The ‘Two Pizza Rule’ Is Jeff Bezos’ Secret To Productive Meetings; Never have a meeting where two pizzas couldn’t feed the entire group. “[Bezos] wanted a decentralized, even disorganized company where independent ideas would prevail over groupthink

The ‘Two Pizza Rule’ Is Jeff Bezos’ Secret To Productive Meetings

VIVIAN GIANG OCT. 29, 2013, 6:17 PM 6,526 10

The more people there are, the less productive most meetings will be. The idea is that most attendees will end up agreeing with each other instead of voicing their own opinions and own ideas. Amazon’s Jeff Bezos has a solution for this problem. He calls it the “two pizza rule”: Never have a meeting where two pizzas couldn’t feed the entire group. In fact, Bezos advises to only have meetings when absolutely necessary. “[Bezos] wanted a decentralized, even disorganized company where independent ideas would prevail over groupthink,” writes Richard Brandt at The Wall Street Journal. In The WSJ profile, Brandt interviews a former Amazon executive who recalls Bezos saying “communication is terrible!” during an offsite retreat. Birth of a Salesman

Behind the rise of Jeff Bezos and Amazon: Richard L. Brandt on the founder’s Texas roots, the site’s chaotic early days, why negative reviews are allowed and his increasing use of personal data. Read more of this post

This Video Of Chinese Street Food Made From ‘Gutter Oil’ Is The Most Disgusting Thing You Will See All Day

This Video Of Chinese Street Food Made From ‘Gutter Oil’ Is The Most Disgusting Thing You Will See All Day

MAMTA BADKAR OCT. 29, 2013, 12:43 PM 24,892 44

The next time you consider eating Chinese street food you might think twice. The use of gutter oil it turns out is pretty common. This refers to a process of pulling waste oil from sewers, grease traps, waste from slaughterhouses, reprocessing it and then selling it as cooking oil. These screenshots from a Radio Free Asia (RFA) video via Max Fisher at The Washington Post show a woman in Shenzhen pulling slop from a gutter. The slop then ends up in “processing” plants where it is processed with other animal fat through filtration or boiling. The oil eventually make its way to “street vendors and hole-in-the-wall restaurants” that use it as “recycled cooking oil.” Watch the entire video below: Gutter oil is reported to account for one-tenth of cooking oil in China, according to experts cited by RFA. Besides being downright disgusting, the oil is also said to contain carcinogens and other toxins. China has been fighting the practice for years. Earlier this month a man from China’s Jiangsu province was sentenced to life in prison for making and selling gutter oil. China has long battled food safety concerns. But in a country where cooking oil is at a premium, it will likely be a while before officials can effectively crack down on the practice.

Too rich or too poor for success? A middle-income background is often an advantage for business founders

October 29, 2013 3:15 pm

Too rich or too poor for success?

By Jonathan Moules

Keith Wymer’s father was a “journeyman window clean­er” when he was born and his mother worked in a factory. Two years later, the family took an assisted-passage flight to Canada to take up unskilled manual work, trying to better themselves. By the time he was 11, in 1965, they were back in a freezing London flat with no television, telephone or car. The experience made young Keith determined to work his way out of it. Read more of this post

Never lose the start-up mentality; Act like a start-up, even if you’re a well established company,

Never lose the start-up mentality

Act like a start-up, even if you’re a well established company, advises our entrepreneurial columnist.

Martin Luther King perhaps unwittingly captured the essence of the start-up spirit when he spoke of the “fierce urgency of now.” Photo: GETTY IMAGES

By Michael Hayman

9:09AM GMT 29 Oct 2013

My team is thrilled. The Start-ups 100, the listing of the most inspiring early stage businesses in Britain, has just ranked us as No.11. It’s a landmark for us. Not least because from next year we will cease to “officially” be a start up; we will have moved on to the ranks of the grown-ups. Indeed, some of the feedback we have had on the ranking is that many never really considered our firm as a struggling start-up anyway. We did, still do, and this is why. Read more of this post

Donation of ideas is better than just cash; It is often better for a business founder to build their own social enterprise than join an existing one

October 29, 2013 3:26 pm

Donation of ideas is better than just cash

By Luke Johnson

It is often better for a business founder to build their own social enterprise than join an existing one

The intelligent way for business founders to give to charity is not simply to donate money. They could instead consider setting up their own non-profit organisation. In the past few weeks I have helped start two. The first was The Centre for Entrepreneurs, a think-tank devoted solely to entrepreneurship. I thought of this a few years ago but never got it off the ground. My belief that Britain needed such a group never wavered, so after meeting a backer recently, I decided to put my theories into action. Read more of this post

Chinese President Xi Jinping and the six other top officials reportedly were at Tiananmen Square on Monday when a vehicle crashed and exploded nearby, leaving five dead

China leaders were nearby during apparent Tiananmen Square attack

By Barbara Demick

October 29, 2013, 5:07 a.m.

BEIJING — Chinese President Xi Jinping and the six other top officials reportedly were at Tiananmen Square on Monday when a vehicle crashed and exploded nearby, leaving five dead. Although there is no indication that the physical safety of the leaders, who were attending meetings inside the Great Hall of the People, was jeopardized, the apparent suicide attack so close to the epicenter of power rattled the Chinese government and has raised doubts about the effectiveness of its often-stifling security apparatus. Read more of this post

Will Starbucks’ push into tea hurt its coffee shops?

JUDGMENT CALL

October 30, 2013 12:07 am

Will Starbucks’ push into tea hurt its coffee shops?

The Teavana bar’s opening raises questions about how to avoid competing with the original business

THE PROBLEM

Starbucks opened its first Teavana bar in New York last week. CEO Howard Schultz said he was not worried about cannibalising the coffee chain because “most people who are tea drinkers are not crossing over to coffee”. When launching similar products, how do you avoid competing with your original business? Read more of this post

Humble roadside stall blossoms into successful family business

Humble roadside stall blossoms into successful family business

20131030_NurulSakinah

Wednesday, Oct 30, 2013

P. Aruna

The Star/Asia News Network

MALAYSIA – What had started as a roadside stall with the daily budget of RM15 (S$5.90) to buy some chicken and herbs, has today become a successful family business for Nurul Sakinah Abdullah. Currently, the 42-year-old earns at least RM4,000 each day and has hired seven permanent workers at her shop in Seremban. Her brand of “Ayam Panggang Kenyalang” or “Kenyalang roast chicken” has gained fame since she established the business there in 2004. She gets up to three big orders each week to cater food for wedding functions and also sells her marinade recipe to those who want to make their own versions of her famous roasted chicken. Read more of this post

A new space tourism company named World View unveiled its plans to loft passengers to the stratosphere as early as 2015, not by rocket but by giant balloon. Price: $75,000. (Drinks included.)

October 22, 2013

Balloon Ride to Offer Expansive View, for a Price

By KENNETH CHANG

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A rendering of the balloon, which would climb about 18.5 miles and stay up for a couple of hours before its promised gentle descent.

And now, a high-altitude adventure for the leisure class, people who do not want to be jostled as they sip Champagne and gaze down at Earth’s curved blue surface. A new space tourism company named World View unveiled its plans on Tuesday to loft passengers to the stratosphere as early as 2015, not by rocket but by giant balloon. Price: $75,000. (Drinks included.) World View is led by the same people involved in Inspiration Mars, a private endeavor to launch two people in 2018 to a flyby of the red planet. Read more of this post

Attack innovation the ‘special forces’ way

Attack innovation the ‘special forces’ way

BY REGINA E DUGAN –

3 HOURS 55 MIN AGO

Over the past 50 years, the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has produced an unparalleled number of breakthroughs. Arguably, it has the most consistent track record of radical invention in history. Its innovations include the Internet, stealth technology and unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones. Though the United States military was the original customer for DARPA’s applications, the agency’s innovations have played a central role in creating a host of multi-billion-dollar industries. What makes DARPA’s long list of accomplishments even more impressive is the agency’s swiftness in developing breakthroughs, as well as its relatively tiny size and comparatively modest budget. Read more of this post

Tired Asian Businessmen, Assessing Management Quality and the $15 Billion Oshin Retail Stock in China (Bamboo Innovator Insight)

The following article is extracted from the Bamboo Innovator Insight weekly column blog related to the context and thought leadership behind the stock idea generation process of Asian wide-moat businesses that are featured in the monthly entitled The Moat Report Asia. Fellow value investors get to go behind the scene to learn thought-provoking timely insights on key macro and industry trends in Asia, as well as benefit from the occasional discussion of potential red flags, misgovernance or fraud-detection trails ahead of time to enhance the critical-thinking skill about the myriad pitfalls of investing in Asia at the microstructure- and firm-level.

  • Tired Asian Businessmen, Assessing Management Quality and the $15 Billion Oshin Retail Stock in China, Oct 28, 2013 (Moat Report AsiaBeyondProxy)

Oshin

Dear Friends and All,

Tired Asian Businessmen, Assessing Management Quality and the $15 Billion Oshin Retail Stock in China

“A tired businessman is one whose business is usually not a successful one.” – Joseph R. Grundy (1863-1961), Quaker businessman and US senator

“For many CEOs the hours are relentless; you’re working around the clock seven days of the week. I need a break. I think three-and-a-half years in the department store is a long time and if you think about our restructuring post the global financial crisis [and] us not being ready for the digital world, it has taken its toll and I’m just simply tired. The past three-and-a-half years as a CEO … weren’t normal, let’s face it. It was tough going and I am signalling my intention to resign ….” – Paul Zahra, CEO of David Jones, on Oct 22, 2013

Tears were welling up in my eyes this week. Not over Paul Zahra’s shocking announcement on Oct 22, 2013 over his sudden resignation as CEO of Australian upmarket departmental store David Jones (ASX: DJS, MV A$1.48 billion) and the even more shockingly frank explanation: Because he is “simply tired” and “burnt out”. Zahra could have confined his decision to the usual “personal reasons” but he chose to elaborate.

I was fighting back tears over watching the Japanese movie Oshin (おしん) that was shown in the theatres. The movie is a remake of the iconic 1983 Japanese TV drama which was a global hit. The never-tired spirit of Oshin, about a poor girl who perseveres and triumph against the odds despite all the bullying and adversities, has stood in sharp contrast to the admission by Paul Zahra. David Jones was down 44% since Zahra took over in 2010 and has reported consistent falls in revenue and is only now looking at the prospect of earnings growth. Zahra was recently credited for the potential reversal in fortune and he was awarded 88% of his short-term incentive payment.

Oshin is inspired by the touching story of the late Katsu Wada, the indefatigable entrepreneur who founded the once-successful Japanese departmental chain Yaohan in 1930. The film-maker explained that the 30-year lag for the movie version of the series was to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Oshin and that even after 30 years, “there are some things that never change, like the inspirational story of perseverance”. Even though I have watched the TV series like most older-generation Asians and am familiar with the story, I still cried in one particular scene. Before Oshin’s beloved grandmother died, she had a mouthful of the rice porridge – wages that were earned by Oshin when she was taken in by the kind and wise matriarch Mrs Yashiro in exchange for her labor at the Kagawa-family rice dealer shop. Oshin’s grandmother’s touching parting words: “The rice is very tasty.”

The death of her grandmother steels Oshin’s resolve to make something good out of her life. The story of Oshin is to remind people to cherish those around them and to keep going no matter what happens. Perhaps I was also a little emotional because building up The Moat Report Asia has its unique challenges and what kept me going was the sense of duty to value-add to our subscribers and readers with authentic and refreshing views about resilient compounders in Asia as accounting frauds of companies with attractive quant financials and net-net numbers break out systematically and syndicates manipulating share prices and volumes run rampant. Like Oshin who treasure the people around her, I cherish every one of our subscribers and they come from North America, the Nordic, Europe, the Oceania and Asia, including value investors with over $20 billion in asset under management in equities.

Quaker entrepreneur Joseph Grundy (1863-1961) illuminated a useful way to assess management quality with his penetrating quote: “A tired businessman is one whose business is usually not a successful one.” The story of Paul Zahra and Oshin highlighted two interesting questions:

  • Avoiding stocks whose companies are run by managers who are tired appear to be a sound method to lower downside risks. If so, is it possible to know in advance why managers get tired and burn out?
  • Why then do others not get tired like Oshin? How to identify and invest in stocks whose management and culture that have such Oshin-like quality?

To answer these questions, let’s explore the case of the $94-billiion retail grocery market in China:

  • Why is there one Oshin-like company in China, with a market value of $15 billion, who is growing sustainably when everyone else, from Tesco, Wal-Mart to Asia’s richest businessman Li Ka-Shing’s Park N’Shop and Thai billionaire tycoon’s CP Lotus, are “tired” with faltering growth and losses?
  • Also, what are the 3Ms that resulted in entrepreneurs and managers to not become tired? The 3Ms is also a simple and practical way to help value investors assess management quality.
  • How can companies avoid the fate of a Yaohan and investors to detect the downfall ahead of time?

“In business, I look for economic castles protected by unbreachable ‘moats’.”

– Warren Buffett

The Moat Report Asia is a research service focused exclusively on competitively advantaged, attractively priced public companies in Asia. Together with our European partners BeyondProxy and The Manual of Ideas, the idea-oriented acclaimed monthly research publication for institutional and private investors, we scour Asia to produce The Moat Report Asia, a monthly in-depth presentation report highlighting an undervalued wide-moat business in Asia with an innovative and resilient business model to compound value in uncertain times.

Learn more about membership benefits here: http://www.moatreport.com/subscription/

Our latest upcoming monthly issue for the month of October examines a Northeast Asia-listed company with global #1 market share leadership in 4 different products, including making the components for an innovative consumer product whose sales have climbed from $90 million to $526 million in the recent three years. The company is a hidden global consolidator with underappreciated growth. The stock is trading at PE 11.5x, EV/EBITDA 9x and generates a sustainable dividend yield 5.75%.

Our past monthly issues in August and September investigate a Taiwan and Southeast-Asian-listed entrepreneurial company, both with a dominant 80% domestic market share and have innovative business models to generate substantial cashflow to support both expansion and a 4-5% dividend yield. There is also a behind-the-scene conversation with the CEO of the two companies to understand their thinking process in building up the business.

The Moat Report Asia Members’ Forum has been getting penetrating quality dialogues from our existing institutional subscribers from North America, the Nordic, Europe, the Oceania and Asia, including professional value investors with over $20 billion in asset under management in equities. Questions range from:

  • The nuances of internal dealings in Asia, including the case discussion of the recent deal in which HK billionaire’s Lee Shau-kee Henderson Land acquiring Towngas or Hong Kong & China Gas (3 HK) from his family holdings, seemingly déjà vu from the early Oct 2007 transaction when the market peak.
  • The case of F&N Singapore spinning out its property unit FCL Trust and getting “free” special dividend-in-specie and the potential risk in asset swap restructuring to deleverage the hidden debt in the entire Group balance sheet.
  • The dilemma of whether to invest in a Southeast Asian-listed company and hidden champion with a domestic market share of 60% due to family squabbles and a legal suit over the company’s ownership.
  • Discussion of the wise and thoughtful 107-year-old Irving Kahn’s investment into a US-listed but Hong Kong-based electronics company with development property project in Shenzhen’s Qianhai zone and the possible corporate governance risks that could be underestimated or overlooked, as well as their history of listing some assets in HK in 2004.. This is also a case study of “buy one get one free” in John’s highly-acclaimed book The Manual of Ideas in which the “free” property is lumped together with the (eroding) core business to make the combined entity look cheap and undervalued. What are the potential areas that value investors need to watch out for when adapting the SOTP (sum-of-the-parts) valuation method in Asia?
  • And many more intriguing questions.

Do find out more in how you can benefit from authentic and candid on-the-ground insights that sell-side analysts and brokers, with their inherent conflict-of-interests, inevitable focus on conventional stock coverage and different clientele priorities, are unwilling or unable to share. Think of this as pressing the Bloomberg “Help Help” button to navigate the Asian capital jungle. Institutional subscribers also get access to the Bamboo Innovator Index of 200+ companies and Watchlist of 500+ companies in Asia and the Database has eliminated companies with a higher probability of accounting frauds and  misgovernance as well as the alluring value traps.

The Omidyar way of giving: The founder of eBay aims to be a more entrepreneurial philanthropist than his predecessors

The Omidyar way of giving: The founder of eBay aims to be a more entrepreneurial philanthropist than his predecessors

Oct 26th 2013 |From the print edition

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THE billionaire’s dilemma: spend $250m on buying the venerable Washington Post, or splash the cash on a start-up news network to be headed by a controversial investigative journalist with no experience of running anything? It is entirely in character that Pierre Omidyar chose the second option, bankrolling the new journalism venture of Glenn Greenwald, best known for his reporting on the National Security Agency. Mr Omidyar did not become a billionaire at the age of 31 by fixing an established institution, but by building eBay from scratch into a worldwide online marketplace. And fostering innovative start-ups with an ambition to improve the world has been the focus of his philanthropy since he gave up his executive role at eBay while still in his 30s. Mr Omidyar, who is now 46, has already deployed $1 billion of his fortune to this end, which puts his $250m media investment into perspective: a big bet, but not that big. Read more of this post

Creating customers for life in the everything-as-a-service (XaaS) economy

Creating customers for life in the everything-as-a-service (XaaS) economy

BY ESMERALDA SWARTZ 
ON OCTOBER 28, 2013

Search “everything-as-a service” (XaaS) and Google will spit out more than 1.5 billion results. Just based on its nomenclature, you can guess that XaaS is used to describe a variety of business models where almost anything can be delivered as-a-service — automobiles, wind turbines, jet engines and network devices are just a few examples. It’s not surprising that enterprises have begun to recognize the opportunity around the globe to transition business models to the cloud to take advantage of the XaaS trend. Gartner forecasts that the market for applications, application infrastructure and systems infrastructure delivered as public cloud services will reach $43 billion in 2015. Read more of this post

Israeli company that pioneered flash drives has lessons for the start-up nation; M-Systems was a rare case of an Israeli start-up creating both a consumer hit and hundreds of jobs

Israeli company that pioneered flash drives has lessons for the start-up nation

M-Systems was a rare case of an Israeli start-up creating both a consumer hit and hundreds of jobs.

By Amitai Ziv | Oct. 29, 2013 | 6:11 PM

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“Dov had amazing timing. It couldn’t have been better,” says one former M-Systems employee, recalling the $1.5 billion sale in 2006 of the high-tech company that Dov Moran founded and led. “Today, the DiskOnKey is technology with a glorious past,” says the former employee, referring to the company’s brand name for its USB flash drive, an external digital memory device. “On the other hand, how would our lives have been in the 1980s without cassette tapes?” His meaning is clear – USB drives were a very important and useful product in their heyday, but no longer. But the story for the devices isn’t quite over. Fifteen years after they were first invented, USB flash drives continue to be sold throughout the world and the story of M-Systems continues to fuel Israeli high-tech dreams, as proof that Israel can spawn large technology companies. In addition, the proceeds from the buyout continue to finance and generate new startups to this day.

Read more of this post

Getting published is easy; getting noticed is trickier; How can writers make themselves heard in the age of blog and self-publishing saturation?

Getting published is easy; getting noticed is trickier

How can writers make themselves heard in the age of blog and self-publishing saturation? Japan authors offer a diverse range of views

BY GIANNI SIMONE

OCT 28, 2013

“Writers shouldn’t be afraid of using their imagination,” Hugh Ashton says, before launching into a quote from Sherlock Holmes: “When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.” Ashton, a Japan-based author of new Holmes material and other novels, takes the sleuth’s words very seriously. “I find his character and working practices can be applied to the writer’s trade,” he says. “Indeed, as long as the plot has some plausibility, it’s a good plot. There are some very strange things that happen in real life, after all,” he adds, explaining the message he takes from the words of Arthur Conan Doyle’s best-known character. Read more of this post

Walking the leadership tightrope

Walking the leadership tightrope

PUBLISHED: 4 HOURS 21 MINUTES AGO | UPDATE: 0 HOUR 6 MINUTES AGO

LYNDA GRATTON

If you’re a business leader today, you’re working to understand and balance the perspectives of an unprecedented variety of stakeholders, from NGOs that are becoming more voracious in their demands to workers who are increasingly hard to engage. And you’re doing so in a world that is more transparent and connected than ever before. It’s a tough challenge. I found myself reflecting on this recently while speaking with two business leaders in one of the world’s great pharmaceutical companies. The conversation turned to the growing complexity of the business environment, and the question was inevitably posed: what had I, as a business professor, managed to figure out about what it takes to succeed under such conditions? In no particular order, here are my thoughts: Read more of this post

The chairman of Tsui Wah Holdings (1314), Lee Yuen-hong, was but a humble cha chaan teng delivery boy when he started his working life in the 1960s

Serving up success
Karen Chiu
Monday, October 28, 2013

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The chairman of Tsui Wah Holdings (1314), Lee Yuen-hong, was but a humble cha chaan teng delivery boy when he started his working life in the 1960s. But through sheer hard work and perseverance, the 58-year-old is now the proud owner of the listed Tsui Wah chain, boasting 25 cha chaan teng in the territory, one in Macau and eight in the mainland. What sets Tsui Wah apart from other cha chaan teng is the ethos that Lee upholds. We have used our heart to keep the taste of local favorites at our eatery for nearly five decades, even in the face of challenges, Lee says, noting how the chain has evolved in an innovative manner to stay in step with the rapidly changing eating habits of Hongkongers. Read more of this post

Top bosses fear striking out; Increasing shareholder scrutiny is leading to a drop in top executives’ fixed pay

Top bosses fear striking out

October 27, 2013

John Collett

Increasing shareholder scrutiny is leading to a drop in top executives’ fixed pay.

Just the threat of facing a second strike makes directors more accountable. Photo: Jessica Shapiro

Rule changes to give shareholders more say over the pay arrangements of top executives are reining in excessive pay packets, according to researchers at Griffith University. The ”two-strikes” rule was legislated in 2011, and there is evidence that executive compensation is being curbed and boards of directors are paying more attention to shareholder views, says Associate Professor Reza Monem from the Griffith Business School. Read more of this post

How not to be a boss like Kevin Rudd; Don’t take all the glory or blame others for your mistakes. “The best companies are run from the bottom up. Rudd never recognised that. That was his mistake.”

How not to be a boss like Kevin Rudd

October 24, 2013

Adam Courtenay

Don’t take all the glory or blame others for your mistakes. Alex Hamill says it’s not uncommon to find bastards in leadership positions. It took just one word from former attorney-general Nicola Roxon to question not only the character of Kevin Rudd but his leadership. Delivering the John Button Memorial Lecture this month, Roxon called her former boss a “bastard”. The party never addressed his management problems or explained properly why he was dumped in favour of Julia Gillard, she said.

“The best companies are run from the bottom up. Rudd never recognised that. That was his mistake.”  Read more of this post

Getting published is easy; getting noticed is trickier; How can writers make themselves heard in the age of blog and self-publishing saturation?

Getting published is easy; getting noticed is trickier

How can writers make themselves heard in the age of blog and self-publishing saturation? Japan authors offer a diverse range of views

BY GIANNI SIMONE

OCT 28, 2013

“Writers shouldn’t be afraid of using their imagination,” Hugh Ashton says, before launching into a quote from Sherlock Holmes: “When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.” Ashton, a Japan-based author of new Holmes material and other novels, takes the sleuth’s words very seriously. “I find his character and working practices can be applied to the writer’s trade,” he says. “Indeed, as long as the plot has some plausibility, it’s a good plot. There are some very strange things that happen in real life, after all,” he adds, explaining the message he takes from the words of Arthur Conan Doyle’s best-known character. Read more of this post

How Anxiety Can Lead Your Decisions Astray

How Anxiety Can Lead Your Decisions Astray

by Francesca Gino  |   8:00 AM October 29, 2013

High-stakes decisions — which can range from starting a business to consummating a joint venture to hiring or firing someone — have something in common: they involve high levels of uncertainty. When so much is unknown or unknowable, trying to decide what the right course of action might be triggers anxiety. In response, many of us seek the counsel of others to help us make these weighty decisions. Read more of this post

The Big Lesson from Twelve Good Decisions

The Big Lesson from Twelve Good Decisions

by Tom Davenport  |   8:00 AM October 28, 2013

How is it that managers facing high-stakes decisions, despite all the resources and knowledge available to them, often make them so poorly?  In large part, it’s because their whole perspective on decision-making is wrong. Managers think of major decisions as choices they must make in order for the work of the organization to proceed. The truth is that decision-making is work.  This simple shift in perspective – seeing big decisions as tasks to be managed – has huge implications. It means they should be approached with the same level of discipline and direction good managers bring to other areas.  It means everyone understands that decisions improve when the right people, tools, and processes are brought to bear on them. Read more of this post

In New York, How to Hothouse Your Tot; The pursuit of educational excellence is so competitive in New York that some babies are given personal tuition in French and Chinese, and four-year-olds are hothoused for the best schools

In New York, How to Hothouse Your Tot

The pursuit of educational excellence is so competitive in New York that some babies are given personal tuition in French and Chinese, and four-year-olds are hothoused for the best schools.

By Veronique Dupont on 10:24 am October 28, 2013.
New York City. The pursuit of educational excellence is so competitive in New York that some babies are given personal tuition in French and Chinese, and four-year-olds are hothoused for the best schools. Some of the richest, most competitive, most fashionable parents on the planet leave no stone unturned in the fight to provide their children with the upper hand. Babies who cannot even form sentences in their native English are signed up to “baby and me” lessons in Chinese or French in the ultra-trendy TriBeCa neighborhood of Manhattan. Read more of this post

Nature’s own walls, like reefs and marshes, have appeal and provide many other benefits, but questions remain on how much protection they would provide, especially in a major storm

October 28, 2013

Natural Allies for the Next Sandy

By HENRY FOUNTAIN

The floodwaters from Hurricane Sandy had barely receded in New York last fall when the suggestions started coming for ways to keep the city and other low-lying areas safe in future storms. Higher flood walls and more bulkheads were needed, some experts said. Others called for even bigger engineering projects, like storm-surge barriers, to keep the water at bay. But the most intriguing suggestions involved natural approaches. Why not return New York to its glory days as an oyster capital, some argued, and build reefs in the harbor that could help beat down a storm’s waves? Why not turn Lower Manhattan into an aquatic Shangri-La, fringing it in marshland that could reduce surging storm waters? Read more of this post

Jump-Starter Kits for the Mind; Low-level electric current offers promise, and potential perils, as a way to stimulate the brain, but many do-it-yourselfers aren’t waiting for confirmation. They’re rushing to buy kits online or hooking themselves

October 28, 2013

Jump-Starter Kits for the Mind

By KATE MURPHY

Whether it’s hitting a golf ball, playing the piano or speaking a foreign language, becoming really good at something requires practice. Repetition creates neural pathways in the brain, so the behavior eventually becomes more automatic and outside distractions have less impact. It’s called being in the zone. But what if you could establish the neural pathways that lead to virtuosity more quickly? That is the promise of transcranial direct current stimulation, or tDCS — the passage of very low-level electrical current through targeted areas of the brain. Several studies conducted in medical and military settings indicate tDCS may bring improvements in cognitive functionmotor skills and mood. Read more of this post

Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone made “corrupt bargain” in bid to stay in position of influence in sport, court told

Bernie Ecclestone made ‘corrupt bargain’ to cling to power in Formula One

Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone made “corrupt bargain” in bid to stay in position of influence in sport, court told

A German media company which claims it lost out as a result of the deal is taking legal action against Mr Ecclestone Photo: REX FEATURES

2:45PM GMT 29 Oct 2013

Bernie Ecclestone, the boss of Formula 1 motor racing, made a “corrupt bargain” in a bid to stay in a position of influence in the sport, the High Court has been told. Mr Ecclestone allegedly entered into an agreement with a banker to facilitate the sale of the Formula 1 group to a buyer chosen by him, Mr Justice Newey heard at the hearing in London. A German media company which claims it lost out as a result of the deal is taking legal action against Mr Ecclestone. Read more of this post

Giant mirrors bring winter sun to remote Norwegian village

Giant mirrors bring winter sun to remote Norwegian village

BY PIERRE-HENRY DESHAYES

AFP-JIJI OCT 29, 2013

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Sunrise: Three giant mirrors erected on the mountainside above Rjukan, Norway, reflect sunshine toward the center of the town below. | AFP-JIJI

OSLO – Residents of a remote village nestled in a steep-sided valley in southern Norway are about to enjoy winter sunlight for the first time ever thanks to giant mirrors. The mountains that surround the village of Rjukan are far from Himalayan, but they are high enough to deprive its 3,500 inhabitants of direct sunlight for six months a year. That was before a century-old idea, as old as Rjukan itself, was brought to life: to install mirrors on a 400-meter high peak to deflect sunrays toward the central square. “The idea was a little crazy, but madness is our middle name,” said Oeystein Haugan, a local project coordinator. Read more of this post

A hard look at Paul Reichmann’s long goodbye

A hard look at Paul Reichmann’s long goodbye

Peter Foster | 27/10/13 4:15 PM ET
The following Peter Foster column appeared September 22, 2009, as Paul Reichmann was about to loose control of the last vestiges of his retail empire.  Mr. Reichmann , 82, died last week.

Paul Reichmann was once the reigning genius not merely of Canadian business but of the global real estate industry. Now he is reportedly about to lose his stake in Canary Wharf, the spectacular London development whose construction sunk Olympia & York, the company he controlled, in 1991. His 8.45% share was apparently pledged as collateral for a loan that has been called. Read more of this post

There has been a sharp rise in the number of children receiving medical consultations for emotional problems, an expert said

Pressures pile on kids
Staff reporters
Tuesday, October 29, 2013

There has been a sharp rise in the number of children receiving medical consultations for emotional problems, an expert said. Psychiatrist Kathy Chan Po-man said she is now handling at least one such case every month as against one very several months 10 years ago. One out of every four children she treats is below the age of eight. Read more of this post

5 Ways Your Brain Tricks You Into Making Horrible Investment Decisions

5 Ways Your Brain Tricks You Into Making Horrible Investment Decisions

ROB WILE OCT. 27, 2013, 6:57 PM 15,860 7

Studies abound showing how our mental biases thwart sound investing decisions. Value Stock Guide has compiled the five main ways this happens into a nifty infographic (via Eddy Elfenbein). You should check out the whole thing, but real quickly, the 5 common ways your brain screws you up are:

  • You do what everyone else is doing because of herd behavior.
  • You confuse “cheap” with “value.”
  • You throw good money after bad.
  • You practice loss aversion and that leads to bad choices.
  • You think the future is more unpredictable than it is.

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