5 Reasons Disney’s ‘Frozen’ Is Killing It At Theaters

5 Reasons Disney’s ‘Frozen’ Is Killing It At Theaters

JEFF GOMEZSTARLIGHT RUNNER ENTERTAINMENT

JAN. 29, 2014, 7:21 PM 6,562 5

“Frozen” has already made more than $800 million at the box office worldwide.

Like the Polar Vortex, Frozen has swept across the world, whipping kids into a crystal frenzy, lightening parents’ wallets as of this past weekend by over $810 million. The Disney picture just surpassed “The Lion King” to become the second most successful original animated feature, and it has “Finding Nemo” in its sights. Read more of this post

13 Quotes That Show Why Libertarian Tech Billionaire Peter Thiel Is A Scary Genius

13 Quotes That Show Why Libertarian Tech Billionaire Peter Thiel Is A Scary Genius

JILLIAN D’ONFRO

JAN. 29, 2014, 9:28 PM 216,226 38

Peter Thiel, renaissance man.

It isn’t easy to pinpoint exactly what Peter Thiel is most famous for. His interests range from the mundane (online payments) to the fringes of scientific thought (immortality and floating cities).

He’s a libertarian. But he has also funded the secretive data-mining company Palantir, which works for the FBI and the CIA. Read more of this post

9 Secrets Of Successful Entrepreneurs: They know exactly what motivates them, and it often starts with a big loss or other major event in their lives

9 Secrets Of Successful Entrepreneurs

KIMBERLY PALMERU.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT
JAN. 30, 2014, 2:47 PM 1,427 1

Recent college grads increasingly build side businesses in addition to whatever full-time job they are able to land.

The 2011 Youth Entrepreneurship Study by Buzz Marketing Group and the Young Entrepreneur Council found that 36% of respondents, who were between the ages of 16 and 39, had started side businesses in order to bring in more income. Those businesses included freelance work, eBay shops, tutoring, baking and Web design. Read more of this post

Kicking footballs into the future: The head of soccer innovation at Adidas tries to anticipate how the sport is changing; Innovation is based on ideas “and we need a constant flow of them”

January 30, 2014 4:30 pm

Kicking footballs into the future

By Emma Jacobs

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End goals: Antonio Zea’s job at Adidas involves developing the official match ball for the 2014 world cup

Employees in Antonio Zea’s department are encouraged to put interesting pictures up on the wall in the hope the surroundings will foster creativity and spark new ideas. On the whiteboard in his office it says, “Make cool s**t”. He likes to point to this mantra often. It “keeps things simple”, he says. Read more of this post

How to Build Brand Religion

How to Build Brand Religion

by Ron Faris  |   12:21 PM January 29, 2014

On Thursday at 11 a.m., the Supreme store in Soho debuts a new sneaker design, and people wait around the block to be the first to purchase it. Roughly a mile away in Madison Square Park, a line snakes past manicured lawns as people wait an hour in line to buy a Shake Shack cheeseburger. Further downtown, Tyler, the Creator, the impresario leading man of the hip-hop collective Odd Future, hosts a pop-up shop on Orchard Street with a thousand kids waiting in line to meet the artist and buy his gear. Read more of this post

Before you start a company, you better read this: It’s going to be really, really hard. So you got to believe in your vision, in the problem you want to solve, because it won’t make sense any other way

Before you start a company, you better read this

By Jeffrey Yuwono

It’s going to be really, really hard. So you got to believe in your vision, in the problem you want to solve, because it won’t make sense any other way

So you are in school and want to be an entrepreneur. I was there too in 2007 after graduating with an MBA from Stanford University. My first start-up failed. The second one made money. And now I’m on my third riding the roller coaster that is entrepreneurship. Read more of this post

How to avoid the ‘comfort trap’ in strategic planning

How to avoid the ‘comfort trap’ in strategic planning

Published 30 January 2014 10:45, Updated 30 January 2014 11:22

Roger Martin

The unknowns of strategic planning will always be a little scary, but knowing how to avoid ‘comfort traps’ will make it less daunting in the long term. Read more of this post

From its beginnings supplying the theatres springing up in the early days of London’s West End to a £10-million-a-year business, the history of Angels the Costumiers is a glamorous mix of theatre, film and fashion

MASTERS OF DISGUISE

ARTICLE | 30 JANUARY, 2014 10:50 AM | BY TESS DE LA MARE

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From its beginnings supplying the theatres springing up in the early days of London’s West End to a £10-million-a-year business, the history of Angels the Costumiers is a glamorous mix of theatre, film and fashion. Read more of this post

Babes at Work: author of Looptail: How One Company Changed the World by Reinventing Business, introduces a passage from Joy, Inc.: How We Built a Workplace People Love on how to build an employee-centric corporate culture

Published: January 17, 2014

Babes at Work

Bruce Poon Tip, author of Looptail: How One Company Changed the World by Reinventing Business, introduces a passage from Richard Sheridan’s Joy, Inc.: How We Built a Workplace People Love on how to build an employee-centric corporate culture. Read more of this post

After 500 Years, Why Does Machiavelli Still Hold Such Sway? Relative morality is usually considered a bad thing-except if it gets results

Posted: January 27, 2014

James O’Toole is a senior fellow in business ethics at Santa Clara University’s Markkula Center for Applied Ethics and the author of 17 books, including The Executive’s Compass and Leading Change.

After 500 Years, Why Does Machiavelli Still Hold Such Sway?

The past few months have seen a flurry of celebrations for the 500th anniversary of Niccolò Machiavelli’s classic leadership “how to” text, The Prince. It may be five centuries old, but The Prince remains one of the most quoted leadership tomes of all times. The reason for its persistent popularity is clear: “Big Mac” was an unabashed realist. His leadership theory is based on the premise that most people are bad. Thus, his advice to leaders seeking to gain and maintain power: “Learn how not to be good, and to use this knowledge and not use it, according to the necessity of the case.” Read more of this post

New Year’s Resolution: Become a Thought Leader

The easiest way to fight procrastination

The easiest way to fight procrastination

By Sidin Vadukut 3 hours ago

Sidin Vadukut is a London-based writer. He is the author of three novels and is currently working on a non-fiction book on Indian patriotism.

A day doesn’t day go by when the “Productivity” folder in my RSS feed doesn’t recommend some shiny new task manager/to-do-list-app/project management tool.

I confess I often download them with high hopes….

…only to delete the app a few hours later and revert back to the way I’ve always gotten things done. Read more of this post

Grappling German grammar, Eddie Izzard proves humor can travel

Grappling German grammar, Eddie Izzard proves humor can travel

Comedian Izzard speaks after being presented with the 6th Annual Outstanding Lifetime Achievement Award in Cultural Humanism at Harvard University

Wed, Jan 29 2014

By Victoria Bryan

BERLIN (Reuters) – If anyone wants to know the German for “weasels covered in gravy”, then comic Eddie Izzard, who unlike some of his countrymen is a lover of all things European, is the go-to man. Read more of this post

Watchmakers face dearth of craftsmen as luxury market booms

Watchmakers face dearth of craftsmen as luxury market booms

Wed, Jan 29 2014

By Silke Koltrowitz

GENEVA (Reuters) – Anita Porchet has a skill that Swiss watchmakers can’t afford to do without. As an enamel painter, she decorates watches for the likes of Patek Philippe and Vacheron Constantin which can sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Read more of this post

The Good Jobs Strategy: How the smartest companies invest in employees to lower costs and boost profits; Zara’s investment in staff is crucial to this speed, together with its ability to collect information from employees on what is popular

January 29, 2014 4:07 pm

‘The Good Jobs Strategy’ by Zeynep Ton

Review by Gill Plimmer

The Good Jobs Strategy: How the smartest companies invest in employees to lower costs and boost profits, by Zeynep Ton, New Harvest $25/£8.99

When Madonna was on tour in Spain a few years ago, teenage girls turned up at her final performance wearing the very outfit she had worn for her first show. They had bought it from Zara, the Spanish retailer. Read more of this post

The ‘fearless’ speech writer behind Obama’s State of Union address

The ‘fearless’ speech writer behind Obama’s State of Union address

Tue, Jan 28 2014

By Elvina

Nawaguna

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Six days before the State of the Union address, Cody Keenan posted on the photo-sharing site Instagram a blurred image of a speech draft with President Barack Obama’s notes in the margins. He ended the post with “#SpoilerAlert #InsideSOTU-Cody.” Read more of this post

What Makes You Happy? It Depends on How Old You (Think) You Are

What Makes You Happy? It Depends on How Old You (Think) You Are

Jan 27, 2014

One Monday morning two years ago, Wharton marketing professor Cassie Mogilner and then-Wharton PhD candidate Amit Bhattacharjee were discussing what they did during the past weekend. Mogilner talked about her fabulous and productive weekend getting things done around the house and enjoying a Sunday brunch with her husband. Bhattacharjee then described his weekend, one filled with excitement and travel. Read more of this post

Choose the way you make choices; We often put far less effort into forming an opinion than into choosing what we eat, buy or even wear

Updated: Thursday January 30, 2014 MYT 7:38:21 AM

Choose the way you make choices

BY MARINA MAHATHIR

We often put far less effort into forming an opinion than into choosing what we eat, buy or even wear.

THESE days if you walk into a coffee bar, you find yourself faced with an overwhelming variety of choices. You can have strong, weak, with milk, without milk, several different types of milk and in several sizes. Read more of this post

How 10 Companies, Including Google And Warby Parker, Got Their Wacky Names

How 10 Companies, Including Google And Warby Parker, Got Their Wacky Names

GEOFF WEISSENTREPRENEUR
JAN. 29, 2014, 1:54 PM 1,341

Business owners are increasingly thinking outside of the box — and in some cases, the English language itself — when it comes to christening their nascent ventures.

Google and Yahoo, for instance, sound like terms one might hear warbled by a baby or shouted on a rollercoaster as opposed to the names of multinational empires. Read more of this post

Demis Hassabis: the secretive computer genius with the $750 million brain

Demis Hassabis: the secretive computer genius with the $750 million brain

January 30, 2014 – 12:43PM

Tom Rowley

What made Google dig so deep to buy out a shy and secretive computer mastermind from north London?

Tony Corfe still remembers the time he first saw Demis Hassabis play chess. He was in charge of the primary schools team in Barnet, north London, and looking for new recruits when one week a slight six-year-old boy turned up. Read more of this post

A Simple Test Can Determine If You’re A Good Liar

A Simple Test Can Determine If You’re A Good Liar

DINA SPECTOR
JAN. 29, 2014, 4:20 PM 22,076 14

Psychologist Richard Wiseman, the author of “59 Seconds: Change Your Life in Under a Minute,” has a simple test to determine whether you are a good liar or not.

It’s called the “Q” test and it takes about five seconds to complete.  Read more of this post

Pioneering Swiss watchmaker Raymond Weil, who founded the family business that bears his name, has died in Geneva, aged 87

PIONEERING WATCHMAKER RAYMOND WEIL DIES

ARTICLE | 29 JANUARY, 2014 11:36 AM | BY JESSICA TASMAN-JONES

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Swiss watchmaker Raymond Weil, who founded the family business that bears his name, has died in Geneva, aged 87.

Weil founded the luxury brand in 1976, when the Swiss watchmaking industry was in disarray due to the so-called “Quartz crisis” – during which electronic watchmaking methods resulted in a decline in traditional mechanical time pieces, which had been the speciality of Swiss craftsmen.

His aim had been to create luxurious but affordable timepieces.

In a statement the company said Weil died “peacefully” on 26 January.

Outside watchmaking, Weil was passionate about music, and named some of his first collections after famous operas and composers – such as the Amadeus collection, named after Mozart, and the Traviata collection.

Weil retired from the company’s board only last September, but was the honourary president of the brand at his death.

The company is one of the few Swiss watchmakers to remain in family hands. Weil’s son-in-law Olivier Bernheim, who joined the company in 1982, is the chair of the board, while his grandsons Elie and Pierre Bernheim are both directors.

Bernheim described Weil as his mentor. He said in a statement: ““His legacy and enthusiasm will live on through our family, his brand, its team over the world and all of those who wear the watch that bears his name.”

 

The sounds of our lives: It took a competition to make this writer realise how nature’s symphonies have lost out to city noises

Updated: Wednesday January 29, 2014 MYT 10:22:55 AM

The sounds of our lives

BY JUNE H.L.WONG

It took a competition to make this writer realise how nature’s symphonies have lost out to city noises.

WE have become such a visual world that we often overlook our other senses. So when I heard there was a World’s Most Beautiful Sound competition, I was intrigued. When I found out the winning entry came from Malaysia, I was amazed. Read more of this post

The benefits of planning really, really far ahead: Vision writing is like setting a series of very detailed 10- or 12-year goals for your career or business. It’s worked wonders for Michigan-based Zingerman’s

The benefits of planning really, really far ahead

January 28, 2014: 10:52 AM ET

Vision writing is like setting a series of very detailed 10- or 12-year goals for your career or business. It’s worked wonders for Michigan-based Zingerman’s.

By Vickie Elmer

FORTUNE — After a decade in business, Paul Saginaw could feel complacency creeping in at Zingerman’s Delicatessen, the successful gourmet eatery and market he had co-founded.

It wasn’t clear where new ideas would come from or how the Ann Arbor, Mich.-company would grow from its historic orange brick home.

So Saginaw decided he and his partner needed to stare into the future, think creatively about what they wanted to happen, and develop a vision for their business and for themselves that went far beyond serving corned beef sandwiches or imported cheese. He wanted to consider their future contributions to the world as well as to Zingerman’s advancement. His partner Ari Weinzweig’s response: “Why are you bothering me? I’ve got work to do.”

Saginaw eventually convinced him, saying, “This is the work of leaders.” In 1994, they spent weeks creating a 15-year vision that opened the door to creating related food enterprises led by Zingerman’s crew. By the end of 2013, they were overseeing a group of eight companies, doing everything from roasting coffee, training business people, shipping shortbreads and gift baskets, and making bread, candy, and cheeses, among other things. All are run using Zingerman’s brand of long-range vision plans to grow and improve. Last year, Zingerman’s expanded its original deli with a “sandwich line of our dreams” and three new dining rooms. Its sales are expected to top $50 million this year, up from $30 million in 2007.

The company’s success is Exhibit A for using vision writing as a means to grow a business. Zingerman’s training company, known as ZingTrain, will introduce the concept to mom-and-pop businesses, some mid-sized companies, as well as some university types (including those at neighboring University of Michigan).

In one sense, vision writing is like setting a series of very detailed 10- or 12-year goals for your career or business. Researchers have shown that setting moderately difficult goals can be useful in determining a company’s direction, improving productivity, and creating commitment to working toward critical outcomes. And the way goals are framed may improve results.

“Almost during the seminar itself, we started writing what our vision would be,” says James Clark, co-founder of Room 214, a digital marketing and social media company whose clients include Adobe, Forever 21, Vail Resorts, and Mr. Coffee.

Within two days of returning to Room 214’s offices in Boulder, Colo., the vision was “probably about 70% done,” with partners and directors contributing. They took it to the entire 28-employee company, read the vision out loud, and within two weeks had completed their vision, which called for a culture of employee development and training, small satellite offices aligned with new opportunities, and eventually a venue to unplug (a resort they plan to buy in Costa Rica).

Vision writing could be “a competitive advantage to firms that are bold enough to give it a try,” says Dorie Clark, an adjunct professor at the Fuqua School of Business at Duke University. Yet it’s used rarely in the corporate world, in part because of its New Age ties.

“There’s a fear that vision writing may connote a sort of self help ethos, not what serious business people do,” says Clark, who is the author of Reinventing You: Define Your Brand, Imagine Your Future. “If it could be rebranded as an innovation technique, which is what every company is looking for right now, that could … gain currency.”

Vision writing as a business tool has been around for decades, used by both Dale Carnegie and Napoleon Hill, author of Think and Grow Rich. It’s part of the 7 Habits developed by Stephen Covey — his “start with the end in mind” edict is crucial to good vision writing.

“It’s a written definition of success,” says Saginaw. “We didn’t know we would accomplish it, but we knew what we wanted … We talk about starting with the end in mind,” whether the end involves expanding the original deli at a cost of $10 million, improving deliveries at the coffee company, or planning a charity dinner.

Saginaw’s partner now teaches vision writing at ZingTrain and has written about it in some books — published by Zingerman’s Press. Weinzweig hopes that his adopted hometown will be a center for visioning and sees thousands of companies using it.

Vision writing is useful when you want to plan for something exciting and worthwhile, but it can’t be a fantasy. It must have some business underpinnings and measurable elements. The writing process gives the goal more power and clarity, as does sharing it with your entire organization.

“Write for something really inspiring and significant,” said Weinzweig in a webinar on the practice. Pick a date in the future — “get further out than you feel comfortable with,” Weizweig suggested, perhaps 10 to 13 years.

Zingerman’s vision writing documents are written in present tense — as if the company is already enjoying all that it has accomplished. Zingerman’s completed its first vision and added a half-dozen companies that create or sell high-quality food and drinks; its second vision document goes through 2020 and calls for “radically better food,” a focus on education and a fun environment, and growth to about 18 businesses, all of them in or near Ann Arbor, Mich.

So why does it work? Saginaw has an answer for that: The document, written in the future perfect tense, serves as a filter for opportunities, to help determine whether they will lead Zingerman’s in the right direction or distract it from its ideal future.

“Start with your wildest dreams,” said Saginaw. “When you share it, it will be honed in more rational thought.”

Sometimes the vision needs to be pulled out to remind senior managers of what they wanted in the first place. When Zingerman’s opened the Roadhouse, a bigger restaurant, many early customers had “a bad experience … We really sucked,” Saginaw recalled. So they returned to their vision of a place that makes and sells classic American food, like potato-bacon soup and many varieties of macaroni and cheese, and it has turned its act around. In fact, its executive chef won a James Beard award in 2011.

Yet some say a vision may make you blind to great opportunities. “One potential risk of … using vision writing is you’ll hit it. Maybe what you should be doing instead is exceeding it, or innovating in ways that sitting here in 2013 we can’t even possibly imagine,” Dorie Clark said.

Saginaw isn’t worried about that; he said most visions leave room for strategies to change and innovations to show up. “The vision is the what. The strategy is how we’re going to get there … We wanted to be pushed” to achieve something ambitious, something that leaves a legacy.

 

The Myth Of The Self-Made Man

The Myth Of The Self-Made Man

CULLEN ROCHEPRAGMATIC CAPITALISM

35 MINUTES AGO 0

Tom Perkins was on Bloomberg TV yesterday afternoon discussing  comments he made in a letter to the editors of the Wall Street Journal over the weekend.  In case you missed it, the letter explained how the 1% are a minority group being attacked by the majority.  And Perkins made a totally inappropriate comparison with the persecution of the Jews during WW2.  Not surprisingly, this set off a firestorm. Read more of this post

The rise of the collectorator; A new breed of buyer has taken over the auction world. Part-investor, part-interior decorator, they’re becoming known as ”collectorators”

The rise of the collectorator

January 29, 2014

James Cockington

A new breed of buyer has taken over the auction world. John Albrecht, managing director of Leonard Joel in Melbourne, has defined this part-investor, ”part-interior decorator” species as ”the collectorator”. Read more of this post

London Stunned By Spate Of Financial Worker Deaths

London Stunned By Spate Of Financial Worker Deaths

MICHAEL KELLEY

JAN. 28, 2014, 12:54 PM 31,626 44

A series of deaths among finance workers has shaken London and raised more concerns about stress levels of bankers, Ben Wright and David Enrich of The Wall Street Journal report. Read more of this post

How Yelling Can Hurt, and How to Stop It

Talking to Your Child After You Yell

How Yelling Can Hurt, and How to Stop It

SUE SHELLENBARGER

Updated Jan. 28, 2014 7:11 p.m. ET

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Many parents lose control because they take children’s misbehavior personally. What can help: learning to notice the warning signs in your body, having age-appropriate expectations for your child, and building a margin into daily routines to allow time to deal with mishaps. Robert Neubecker; Parents can turn a meltdown into an opportunity to learn by involving kids in finding solutions to the underlying problem. Apologizing can help repair the relationship after an outburst and set a positive example. Robert Neubecker Read more of this post

How a Math Genius Hacked OkCupid to Find True Love

How a Math Genius Hacked OkCupid to Find True Love

BY KEVIN POULSEN

01.21.14

Chris McKinlay was folded into a cramped fifth-floor cubicle in UCLA’s math sciences building, lit by a single bulb and the glow from his monitor. It was 3 in the morn­ing, the optimal time to squeeze cycles out of the supercomputer in Colorado that he was using for his PhD dissertation. (The subject: large-scale data processing and parallel numerical methods.) While the computer chugged, he clicked open a second window to check his OkCupid inbox. Read more of this post

China Loses Manager of Its Cash Hoard

China Loses Manager of Its Cash Hoard

Zhu Oversaw $3.8 Trillion in Foreign-Exchange Reserves

LINGLING WEI And BOB DAVIS

Updated Jan. 28, 2014 2:07 p.m. ET

BEIJING—The invisible man behind China’s $3.8 trillion foreign-cash hoard is disappearing.

Zhu Changhong, a former star bond trader in the U.S. who was recruited by Chinese officials about four years ago from investment firm Pimco to manage the country’s foreign-exchange reserves, resigned unexpectedly, officials said Tuesday. The move comes as China grapples with boosting returns at a time of turbulence in global markets. Read more of this post