clients on. Meeting it will require more than just new capabilities. It requires a structural reset, beginning with a mindset shiftfrom authority rooted in expertise to leadership grounded in learning and adaptability. Whether McKinsey retains its position at the top will depend on how effectively it embraces this shift. In the AI age, even the most storied institutions must continuously reinvent themselvesor risk being outpaced by those that do.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-12-22 11:00:00| Fast Company

Resilience is a much-needed skill in todays tough job market. Despite the headlines lambasting young employees as lazy and entitled, a Big Four consulting firm is taking matters into its own hands and offering training for recent grads.  PwC will give its new young hires “resilience training to toughen them up for careers as management consultants. The firm has introduced the initiative in the UK to help Gen Z brush up on their human skills, including communication with clients and handling day-to-day work dynamics, like pressure or criticism.  Quite often we are struck that the graduates that join us dont always have the resilience; they dont always have the human skills that we want to deploy onto the client work we pass them towards, Phillippa OConnor, PwCs chief people officer told The Sunday Times. Resilience requires, among other things, the ability to withstand, adapt or recover quickly from the challenges and inevitable setbacks that come with everyday work and life. A recent study by the McKinsey Health Institute shows that those who report high levels of resilience or adaptability show better holistic health and higher engagement than their peers.  But simply telling employees to be more resilient and toughen up isnt likely to achieve much. When the path forward is unclear, research shows that teams and employees default to what they already know: regardless of whether its the best approach.  OConnor isnt alone; the notion of Gen Z (and younger millennials) lacking in the resilience department is one thats popped up across the general discourse. Growing up as digital natives, missing formative in-person experiences during COVID, and now entering hybrid or remote-first workplaces, many young professionals simply didnt get the chance to build and exercise certain human or soft skills.  And no amount of resilience training can compensate for a broken workplace. Studies show that resilience may help in low-pressure settings, but in environments with overwhelming workloads and toxicity, it becomes both ineffective and even harmful. As companies gut layers of middle management, Gen Z hires are increasingly left reporting to stretched, exhausted managers with neither the time nor the bandwidth to offer the close, hands-on guidance they need. As companies continue to gut middle management, new hires find themselves reporting to overworked, burnt-out managers who lack the capacity for the hands-on support they need.  Now a number of companies, like PwC, are addressing these concerns head on. Last month the accountancy giant Azets revealed it is exploring partnerships with major hotel, pub, and restaurant chains to offer temporary work assignments for trainee accountants and improve their soft skills.  In 2023, fellow Big Four consulting firm KPMG supplied classes on ‘soft skills’ for its Gen Z recruits who graduated during the pandemic, out of concern they were struggling to adapt to professional life.  Surviving a global pandemic during their formative years, thrown into a tumultuous job market, and faced with relentless criticism from those on higher rungs of the corporate ladder, Gen Z have more than demonstrated their resilience.  Now? Theyre looking for support. 

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-12-22 10:30:00| Fast Company

A group of college students braved the frigid New England weather on Dec. 13, 2025, to attend a late afternoon review session at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. Eleven of those students were struck by gunfire when a shooter entered the lecture hall. Two didnt survive. Shortly after, a petition circulated calling for better security for Brown students, including ID-card entry to campus buildings and improved surveillance cameras. As often happens in the aftermath of tragedy, the conversation turned to lessons for the future, especially in terms of school security. There has been rapid growth of the nations now US$4 billion school security industry. Schools have many options, from traditional metal detectors and cameras to gunshot detection systems and weaponized drones. There are also purveyors of artificial-intelligence-assisted surveillance systems that promise prevention: The gun will be detected before any shots are fired, and the shooting will never happen. They appeal to institutions struggling to protect their communities, and are marketed aggressively as the future of school shooting prevention. Im a criminologist who studies mass shootings and school violence. In my research, Ive found that theres a lack of evidence to support the effectiveness of these technological interventions. Grasping for a solution Implementation has not lagged. A survey from Campus Safety Magazine found that about 24% of K-12 schools report video-assisted weapons detection systems, and 14% use gunshot detection systems, like ShotSpotter. Gunshot detection uses acoustic sensors placed within an area to detect gunfire and alert police. Research has shown that gunshot detection may help police respond faster to gun crimes, but it has little to no role in preventing gun violence. Still, schools may be warming to the idea of gunshot detection to address the threat of a campus shooter. In 2022, the school board in Manchester, New Hampshire, voted to implement ShotSpotter in the districts schools after a series of active-shooter threats. Other companies claim their technologies provide real-time visual weapons detection. Evolv is an AI screening system for detecting concealed weapons, which has been implemented in more than 400 school buildings since 2021. ZeroEyes and Omnilert are AI-assisted security camera systems that detect firearms and promise to notify authorities within seconds or minutes of a gun being detected. These systems analyze surveillance video with AI programs trained to recognize a range of visual cues, including different types of guns and behavioral indicators of aggression. Upon recognizing a threat, the system notifies a human verification team, which can then activate a prescribed response plan. But even these highly sophisticated systems can fail to detect a real threat, leading to questions about the utility of security technology. Antioch High School in Nashville, Tennessee, was equipped with Omnilerts gun detection technology in January 2025 when a student walked inside the school building with a gun and shot several classmates, one fatally, before killing himself. Lack of evidence This demonstrates an enduring problem with the school security technology industry: Most of these technologies are untested, and their effect on safety is unproven. Even gunshot detection systems have not been studied in the context of school and mass shootings outside of simulation studies. School shooting research has very little to offer in terms of assessing the value of these tools, because there are no studies out there. This lack is partly due to the low incidence of mass and school shootings. Even with a broad definition of school shootingsany gunfire on school grounds resulting in injurythe annual rate across America is approximately 24 incidents per year. Thats 24 more than anyone would want, but its a small sample size for research. And there are few, if any, ethically and empirically sound ways to test whether a campus fortified with ShotSpotter or the newest AI surveillance cameras is less likely to experience an active shooter incident because the probability of that school being victimized is already so low. Existing research provides a useful overview of the school safety technology landscape, but it offers little evidence of how well this technology actually prevents violence. The National Institute of Justice last published its Comprehensive Report on School Safety Technology in 2016, but its finding that the adoption of biometrics, smart cameras, and weapons detection systems was outpacing research on the efficacy of the technology is still true today. The Rand Corporation and the University of Michigan Institute for Firearm Injury Prevention have produced similar findings that demonstrate limited or no evidence that these new technologies improve school safety and reduce risks. While researchers can study some aspects of how the environment and security affect mass shooting outcomes, many of these technologies are too new to be included in studies, or too sparsely implemented to show any meaningful impact on outcomes. My research on active and mass shootings has suggested that the security features with the most lifesaving potential are not part of highly technical systems: They are simple procedures like lockdowns during shootings. The tech keeps coming Nevertheless, technological innovations continue to drive the school safety industry. Campus Guardian Angel, launched out of Texas in 2023, promises a rapid drone response to an active school shooter. Founder Justin Marston compared the drone system to having a SEAL team in the parking lot. At $15,000 per box of six drones, and an additional monthly service charge per student, the drones are equipped with non-lethal weaponry, including flash-bangs and pepper spray guns. In late 2025, three Florida school districts announced their participation in Campus Guardian Angels pilot programs. Three school districts in Florida are part of a pilot program to test drones that respond to school shootings. There is no shortage of proposed technologies. A presentation from the 2023 International Conference on Computer and Applications described a cutting-edge architectural design system that integrates artificial intelligence and biometrics to bolster school security. And yet, the language used to describe the outcomes of this system leaned away from prevention, instead offering to mitigate the potential for a mass shooting to be carried out effectively. While the difference is subtle, prevention and mitigation reflect two different things. Prevention is stopping something avoidable. Mitigation is consequence management: reducing the harm of an unavoidable hazard. Response versus prevention This is another of the enduring limitations of most emerging technologies being advertised as mass shooting prevention: They dont prevent shootings. They may streamline a response to a crisis and speed up the resolution of the incident. With most active shooter incidents lasting fewer than 10 minutes, time saved could have critical lifesaving implications. But by the time ShotSpotter has detected gunshots on a college campus, or Campus Guardian Angel has been activated in the hallways of a high school, the window for preventing the shooting has long since passed. Emily Greene-Colozzi is an assistant professor of criminology and justice studies at UMass Lowell. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-12-22 10:00:00| Fast Company

As the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) returns to Las Vegas from Jan. 6 to 9, the tech industry is gearing up for its annual spectacle of prototypes, silicon benchmarks and AI-branded gadgets. But one of the most consequential shifts in enterprise technology over the coming year will unfold far from the keynote stages and demo floors. HP, the 85-year-old Silicon Valley company long defined by PCs, printers, and enterprise hardware, is repositioning itself as a work-intelligence platformwhere devices learn continuously, services anticipate needs, and AI dissolves the traditional boundaries between hardware, software, and the cloud.Under Jim Nottingham, senior vice president and division president of Advanced Compute Solutions, HP is treating AI not as a feature or a marketing layer but as a structural force reshaping how the company builds products, manages its supply chain, and generates revenue.As enterprise spending shifts toward intelligent, autonomous systems, that strategy is becoming central to HPs future and to whether it can compete with contemporaries, including Dell and Lenovo on devices, while holding its ground against Microsoft and the cloud hyperscalers that control workplace software, data and AI workflows.Nottingham said HPs transformation began with an uncomfortable realization that work was not working as well as it should. Customers had raised these issues for years, but the true scale of the problem became clear only after HP measured it through its 2025 Work Relationship Index. The findings were striking as just 20% of knowledge workers say they have a healthy relationship with work, meaning most feel overwhelmed by fragmented tools, constant interruptions and systems that make work harder rather than more productive.We heard versions of this from customers across industries and geographies, Nottingham says. When you have visibility across millions of devices and organizations of every size, patterns like this become impossible to miss. Those insights forced HP to confront a deeper truth about AI. You cant just add AI to a device and call it transformation.Instead, HP rethought how devices, software, services and management systems work together across an entire workday. The shift cut across personal systems, print and services at the same time, pushing the company toward a single, platform-led vision of the future of work rather than three separate roadmaps.At CES, well demonstrate that platform-led view across the portfolio, Nottingham says. AI became the organizing principle because its the first technology capable of tying those pieces together and enabling work environments that are more adaptive, secure, and intelligent. From hardware economics to intelligence at scale HPs reinvention comes at a moment of pressure. Hardware margins are shrinking as devices commoditize, while hyperscalers increasingly control enterprise workflows and set the bar for intelligent work systems. HPs counter is scale. Few companies span endpoints, managed fleets, printing infrastructure, and workforce software at a global reach. HP is betting that AI layered across that footprint can drive higher-margin services and recurring revenue without forcing customers to replace existing systems.Recent financial results help explain the companys confidence. In the fourth quarter of fiscal 2025, the company reported revenue growth of 4% year over year, driven largely by strength in Personal Systems. AI PCs accounted for more than 30% of shipments during the quarter, and HP expects that share to approach 50% next year. Subscription and services businesses now generate billions of dollars in annual recurring revenue, reinforcing a shift away from one-time device sales toward a more durable, platform-driven business model.Industry experts argue that this shift reflects where enterprise computing is headed, but execution is what separates leaders from laggards. Pierre Baqué, CEO and founder of Neural Concept, said meaningful AI transformation requires intelligence to be embedded into system design from the outset, accounting for real-world constraints and tradeoffs.The future of enterprise computing is about leveraging intelligent, AI applications that learn and adapt across the full lifecycle, improving how engineering teams accelerate and validate their operations, says Baqué.HPs AI PCs are built around that philosophy. The systems integrate neural processing units that run AI workloads locally, enabling real-time inference without constant reliance on the cloud. The payoff is lower cost, faster performance and stronger privacyadvantages that matter in regulated industries and bandwidth-constrained environments, and that distinguish HPs approach from cloud-first Copilot PCs and consumer-led AI designs from Apple and Qualcomm.For specialized workers inside companiesthe people responsible for the most complex and demanding workflowsthe stakes are much higher, Nottingham adds. Whether the work involves generative AI, simulation or data science, our solutions streamline complex workflows, remove friction and help increase productivity. A different competitive wager HP is embedding AI across categories competitors often treat separately, including AI PCs, workstations, printing and device management. Print AI applies generative models to formatting, security and intent recognitionan area few expected to see meaningful AI impact. In AI PCs, documents, meetings and workflows can be queried instantly, while tasks such as video editing and image processing shrink from minutes to seconds, even offline.By enabling hybrid compute that combines local responsiveness through AI with cloud scale, we are helping these teams work faster and more effectively without disrupting their flow, Nottingham says. He added that AI PCs now make up a growing share of HPs shipments, and adoption is accelerating. It reflects where enterprise computing already is, not where it might be someday.HPs transformation raises a larger question for the industry: If a company with HPs scale and legacy must become intelligent to stay competitive, what does that mean for every other maker of work devices?Autumn Stanish, a director analyst at Gartner, says the industrys shift from device-driven revenue to software, services and lifecycle-based models has been inevitable.This has been inevitable for a long while now, and a very slow transition for the hardware industry, she said, as longer device lifecycles and price pressure eat into traditional hardware profits. Device pricing isn’t going rise enoughto make up for that lost revenue, pushing companies to look beyond selling PCs and other systems.  She notes that HPs expansion into digital employee experience tools such as DXP, along with managed device lifecycle services now offered by HP, Dell and Lenovo, reflects where competition is moving. Cloud AI processing is expensive for providers and customers alike, she added, making local, on-device intelligence increasingly essential. The future of work, then, may arrive not through spectacle, but through quiet reinventionwhere AI fades into the background and systems adapt to how work actually happens.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-12-22 10:00:00| Fast Company

At 10:24 p.m., while brushing his teeth, my husbands phone pings. Its not an emergency. No one is bleeding. No building is on fire. Its an email that begins with the words, Just circling back. In France, this would be illegal. Or at least deeply frowned upon. Since 2017, French workers at companies with more than 50 employees have had a legally protected right to disconnect. That means, employers cant expect workers to answer emails or messages after hours. Similar policies exist across Europe, including Spain, Belgium, and Greece. Meanwhile, in America, were circling back at bedtime. {"blockType":"creator-network-promo","data":{"mediaUrl":"https:\/\/images.fastcompany.com\/image\/upload\/f_webp,q_auto,c_fit\/wp-cms-2\/2015\/08\/erikaaslogo.png","headline":"Girl, Listen: A Guide to What Really Matters","description":"Ericka dives into the heat of modern motherhood, challenging the notion that personal identity must be sacrificed at the altar of parenting. ","substackDomain":"https:\/\/erickasouter.substack.com\/","colorTheme":"blue","redirectUrl":""}} The Country That Turned “Always On” Into a Personality Trait In theory, Americans love freedom. In practice, we seem to love productivity even more. Historically, we dont just work, we identify with our work. We humblebrag about being slammed. We apologize for vacations. We wear burnout like a well-earned Miss America crown. The unspoken rule is clear: If youre not reachable, youre not serious. Ive interviewed hundreds of working parents over the years, and one thing comes up again and again: Its not just the workload that is crushing them, its the anticipation of it. The constant low-grade anxiety that an email could arrive at any moment. That their boss might just need one thing. Silence could be interpreted as laziness. Work doesnt end anymore. Its like the constant background noise of our personal lives. Americas Love Affair with Hustle Culture (and Why We Cant Quit It) Heres the uncomfortable truth: We dont just tolerate hustle culture, we reward it. We promote the people who respond fastest. We praise the ones who go above and beyond. We quietly penalize the ones who protect their time, especially women and parents. Especially mothers. Disconnecting in America isnt seen as healthy; its seen as risky. And thats the difference between us and Europe. In France, disconnecting is a labor right. In the U.S., its a personal boundary you have to negotiate politely without inconveniencing anyone important. Good luck with that. The Myth That Availability Equals Value One of the biggest lies of modern work is that responsiveness equals commitment. But study after study shows the opposite. Constant availability leads to burnout, cognitive fatigue, poorer decision-making, and lower creativity. When your brain never powers down, it doesnt perform better; it performs worse. And yet, here we are. Answering emails from the sidelines of the soccer field and Slack-ing during bedtime. Weve turned the ability to be interrupted into a marketable job skill. So, Could a Right to Disconnect Ever Work Here? Legally? Maybe. Culturally? Thats a higher hurdle. Because Americas resistance to disconnecting isnt just about logistics. Its about identity. Work isnt just what we do; its who we are. For many of us, especially in an economy as frighteningly precarious as ours, being reachable feels like job protection. Until we change what we reward, no policy will fully save us. A right to disconnect would only work in America if we stopped confusing exhaustion with ambition and availability with worth. What Would Real Progress Actually Look Like? Im not sure legislation is enough for a cultural shift. We will need leaders who model boundaries instead of martyrdom. With companies that measure output rather than online status. With workplaces that understand rest isnt the enemy of success; its the fuel. And maybe, just maybe, it would start with all of us resisting the urge to circle back at 10:24 p.m.. The French have a phrase for this: la vie. Its the part of life that happens after work. In America, we call it being unreachable, and we are still not sure we are allowed to be.  {"blockType":"creator-network-promo","data":{"mediaUrl":"https:\/\/images.fastcompany.com\/image\/upload\/f_webp,q_auto,c_fit\/wp-cms-2\/2015\/08\/erikaaslogo.png","headline":"Girl, Listen: A Guide to What Really Matters","description":"Ericka dives into the heat of modern motherhood, challenging the notion that personal identity must be sacrificed at the altar of parenting. ","substackDomain":"https:\/\/erickasouter.substack.com\/","colorTheme":"blue","redirectUrl":""}}

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-12-22 09:30:00| Fast Company

Everybody loves the idea of feedback, defined broadly as information provided to someone about their performance, behavior, or actions. This makes a great deal of sense. Indeed, many studies have consistently shown that feedback from others plays an important role in helping us understand who we are, including how we differ from others. It is vital for improving managers and leaders performance and for helping people evolve and develop, both professionally and personally. Conversely, being feedback-deprived, or having a tendency to ignore it, increases the gap between how good you think you are, and how good you actually areat times, to painfully delusional levels. {"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":""}} And yet, people often fail to accept and internalize feedback. This is particularly true when the feedback is misaligned with how we view ourselves or at odds with what we think about the situation. Contributing to this failure is often the poor quality of the feedback, due to factors ranging from sender expertise and intention to the politics and bias of subjective character evaluations. Unsurprisingly, meta-analytic evidence suggests that 1/3 of feedback interventions are ineffective, and another 1/3 actually worsen recipients performance. Feedback, in short, has a poor track record. And especially poor for more senior leaders. High-quality feedback is thus particularly scarce where it is needed the mostfor those whose decisions and actions have the most far-reaching impact: in senior leadership. Why is this the case? The reasons First, when someone is powerful, others will go to great lengths to avoid upsetting or confronting that person, aware (consciously and not) that leaders have some power over their future, which explains why it is far more common for leaders to hear praise and compliments from subordinates than constructive criticism. A darkly comic illustration appears in Armando Ianuccis movie The Death of Stalin. When Stalin collapses, his inner circle hesitates, panics, and second-guesses itself, terrified of acting without explicit permission. No one dares to take responsibility, question assumptions, or deliver unwelcome truths. The satire works precisely because it exaggerates a real dynamic: when power is concentrated and fear is high, feedback disappears, initiative dies, and silence becomes the safest strategy. Second, hierarchical cultures and traditional leadership archetypes conspire against leaders ability to create the necessary psychological safety for candor. Unless effort is put into creating these conditions, team members will perceive a negative cost-benefit analysis when it comes to voicing issuesespecially with their leaders decisions or behaviorsversus holding back and staying silent. While this may boost leaders egos, fostering self-enhancing and delusional estimates of their own talentsit will severely limit their ability to improve and get better. How can anyone, including a manager or leader, get better if they are unaware of a gap between their self-views and their actual performance? Why would anyone, including a manager or leader, seek to change and evolve if their perception is that everything is fine? Third, when someone seems devoid of self-awareness, to the point of being not just immune to feedback, but almost un-coachable, people will see no point in providing them with feedback, as it would be wasted on them. Unfortunately, when others are of the opinion that leaders are incompetent, and that, on top of that, they are totally unaware of this fact, they lose respect for that leader and approach their interactions with them as they would with a delusional narcissist or mad person.   What to do Fortunately, there is a booming industry (at times comprising science-based instruments like evidence-based 360-degree feedback surveys and personality assessments) to tell leaders what they need to hear, especially when thats not what they want to hear. Even in the absence of such instruments, here are five simple ways leaders can get better at receivingand ingestingconstructive feedback. Ask for disconfirming data, not general impressionsInstead of Any feedback for me?, ask narrowly framed questions that invite contradiction, such as What is one decision I made recently that slowed the team down? or Where did my involvement add least value this quarter? Research on feedback seeking shows that specific, behavior-linked requests increase both the honesty and usefulness of responses, while vague requests elicit politeness and noise rather than signal. Separate ingestion from reaction, deliberately and visiblyHigh-status leaders often kill feedback not by rejecting it, but by reacting too fast. A defensive facial expression, explanation, or contextual clarification is usually enough to shut people dow. Evidence from self-regulation and feedback intervention research shows that feedback is more likely to improve performance when recipients force themselves to pause evaluation and treat feedback as data, not judgment. One practical move is to explicitly say, Thank you. I wont respond now, so I can think about what youve said, and Ill come back to you, and then actually do so. Triangulate patterns, ignore anecdotesSingle pieces of feedback are typically biased, idiosyncratic, or situational. Leaders should resist reacting to one voice and instead look for recurring themes across sources, time, and contexts. Meta-analytic work on 360-degree feedback consistently shows that behavior change is most likely when leaders focus on convergent signals rather than isolated comments. Treat feedback like data analysis, not testimony. Outsource truth-telling when power gets in the wayAt senior levels, the social cost of honesty becomes prohibitive. This is precisely why structured mechanisms such as anonymous upward feedback, external coaching, or validated personality and derailment assessments outperform informal conversations. Research on power and voice shows that hierarchy systematically suppresses upward dissent unless safeguards are in place. Leaders who believe their open-door policies are adequate are usually the least informed. Publicly act on one small piece of feedback, fastThe strongest signal that feedback is welcome is not just saying thank you, but visibly changing something. Even a modest adjustment, communicated explicitly (Based on your feedback, Ill stop doing X and start doing Y), recalibrates the perceived cost-benefit of speaking up. Evidence from psychological safety research shows that follow-through, not receptiveness rhetoric, predicts future voice behavior. Feedback cultures are built behavior by behavior, not intention by intention. Taken together, these practices treat feedback less as a moral virtue and more as an imperfect but essential data stream. Leaders who learn to filter, metabolize, and act on that data gain something far rarer than praise: a realistic picture of their impact. {"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
 

2025-12-22 07:00:00| Fast Company

In November, Apple laid off dozens of sales employees in a rather unexpected move for the tech giant. Apple is the rare tech company that has steered clear of mass layoffs, particularly among its peers in the trillion-dollar club. The layoffs came as a surprise for those who lost their jobs, according to a Bloomberg reportand they impacted some employees who had been with the company for decades.  The post-pandemic job market has come to be defined by layoffs, in tech and beyond: A Glassdoor analysis finds that there was a peak in 2023, but layoffs have since continued at a more frequent cadence relative to the years prior. A variety of sectors have been hit hardand prominent employers like Verizon, Starbucks, and UPS have gone through multiple rounds of cuts this year alone, slashing thousands of jobs.  But the tech industry has been uniquely reliant on layoffs as companies have gone through periods of overhiring and fluctuating priorities, with the rapid emergence of artificial intelligence now upending the sector.  Since 2022, tech employers have laid off upwards of 700,000 workers, according to the tracker Layoffs.fyi. With the exception of Apple, which has conducted a handful of more targeted cuts in recent years, the Big Tech companiesnamely Amazon, Meta, Google, and Microsofthave laid off tens of thousands of employees over the last three years. There are just so many new grads coming out, trying to enter the tech industry, and they feel like the promise of a high-paying job in tech is just not really being fulfilled, says Daniel Zhao, Glassdoors chief economist and director of economic research.  All this has led to a challenging environment for tech workers who are seeking new jobs and new graduates who are trying to find their footing. In the last two decades, Big Tech jobs held a certain cachet for millennial knowledge workers who were starting their careers. The sprawling campuses and free food were appealing, of course, but companies like Google also imbued their work with purpose and appeared to guarantee professional success.  But as layoffs have roiled the industry, it seems as though the tech jobs that were once hailed as stable and desirable may no longer be a sure bet for workers.  Unfortunately, layoffs aren’t really a last resort response anymore, says Brett Coakley, the principal executive coach at career consulting firm Close Cohen. Theyve become more of an annual planning tool. These workers that thought they were insulated are realizing that prestige doesn’t really provide the protection that they’re used to.  The dream job has changed For years, these tech companies have promised both generous salaries and job security alongside lavish perks. Between recurring layoffs and strict return to office policies, however, something seems to have shiftedand its not just that the perks have dried up. Many large tech employers hired aggressively during the pandemic, only to turn around and lay off workers not long after. Companies like Amazon forced employees to return to the office five days a weekin some cases requiring that they relocate.  The rise of generative AI is also radically reshaping tech companies, with many of them making multi-billion-dollar investments and courting top talent. Computer science graduates are finding it more difficult to land entry level jobsin part because those roles are steadily being automated. Some companies, like Salesforce, have already replaced certain workers with AI, while others have warned that job losses are on the way and that employees need to meet the moment and adopt AI technology. Mark Zuckerberg noted earlier this year that AI could supplant mid-level engineers at Meta, while Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has said employees who become conversant in AI will have high impact and help us reinvent the company.  (Whether AI will actually cull jobs at a rapid clip is almost beside the point, though it seems like companies are reticent to name the other issues driving their business woesamong them immigration policy and tariffs.)  The result is workers have become more hesitant to stake their careers on a Big Tech job, Coakley says.  We see that folks that are coming into their early career have that same symptom, he says. Why would I go into this thing that isn’t stable? I can do a gig role, or I can do something that’s a little more skills-based. Or: Why do I need to go to a four-year college to get this degree if I’m not going to get a job? We’re getting a lot of that sentiment. Some workers who are early in their careers are looking at smaller companies or trying to bolster their AI skills for when the pendulum inevitably swings back and Big Tech starts hiring again, according to Coakley. Zhao argues that the high-paying job in tech still has its allure, though it feels increasingly out of reach for some new entrants to the industry. The number of workers who have been unemployed for over six months has ticked up as hiring has slowedand college-educated workers now comprise a greater share of them.  These Big Tech companies are still very attractive jobs, Zhao says. If you ask any new grad, Do you want to go work at Google? I think most of them would still say yes. It’s just a question of how you actually get your foot in the door.             What this means for tech workers old and new  Its not just people early in their career who are reevaluating where they want to work. The current climate has revealed that tenure and seniority wont necessarily preserve your job, particularly when companies are chasing AI talent. For older employees who built their careers at Big Tech companies, the unease permeating the tech sector has sparked questions about how long they can expect to remain in their jobs.  We had a lot of folks atthe beginning of the year coming to us after a layoff, Coakley says. So they didn’t see it coming, or they weren’t expecting it. [Now] I’ve started to see a lot of that other end of the spectrum, where people are being proactive and saying, I don’t know if this is going to be here for me in six months. Experts often say layoffs have a clear effect on company culture, and Glassdoors analysis supports this idea: The volume of Glassdoor reviews surge by over 40% in the week following a layoff, and they continue to be referenced in reviews months later. Zhao points out that some companies seek to avoid the negative attention and press coverage that accompanies a mass layoff by making smaller, more frequent cuts.  But tech workers can still see whats happening, and Coakley says some of them are taking preemptive steps to carve out a new path. The mid- to senior-level [employee] has really sort of built their identities inside of one corporation, he says. They’ve lived inside that bubble of Big Tech, but now that the bubble is sort of thinning, they’re asking themselves: Who am I outside this company? Coakley has found that some senior employees are now interested in fractional roles, or startups that offer more work-life balance.  People are realizing that they’ve been relying on corporations for stability, he says, and that’s no longer viable. Amid a tough hiring market, even workers who have soured on their Big Tech jobs may be scared to make any drastic moves. But that could change when the market eventually turns aroundto the detriment of these employers.  If we see the balance of power shift back towards employees and away from employers, then a lot of this can change, Zhao says. And to some extent that’s a risk that employers should be paying attention to as well. The culture of Big Tech may have changed, but workers have also changed accordingly, growing more emboldened by the upheaval of the last five yearsand the realization that their employers are no different than their peers across corporate America.   I think the fact that workers feel so stuck right now, Zhao says, means that once the job market opens up again, all of those workers are going to hit the door. 

Category: E-Commerce
 

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