30 Lessons for Living: Tried and True Advice from the Wisest Americans

30 Lessons for Living: Tried and True Advice from the Wisest Americans Paperback

by Karl Pillemer Ph.D. (Author)

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“Heartfelt and ever-endearing – equal parts information and inspiration. This is a book to keep by your bedside and return to often.” –Amy Dickinson, nationally syndicated advice columnist “Ask Amy” After a chance encounter with a remarkable ninety-year-old woman, renowned gerontologist Karl Pillemer decided to find out what older people know about life that the rest of us don’t. His quest led him to speak with a thousand Americans over the age of sixty-five—many of whom can remember the Depression and World War II. While some of their tales reaffirmed timeless wisdom, others surprised Pillemer with the unexpected. Now with a new preface by Jane Brody, 30 Lessons for Living distills their moving stories and hard-won advice. To learn how to live without regret, persevere through hard times, find fulfillment, and age fearlessly and well, there is no one better to ask than the people who have done it themselves. Read more of this post

How The Netherlands Became The Biggest Exporter Of Resilience

How The Netherlands Became The Biggest Exporter Of Resilience

For centuries, the Netherlands has suffered from catastrophic floods. As the rest of the world now reckons with the same fate, the Dutch are sharing–and selling–what they’ve learned.

Jeff Chu

November 1, 2013 | 9:40 AM

Huib de Vriend was five years old when the great flood of 1953 hit. It was a chilly Saturday night, and the local radio stations had gone off the air at their usual hour near bedtime, just before the full force of the storm blew in. What shook young Huib more than the whistle of the wind or the thrum of the rain was the panic in his grandmother’s voice. “She was yelling: ‘The water is coming! The water is coming!'” he recalls. That was when he knew something was wrong. His grandmother was usually a voice of calm in the family. Read more of this post

How to Save the Investment Research Industry

How to Save the Investment Research Industry

26 SEP 2013 – INDY SARKER

The investment research industry — both asset management and brokerage firms — has faced structural challenges for the past decade. Despite this, the industry has not wholeheartedly embraced innovation in its business processes. These hurdles encompass a combination of high costs, lack of significant productivity initiatives and declining value to the consumer. Today’s external customer environment of a shrinking commission pool, asset managers using fewer brokers and the rise of commission-sharing arrangements also illustrate the cost structure driving the brokerage industry. Read more of this post

Good Morning! Your Moral Fiber Is Eroding by the Minute; a person’s store of self-control is finite, and can be depleted. Like a muscle, our self-control weakens when we use it and is restored when we rest it

Good Morning! Your Moral Fiber Is Eroding by the Minute

By Drake Bennett November 01, 2013

Right now, as I write this, I am at peak integrity, but with every minute that passes, my moral fiber is weakening, like a cereal flake in milk. I don’t notice it, but if there are decisions or tasks requiring personal discipline, I should take care of them quickly—by this afternoon, I will be defenseless against my baser instincts. So say Maryam Kouchaki and Isaac Smith, researchers into organizational behavior, in a new paper in the journal Psychological Science. The idea that people can be more or less moral at different times goes back to the earliest recorded stories people told about each other: Achilles is both merciless killer and tender friend, Dr. Jekyll is Mr. Hyde. What’s notable about the hypothesis Kouchaki and Smith set out to  prove is that a person’s moral upstandingness erodes over the course of each day, broken down in a process as regular and as ineluctable as digestion. Read more of this post

Father of IBM’s first personal computer, which sold out in stores in 1981, dies of a heart attack aged 72

Father of IBM’s first personal computer, which sold out in stores in 1981, dies of a heart attack aged 72

Lowe joined IBM in 1962, when he finished college with a physics degree

He left the company in 1988 to work for Xerox

Lowe is survived by wife, Cristina Lowe, five children and 10 grandchildren

By ASSOCIATED PRESS

PUBLISHED: 21:06 GMT, 31 October 2013 | UPDATED: 22:09 GMT, 31 October 2013

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William C. Lowe (pictured in 1987 with an IBM computer) died of a heart attack in Illinois at age 72; The IBM personal computer introduced in 1984 was a massive hit and changed society

The man behind IBM’s first ever personal computer, which sold out in stores in 1981 for $1,565, has died at the age of 72. William C. Lowe died of a heart attack on October 19 in Illinois, his daughter Michelle Marshall confirmed. Marshall said she didn’t realize the magnitude of what her father helped accomplish until she was an adult.

Read more of this post

Bible-toting Gary Wang sentenced to prison for his involvement in the EMG and Rebar Group (力霸集團) embezzlement scandals

Bible-toting Gary Wang sentenced to prison

By Ashley Yen, Special to The China Post
November 2, 2013, 12:15 am TWN

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TAIPEI, Taiwan — Former Eastern Multimedia Group (EMG, 東森集團) Chairman Gary Wang (王令麟) reported to the Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office yesterday with a Bible in his hands to begin serving his prison term. Wang was given a five-year, six-month sentence for his involvement in the EMG and Rebar Group (力霸集團) embezzlement scandals. Wang was escorted in handcuffs by his attorney and the police. He expressed his apologies to the public in front of the prosecutors’ office. Read more of this post

The Outsiders Who Saw Our Economic Future; In both America’s energy transformation and the financial crisis, it took a group of amateurs to see what was coming

The Outsiders Who Saw Our Economic Future

In both America’s energy transformation and the financial crisis, it took a group of amateurs to see what was coming

WSJ reporter Gregory Zuckerman, author of ‘The Frackers’, discusses how early pioneers of the fracking industry were seen as outsiders and ‘wildcatters’ by the established oil industry.

GREGORY ZUCKERMAN

Nov. 1, 2013 8:35 p.m. ET

The experts keep getting it wrong. And the oddballs keep getting it right.

Over the past five years of business history, two events have shocked and transformed the nation. In 2007 and 2008, the housing market crumbled and the financial system collapsed, causing trillions of dollars of losses. Around the same time, a few little-known wildcatters began pumping meaningful amounts of oil and gas from U.S. shale formations. A country that once was running out of energy now is on track to become the world’s leading producer. Read more of this post

An exclusive interview with Bill Gates

November 1, 2013 11:05 am

An exclusive interview with Bill Gates

By Richard Waters

The internet is not going to save the world, says the Microsoft co-founder, whatever Mark Zuckerberg and Silicon Valley’s tech billionaires believe. But eradicating disease just might. Bill Gates describes himself as a technocrat. But he does not believe that technology will save the world. Or, to be more precise, he does not believe it can solve a tangle of entrenched and interrelated problems that afflict humanity’s most vulnerable: the spread of diseases in the developing world and the poverty, lack of opportunity and despair they engender. “I certainly love the IT thing,” he says. “But when we want to improve lives, you’ve got to deal with more basic things like child survival, child nutrition.” Read more of this post

Speedy Lunches Urged at SEC as Union Decries Time-Clock Watching

Speedy Lunches Urged at SEC as Union Decries Time-Clock Watching

Add the ability to eat quickly to the list of skills needed to work at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. In a dispute that has sent pangs of resentment — and perhaps hunger — across the agency, the SEC’s union chief has warned workers to keep lunch breaks to a half hour or risk being disciplined as “absent without leave.” “Despite the fact that most SEC employees are often told that they may take an hour for lunch, technically, we are only entitled to thirty minutes,” wrote Greg Gilman, president of the union, in an e-mail sent to SEC workers last week. “Do not fall into the trap of believing that because you are a ‘professional’ the rules do not apply to you.” Read more of this post

India 101: How to Make the Most of Your First Trip

November 16, 2012, 5:54 AM

India 101: How to Make the Most of Your First Trip

By Jennifer Chen

Travel Well is a column for Scene covering Asia-Pacific travel tips and trends. Got a question about travel in the region? Email us or tweet @WSJscene.

I will be traveling with a friend to India (New Delhi, Agra, Jaisalmer and Jaipur) for two weeks in December. This will be my first trip there. Do you have any tips on what to pack? Our main goal is to experience the culture, but we’re also interested in history and adventure. We want to see the forts, walk through bazaars, ride camels, take an overnight train and visit the Taj Mahal. Any food recommendations would be wonderful, too. Finally, how do I filter through online hotel reviews—which ones are legitimate?

—Sara, Los Angeles

What to pack: December is a great time to visit northern India thanks to the dry weather and comfortable daytime temperatures in the 70’s Fahrenheit (20′s Celsius) for New Delhi and Jaipur. The mercury, however, can dip down to the 30’s Farenheit (below zero Celsius) at night, so think layers when packing and make sure to bring a few warm items. Ashish Sanghrajka, the president of Big Five Tours and an India travel expert, recommends breathable cotton clothing as the best way to deal with the fluctuating temperatures. Read more of this post

How Investors Leave Billions on the Table

Nov 1, 2013

How Investors Leave Billions on the Table

JASON ZWEIG

Will investors ever stop underperforming their own investments? Consider Pimco Total Return, the giant bond mutual fund run by the renowned investor Bill Gross. In the year ended Sept. 30, its largest share class lost 0.74% — a respectable result, considering that the bond benchmark the fund seeks to beat, the Barclays U.S. Aggregate index, lost 1.89%. But the fund’s investors, who yanked out $7.3 billion in May and June, right before it rebounded, did worse. Pimco Total Return’s largest share class had $169.3 billion in assets as of Sept. 30, 2012. If no one had put in or taken out a dime (other than to reinvest interest income and other payouts), these shares would have ended September 2013 with $168.1 billion, or 0.74% less. Instead, it finished at $157.1 billion—$11 billion less. Read more of this post

Is Success Harder for Older Entrepreneurs?

Is Success Harder for Older Entrepreneurs?

Updated Oct. 30, 2013 7:18 p.m. ET

The image of an up-and-coming entrepreneur is often that of a college dropout with an affinity for technology—typically, a male in his 20s. Yet about half of last year’s new entrepreneurs were 45 or older, according to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a nonprofit group focusing on entrepreneurship and education. Some entrepreneurs in their 40s, 50s and up say they often have to deal with “age bias” on the part of investors, clients and colleagues. But is it really harder for older entrepreneurs to succeed at building startups? And what, if anything, can they do about raised eyebrows, or snide remarks, about their age? This week mentors on The Accelerators, a Wall Street Journal blog on the challenges of starting a business, weighed in with their views on age bias. Read more of this post

Hedge fund wisdom, cut to the bone

November 1, 2013 7:20 pm

Hedge fund wisdom, cut to the bone

By Merryn Somerset Webb

Successful hedgies share top tips in the name of philanthropy

Iflew from Scotland to London with my children on Thursday. Everyone was in a remarkably good mood – possibly because they were either flying on or working for British Airways rather than Ryanair – and the captain asked us in to see the flight deck. It went well. No one pressed any buttons they weren’t supposed to and everyone was polite to the pilots. But I was not altogether thrilled to be reminded just how complicated a cockpit is – so many buttons, so much risk. Read more of this post

We Should Stop Telling Entrepreneurs To ‘Fail Fast’

We Should Stop Telling Entrepreneurs To ‘Fail Fast’

MAX NISEN NOV. 1, 2013, 6:05 PM 1,412 2

“Fail fast” has become standard entrepreneurial advice. Startups and small businesses are told they shouldn’t worry about messing up, because it’s better to quickly realize that something’s not working and move on.  That’s the right idea but very much the wrong attitude, according to Rob Shelton, the global innovation chief of PwC. When the professional services giant did a massive study looking at what separates the most innovative companies from the rest of the pack, one of the most important attributes was what Shelton calls a “Darwinian engine,” defined as a formalized process for innovation, and an ability to rapidly try and test out new ideas and discard the ones that don’t work. But don’t call it “failing,” he warns. Read more of this post

How Warby Parker Thrives On Brutal Honesty

How Warby Parker Thrives On Brutal Honesty

VIVIAN GIANG NOV. 1, 2013, 4:02 PM 1,880

Not wanting to be another failed partnership, the founders of eyewear company Warby Parker, who were former classmates at Wharton, decided early on that they would be able to criticize each other openly, honestly, and harshly, if needed. How would they do this without building resentment between one another? In an interview with Adam Bryant at The New York Times, co-founder Neil Blumenthal says that every month the four founders return to the bar where they originally came up with the idea, and one of them is placed in the hot seat. According to Blumenthal, during these “360 reviews,” a partner might say, “When you shoot me a 10-page email at 2 in the morning, I want to punch you in the face.” “That set the tone for the culture at Warby Parker, which would really be rooted in open and honest feedback,” says Blumenthal. Read more of this post

4 Terrible Pieces Of Career Advice You Should Ignore

4 Terrible Pieces Of Career Advice You Should Ignore

HIRANYA FERNANDOLUMIERE NOV. 1, 2013, 1:55 PM 3,820 6

I coach, teach, and mentor about work, jobs, and careers for a living. And I’m big on taking risks, making mistakes, living and learning, pushing boundaries. You may overhear me say things like “if something is worth doing, it’s worth overdoing.” I was never one for moderation, and still struggle to stay within the designated zone. So, when someone like me advises caution, it means something. My interest in other peoples’ wellbeing and success is deep and genuine. What follows is from the heart, even if it sounds harsh. Someone’s got to be the bad cop and call it like it is. I worry that good, well-meaning folks, and especially our youth, are being told things that are simply untrue and don’t stand up to any objective scrutiny—things that create impossible expectations, are incredibly misleading, and essentially lead people down the garden path full of unicorns and rainbows. Of course we want to inspire our clients, our students, and our mentees to pursue their dreams. Our garden and our path must have the occasional unicorn and rainbow to make us believe in beautiful things. But our path must also be true, real, and stable. To that end, there are a few things we need to stop saying. Here are four of them: Read more of this post

Why Starbucks Doesn’t Have An Express Line For Simple Orders

Why Starbucks Doesn’t Have An Express Line For Simple Orders

ASHLEY LUTZ NOV. 1, 2013, 12:46 PM 3,368 4

Starbucks customers who order black coffee wait in the same line as those who order labor-intensive lattes and Frappuccinos. Some black coffee enthusiasts view this as an injustice. If their order is much simpler, why must they wait? An express line would also free up baristas for complicated orders. We asked Adam Pressman, a principal in A.T. Kearney’s retail practice, why Starbucks doesn’t implement this policy. He provided a few reasons why black coffee customers will keep waiting in line with everyone else.  Read more of this post

Angel or Devil: Who’s Really Investing In Your Start-Up?

Angel or Devil: Who’s Really Investing In Your Start-Up?

by Nir Eyal  |   11:00 AM November 1, 2013

A friend called me heartbroken, crying. She had spent months looking for investors to fund her fledgling startup and now she had a big problem. Someone was ready to give her the money. Trouble was, the cash came with a catch. The only investor willing to pony-up the money was someone she didn’t like. She also got the feeling he did not like her much either, and yet, he wanted to invest. “If he was involved, I have the feeling I would quit my company down the road,” she told me over the phone. Time was running out; she needed the funds and with no other investor ready to commit, she feared she’d have to take the money from someone she couldn’t stand. The very thought made her sick in the stomach. I felt for her and her dilemma piqued my curiosity. What differentiates a great early-stage investor from someone no entrepreneur wants to take money from unless they absolutely have to? Read more of this post

Why do we feel such a strong desire to get a deal—even when we don’t need what we’re buying?

Book Review: ‘Bargain Fever’ by Mark Ellwood

Why do we feel such a strong desire to get a deal—even when we don’t need what we’re buying?

LAURA VANDERKAM

Nov. 1, 2013 4:42 p.m. ET

Sales racks were once muted offerings, tucked away in the back of stores. But they’ve become the main draw. In 2011, retailers sold 40% to 45% of their inventory at a promotional price, Mark Ellwood notes in “Bargain Fever: How to Shop in a Discounted World.” Only 10 years earlier, they had sold 15% to 20% that way. “In just a decade,” he writes, “sales of sales more than doubled.” Read more of this post

Great works of art aren’t just for show. Approached in the right frame of mind, they can help us to deal with life’s key challenges

Art for Life’s Sake

Great works of art can help us deal with life’s challenges

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In ‘At the Linen Closet’, a modest domestic scene by the 17th-century Dutch painter Pieter de Hooch, we see a couple of women putting the household linens in order. His painting suggests that the big themes of life—the search for prosperity, happiness, good relationships—are always grounded in the way we approach little things and ordinary routine. Peter Horree/Alamy

ALAIN DE BOTTON

Nov. 1, 2013 8:16 p.m. ET

Art enjoys such financial and cultural prestige that it’s easy to forget the confusion that persists about what it’s really for. Questions like “What is this painting about?” or “Why should this old sculpture matter to me?” have a way of sounding impudent and crass. Nice people generally don’t ask such things, except in the privacy of their hearts, on their way down the concrete steps of white-walled galleries. Read more of this post

Mankind Turns to Understanding Himself; Jacob Burckhardt’s “The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy” captures a dazzling era and its many contradictions

Mankind Turns to Understanding Himself

JOSEPH EPSTEIN

Nov. 1, 2013 7:10 p.m. ET

‘The most instructive of all the books on the Renaissance,” Lord Acton called Jacob Burckhardt’s “The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy.” The book was one of the few modern works that Friedrich Nietzsche admired. Burckhardt (1818-1897) and Nietzsche (1844-1900) were colleagues at the University of Basel, in Switzerland. Nietzsche claimed that Burckhardt’s were the only lectures he ever enjoyed, and the model for the kind he himself hoped one day to deliver. Burckhardt recognized the younger man’s genius, yet was slightly wary of him, knowing how different were their intellectual methods and points of view. Nietzche was of course a philosopher, of literary bent, trained in the classics. Burckhardt called himself “a contemplative historian.” Read more of this post

May Baseball’s Irrational Heart Keep On Beating; what moneyball thinking has failed to conquer in the sport

World Series Recap: May Baseball’s Irrational Heart Keep On Beating

Columnist Alison Gopnik on what moneyball thinking has failed to conquer in the sport.

Nov. 1, 2013 8:27 p.m. ET

The last 15 years have been baseball’s Age Of Enlightenment. The quants and nerds brought reason and science to the dark fortress of superstition and mythology that was Major League Baseball. The new movement was pioneered by the brilliant Bill James (adviser to this week’s World Champion Red Sox), implemented by Billy Beane (the fabled general manager of my own Oakland Athletics) and immortalized in the book and movie “Moneyball.” Read more of this post

The Post-Crisis New Money Rules

BY KAREN BLUMENTHAL

The New Money Rules

We look back at what we’ve learned since the financial crisis about investing, savings and debt.

Nov. 1, 2013 6:38 p.m. ET

The stock market reached new highs again this past week, further dimming the grim memories of five years ago, when the financial world looked pretty bleak. I started this column just a few months before, and when I wrote that the fallout from this steep decline would be less severe than the crash of 1929, a few readers taunted me for months. After all, in November 2008, the Dow Jones Industrial Average had dropped a third from its 2007 peak and was on its way to losing more than half its value by March 2009. Unemployment was climbing and foreclosures and debt defaults were soaring. Today, much of the sting and stomach-churning terror of the crash has faded, and home prices have taken off—or at least have begun to rebound—in many markets. Still, unemployment remains uncomfortably high and the prospect of higher interest rates threatens to ruin our recent fun. Here are some essential money lessons for those who survived the financial crisis and those who are just starting their financial lives. Read more of this post

Dale Carnegie: How to succeed; Folksy tips from the father of self-help in America

Dale Carnegie: How to succeed; Folksy tips from the father of self-help in America

Nov 2nd 2013 |From the print edition

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Self-Help Messiah: Dale Carnegie and Success in Modern America. By Steven Watts. Other Press; 582 pages; $29.95 and £21.99. Buy from Amazon.com,Amazon.co.uk

RUNNING US Steel at the turn of the 20th century, Charles Schwab was perhaps the first person in America to earn a salary of $1m a year. What made him so successful? Was he a genius? No. Did he know more about steel than other people? Certainly not. So how did he get ahead? Schwab knew how “to make people like him,” observed Dale Carnegie. With charm, confidence and a good smile, anyone can climb the ladder of success. Read more of this post

A Dozen Things I’ve Learned from Philip Fisher and Walter Schloss About Investing

A Dozen Things I’ve Learned from Philip Fisher and Walter Schloss About Investing

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1. “I had made what I believe was one of the more valuable decisions of my business life. This was to confine all efforts solely to making major gains in the long-run…. There are two fundamental approaches to  investment.  There’s the approach Ben Graham pioneered, which is to find  something intrinsically so cheap that there is little chance of it having a big  decline. He’s got financial safeguards to that. It isn’t going to go down much,  and sooner or later value will come into it.  Then there is my approach, which is to find  something so good–if you don’t pay too much for it–that it will have very,  very large growth. The advantage is that a bigger percentage of my stocks is apt  to perform in a smaller period of time–although it has taken several years for  some of these to even start, and you’re bound to make some mistakes at it. [But]  when a stock is really unusual, it makes the bulk of its moves in a relatively  short period of time.”  Phil Fisher understood (1) trying to predict the direction  of a market or stock in the short-term is not a game where one can have an advantage versus the house (especially after fees); and (2) his approach was different from Ben Graham. Read more of this post

Mahindra & Mahindra: SUVival of the fittest; Mahindra has become the pin-up of Indian capitalism—a home-grown automotive champion. Now it must resist complacency and be prepared to take bigger risks

Mahindra & Mahindra: SUVival of the fittest; Mahindra has become the pin-up of Indian capitalism—a home-grown automotive champion. Now it must resist complacency and be prepared to take bigger risks

Nov 2nd 2013 | MUMBAI |From the print edition

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INSIDE Anand Mahindra, an Indian tycoon, there is a rebel bursting to get out. He works amid aircraft models and walls of framed posters and has a mildly indiscreet Twitter account with a million followers. A former film student at Harvard, he describes his country’s malaise using the metaphor of “Star Wars”. Graft and cronyism in India are like an evil Empire that has struck back. His hope is that middle-class and young Indians become Jedi knights to battle the Dark Side. Read more of this post

6 Famous People Who Have Received Brutal Rejection Letters

6 Famous People Who Have Received Brutal Rejection Letters

VIVIAN GIANG OCT. 31, 2013, 10:34 PM 3,723 2

What’s the most difficult thing every successful person has to deal with? Rejection. Recent Nobel Prize winner Alice Munro made headlines when an archive of her rejection letters were found through the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin. One letter, written by Knopf editor Judith Jones in 1968 in response to Munro’s book “Dance of the Happy Shades,” says there is “nothing particularly new and exciting” about the short stories and calls Munro “not that young.” Today, Munro is the first Canadian and 13th woman to win the Nobel Prize in literature. She isn’t the only successful person to receive heart-wrenching rejection letters. C.S. Lewis received 800 rejections before he sold his first piece of writing, and Mary Higgins Clark spent six years trying to get her first novel published, which she sold for $100. Forty years after that first novel, Clark accepted a $64 million book deal with Simon Schuster in the 1990s. Below are six rejection letters that now-famous people once received: Read more of this post

Comvita CEO Brett Hewlett shares his thoughts on role models, the impact of leadership on internationalisation, and whether leadership can be displayed across all levels of an organisation

AUTHENTIC LEADERSHIP

Brett Hewlett, winner of the ‘KPMG Outstanding International Business Leader’ category at the 2013 New Zealand International Business Awards, shares his thoughts on role models, the impact of leadership on internationalisation, and whether leadership can be displayed across all levels of an organisation.

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Who is your top leadership role model?

Richard Branson is always top of mind for me as I find inspiration in his huge vision, but I can also identify with his rebellious, playful and passionate approach to business and life. In general terms I draw most inspiration from amazing acts of leadership from a vast array of people in everyday life, more so than having a following for a single role model – no one is perfect.

What are the top five character traits of a great leader?

Vision, passion, empathy, compassion, generosity – oh, and a good sense of humour helps. Credibility and effectiveness is what sustains great leadership. Over time you will be judged more on what you have done and less on what you have said.

How important is leadership when it comes to helping a company grow into new markets?

Doing anything ‘new’ involves elements of change and risk for an organisation. Not everyone will see it as exciting. It is also possible to be swept away by the pioneering enthusiasm of doing something new just for the sake of it. This is where empathy comes in. A good leader will attempt to understand all of the issues in a balanced way, have empathy for people’s concerns and build consensus and support for the decision. Read more of this post

14 Famous Business Books Summarized In One Sentence Each

14 Famous Business Books Summarized In One Sentence Each

MAX NISEN OCT. 31, 2013, 4:08 PM 24,821 9

Want to read 14 famous business books in under a minute? To save you some time and money, we’ve made it possible. We boiled down some of the most popular and influential business books out there to their central lessons. For those looking to bone up on some business theory, here are the highlights.

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Deepavali is held to celebrate the death of evil at the hands of good, of darkness being vanquished by light. A time to celebrate, a time to ponder

Updated: Friday November 1, 2013 MYT 7:41:21 AM

A time to celebrate, a time to ponder

BY DORAIRAJ NADASON

Deepavali is held to celebrate the death of evil at the hands of good, of darkness being vanquished by light. But every so often, death is cruel and there is little to celebrate.

IT’S Deepavali, a time to celebrate. It’s also All-Souls Day, when Christians (the Catholics, the Protestants don’t bother) gather to remember the dead. In a sense, Deepavali is also a time to remember the dead. It’s said to be the day when Lord Krishna slew the evil demon Narakasura. And it was the dying Narakasura who begged a boon from the God that all in the land should celebrate his death, so there would be no evil on earth again. Read more of this post