The Right Way to Answer “What’s Your Greatest Weakness?”

The Right Way to Answer “What’s Your Greatest Weakness?”

by David Reese  |   11:00 AM January 17, 2014

Thomas Jefferson once said that “honesty is the first chapter in the book of wisdom”. Though truth-telling abounds in grade school platitudes, it seems scarcer the older we get. But this decline in honesty — let’s call it dishonesty — isn’t necessarily innate. Dishonesty can be taught. In my experience, I’ve noticed that, of all culprits, college career centers are exceptional traffickers of such miseducation. In the process, they’re hurting their brightest students’ chances of making it in the world of startups by convincing them to give dishonest answers to tough interview questions. Read more of this post

How to keep the ‘family’ in the family business; Fewer than 15% of family owned companies will still be held by the same family beyond the third generation. Here are some tips that might help your family survive the transition

How to keep the ‘family’ in the family business

Drew Hasselback | February 18, 2014 7:00 AM ET
I have written about prepping for business succession in the past. Other FP Entrepreneur columnists have addressed the topic, too.

Those columns discussed succession in general. But what about succession in a family business? Less than 15% of family owned companies will still be held by the same family beyond the third generation, according to one study. The family dynamic amplifies some of the emotional issues that arise in succession talks, and it erodes some of the caution that might otherwise be present in situations where business owners aren’t related. Read more of this post

Singapore’s satirical news site loves trolling legit media, gets 1 million page-views every month

Singapore’s satirical news site loves trolling legit media, gets 1 million page-views every month

February 19, 2014

by Enricko Lukman

Singapore’s satirical news site New Nation has gained a bit of a reputation inside Indonesia’s media circles since one of its articles became a major headline and topic of discussion among Indonesians last week. The news was about Singapore’s prime minister Lee Hsien Loong, who unfriended Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono on Facebook. In case you’re wondering, yes, it was all made up. Read more of this post

Number of taxi licences surges to 100,000 in Singapore

Number of taxi licences surges to 100,000

Toh Yong Chuan | The Straits Times | Wednesday, Feb 19, 2014

SINGAPORE – Driving a taxi here has become more of a draw, going by the surge in the number of taxi driving licences.

The number of taxi vocational licences issued by the Land Transport Authority (LTA) swelled from 95,800 in 2012 to 99,800 last year. Read more of this post

China accuses Qualcomm of overcharging, abusing dominance

Updated: Wednesday February 19, 2014 MYT 3:03:07 PM

China accuses Qualcomm of overcharging, abusing dominance

BEIJING: China’s anti-monopoly regulator on Wednesday said Qualcomm Inc was suspected of overcharging and abusing its market position, allegations which could see the US chip giant hit with record fines of more than US$1bil. Read more of this post

Working cheek by jowl with your family can be fraught with difficulty. Now there is a growing body of evidence to show that the family business environment can also be a big enabler of addiction problems in the heirs to the business

KICKING THE HABIT

ARTICLE | 18 FEBRUARY, 2014 12:53 PM | BY TESS DE LA MARE

There is no such thing as a stereotypical addict. Extreme wealth and an unhealthy penchant for narcotics have long been bedfellows, as proved by the slew of celebrities that check into rehab each year, but then again, addiction and poverty aren’t strangers either. It is almost impossible to run a line of best fit through the characteristics and backgrounds of addicts. But all that said, there is worrying evidence to show the rate of drug or alcohol dependency in family businesses is much higher than in their non-family counterparts. Read more of this post

US ‘Cable Cowboy’ John Malone begins succession planning

February 19, 2014 3:35 am

US ‘Cable Cowboy’ John Malone begins succession planning

By Matthew Garrahan in Los Angeles

John Malone, the US billionaire dubbed the “Cable Cowboy”, has begun planning his succession at Discovery Communications and Liberty Global by giving their chief executives right of first refusal if he decides to sell his stakes in the media companies. Read more of this post

Apple-Tesla merger rumour excites investors

Apple-Tesla merger rumour excites investors

PUBLISHED: 6 HOURS 37 MINUTES AGO | UPDATE: 0 HOUR 0 MINUTES AGO

Rumours of a possible acquisition by Apple and expectations for a strong fourth quarter drove shares of Tesla Motors to $US203.70 on Tuesday, a 3 per cent gain and a new closing high for the electric car company. Read more of this post

eBay and the declaration of PayPal’s dependence

eBay and the declaration of PayPal’s dependence

BY KEVIN KELLEHER 
ON FEBRUARY 18, 2014

If Carl Icahn has turned the simple tweet into a weapon in proxy fights, his chief adversary at eBay is returning fire with an older, still formidable weapon: the CEO news interview. John Donahoe has been making the rounds at newsrooms arguing against Icahn’s campaign to spin off PayPal. Read more of this post

Many Chinese firms part of wearable technology’s supply chain

Many Chinese firms part of wearable technology’s supply chain

Staff Reporter

2014-02-19

A total of 23 listed companies from China are involved in manufacturing parts of wearable devices and 19 of them or 82.6% belong to the upper and middle stream in the supply chain, in contrast to the leading foreign vendors who concentrate on manufacturing end-products. Read more of this post

Civil servants’ contract skills ‘lacking’; Almost two-thirds of British companies believe civil servants’ ability to negotiate public sector contracts is lacking

February 18, 2014 11:29 pm

Civil servants’ contract skills ‘lacking’

By Gill Plimmer

Nearly three years since David Cameron called civil servants the “enemies of enterprise”, British business says the government’s commercial skills have failed to improve or deteriorated.

Almost two-thirds of British companies believe civil servants’ ability to negotiate public sector contracts is lacking, according to a survey by the CBI employers’ group. They also say work is being awarded to the cheapest bidder, at the expense of quality and long-term costs. Read more of this post

It’s time US adopts global accounting standards

It’s time US adopts global accounting standards

Business Times

19 Feb 2014

David Mason

ACCOUNTING is the art of telling people what has happened in the past and what the value of something was at a specific date. Sounds very simple, but if it was, there would be little need for accountants. Read more of this post

Story stocks tell tall tales; Better yarns than at any time since the dotcom bubble

February 18, 2014 7:52 pm

Story stocks tell tall tales

By James Mackintosh

Better yarns than at any time since the dotcom bubble

Wall Street broking is based on the idea of telling stories to sell stocks. Depending how you measure it, the Street is spinning better yarns than at any time since the dotcom bubble. Read more of this post

Deputy PM: next 3-4 years last chance for S. Korean economy

Deputy PM: next 3-4 years last chance for S. Korean economy

2014.02.19 16:37:20

South Korea needs specific action plans in order to improve economic fundamentals, noted Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Hyun Oh-seok, adding the next three to four years will be the last chance to determine whether the nation’s economy will take another leap forward.  Read more of this post

Big-name funds fall behind smaller counterparts as assets swell

February 17, 2014 12:31 pm

Big-name funds fall behind smaller counterparts as assets swell

By Emma Dunkley

Investors seeking safety in large funds risk portfolio underperformance as the biggest products on the market lag behind their smaller peers.

New research by FE Trustnet shows that investors would have been better off buying an average-sized fund instead of a large one over the past five years in the equity income sector. Read more of this post

Oversupply forces aluminium industry cuts

Last updated: February 18, 2014 10:56 pm

Oversupply forces aluminium industry cuts

By Xan Rice

Two of the world’s three biggest aluminium producers have announced cuts to production in the latest sign of how weak prices and oversupply are weighing on the industry. Read more of this post

Nespresso has shot at larger coffee sale

February 19, 2014 12:01 am

Nespresso has shot at larger coffee sale

By Shannon Bond in New York

Nespresso is betting that a new machine that brews larger coffees will help double its US sales to $600m in the next two years as the single-serve coffee maker seeks to boost its international growth.

The subsidiary of Swiss food group Nestlépioneered single-cup machines using coffee capsules nearly three decades ago, but the category’s trajectory has lifted in recent years. Read more of this post

Why the ‘Penfolds curse’ could strike again; A succession of six corporate owners of Australia’s most famous wine brand over the past three decades have either been taken over or run into financial strife

Why the ‘Penfolds curse’ could strike again

February 19, 2014 – 3:29PM

Simon Evans

Is there a Penfolds curse at work? A succession of six corporate owners of Australia’s most famous wine brand over the past three decades have either been taken over or run into financial strife, and the prospect of it happening again remains high.

It’s as if the ghosts of the founders Dr Christopher and Mary Penfold, who started Penfolds in 1844, are wreaking their revenge because the wine brand has strayed so far from its original purpose of being a medicinal benefit for patients of Christopher’s medical practice. Read more of this post

Australian treasurer warns world must be weaned off QE ‘morphine’

Last updated: February 18, 2014 7:39 pm

Australian treasurer warns world must be weaned off QE ‘morphine’

By Jamie Smyth in Sydney

Australia’s finance chief has hit out at the US, Europe and emerging market economies, calling for the latter to wean themselves off the “morphine” of easy money and embrace reform, days before he is due to host his global peers at this weekend’s G20 talks.

Proving egalitarian in his criticism, Joe Hockey, the Australian treasurer, also took a swipe at the US Congress for blocking budget increases and reforms to the International Monetary Fund, and warned Europe against trying to sideline the G20 as the world’s premier troubleshooter. Read more of this post

Brazilian companies face heavy fines with new corruption law; Country worse than Namibia and Ghana for fraud

Last updated: February 18, 2014 6:52 pm

Brazilian companies face heavy fines with new corruption law

By Joe Leahy in São Paulo

The period before Brazil’s annual carnival in late February is normally short of news. But this month, the nation’s media has been buzzing with the case of a man who fled the country after being convicted in Brazil’s biggest corruption case.

Henrique Pizzolato, the former marketing director of Banco do Brasil, the state-controlled bank, was allegedly found living in his nephew’s apartment in Maranello, Italy, by Italian police and is facing possible extradition. Read more of this post

Group therapy for business founders

February 18, 2014 4:05 pm

Group therapy for business founders

By Andrew Bounds and Jonathan Moules

In the back room of a brewery in the northwest of England, the boss of a family-owned manufacturer is discussing India. He explains to the assembled group – which is made up of owner-managers just like him – that his attempt to set up a factory in India has so far only led to frustration.

With properties hard to find and a local agent dragging its feet, he asks the others if he should find another partner. “How can you build trust over a distance?” he asks. Read more of this post

We need backers who watch and wait; I admire those entrepreneurs who have the indefatigable energy to stick with a radical project through thick and thin. They must possess both a sense of urgency and superhuman persistence

February 18, 2014 3:50 pm

We need backers who watch and wait

By Luke Johnson

Lots of young founders expect lightning progress and startling pay-offs within a short timeframe

Anyone who knows me is aware that I’m an impatient fellow. But the odd thing is that I’ve chosen a career where patience is essential.

I buy part of a company, nurture it and wait. At heart, capitalism is essentially the deferral of rewards. Instead of working and receiving a monthly salary, investors in private companies risk their funds and hope for a capital gain, perhaps half a decade hence. Usually such companies are expanding and need to reinvest their earnings. They cannot even pay an income to the owners in the meantime. Read more of this post

Minimising currency risk is key to finding EM bargains; Risk is that everyone seeks to devalue in response to outflows

February 18, 2014 8:18 am

Minimising currency risk is key to finding EM bargains

By John Plender

Risk is that everyone seeks to devalue in response to outflows

Is the emerging-market scare already a thing of the past? Certainly the level of redemptions has abated from emerging-markets equity funds that are tracked by data provider EPFR Global.

Last week investors redeemed $3bn, halving the $6bn in the previous two weeks, while some markets even saw capital inflows. More importantly, the past month has not produced anything equivalent to the near-collapse of the Long-Term Capital Management hedge fund that followed Russia’s default in the earlier emerging-market panic of 1998. Read more of this post

Philistines may carp but scientists should reach for the sky

February 18, 2014 3:43 pm

Philistines may carp but scientists should reach for the sky

By John Kay

Anthropology helps us understand the world, such as the pathologies of financial crises

In 1969 Robert Wilson, director of the National Accelerator Laboratory, was testifying before the US Congress. He sought funding for a particle accelerator (forerunner of the Large Hadron Collider at Cern where the Higgs boson was discovered in 2012). Asked by Senator John Pastore how his project would help defeat the Russians, he responded: “It only has to do with the respect with which we regard one another . . . are we good painters, good sculptors, great poets . . . new knowledge has nothing to do directly with defending our country except to help make it worth defending.” Read more of this post

India must tackle manufacturing malaise; Weak industry is the greatest challenge facing India

February 18, 2014 9:17 am

India must tackle manufacturing malaise

By James Crabtree

Weak industry is the greatest challenge facing India

The world’s largest carmakers gathered for New Delhi’s auto expo earlier this month, as the likes of Ford and Volkswagenparaded their latest wares. But the gathering showcased another and sadly rather rarer phenomenon: an Indian manufacturing success story. Read more of this post

Sticky or sweet – China’s tricky choice; The country witnessed a clash of eastern and western cultures

February 18, 2014 4:36 pm

Sticky or sweet – China’s tricky choice

By Patti Waldmeir in Shanghai

The country witnessed a clash of eastern and western cultures, writes Patti Waldmeir

It hadn’t happened in a generation: Valentine’s day, that most mercenary and occidental of holidays, coincided in China last week with Lantern Festival, culmination of the lunar new year holiday, oriental and traditional. Talk about culture clash.

Sticky rice dumplings with the family, or Lafite and Louis Vuitton with the girlfriend? The choice was clear: east or west. Nobody could choose both. Read more of this post

Mexico and Nafta at 20. Why it went wrong for one of ‘Tres Amigos’

February 18, 2014 7:18 pm

Mexico and Nafta at 20. Why it went wrong for one of ‘Tres Amigos’

By John Paul Rathbone in London

The country has not become the developed one it thought it would

Twenty years into Nafta, Mexico has too many criminals and not enough policemen; too many workers earning low wages and not enough skilled jobs; too many false dawns and not enough economic growth. Read more of this post

Attempts to count a nation’s assets date back to the Bible. But the Enlightenment saw the first efforts to do so in a precise way

Book Review: ‘The Leading Indicators,’ by Zachary Karabell

Attempts to count a nation’s assets date back to the Bible. But the Enlightenment saw the first efforts to do so in a precise way.

JOSEPH STERNBERG

Feb. 18, 2014 6:45 p.m. ET

China is in an economic swoon at the moment, if you believe some recent readings suggesting that industrial activity is slowing. Investors in Japan were spooked last month by a record trade deficit in 2013. Closer to home, economists debate quarterly GDP numbers in the U.S. to determine how the current recovery compares with those in the past. Read more of this post

New Push to Throw Assets Overboard; Breaking up may be hard to do, but that isn’t stopping activist investors from urging companies to do just that

New Push to Throw Assets Overboard

DAVID BENOIT

Feb. 18, 2014 7:43 p.m. ET

Breaking up may be hard to do, but that isn’t stopping activist investors from urging companies to do just that.

Companies ranging from chemical giants to restaurant chains have come under fire from shareholders wanting to break them apart, arguing that businesses perform better when they aren’t part of a sprawling conglomerate. The year isn’t even two months old, and already five companies have been targeted by investors pushing them to sell or spin off pieces, according to FactSet SharkWatch, which tracks such campaigns. That puts the year on pace to catch up with 2008, which marked the high-water mark for activism campaigns. Read more of this post

What Your iPad Knows About You; Subscription e-reader services Scribd, Oyster and Entitle track your behavior to predict your next book

What Your iPad Knows About You

Subscription e-reader services Scribd, Oyster and Entitle track your behavior to predict your next book

ANGELA CHEN

Feb. 18, 2014 7:24 p.m. ET

You’ve finally finished the book your co-worker recommended, so what to read next?

If it is 5 a.m., chances are that you’re reaching for a romance novel—especially if you’re in Texas or Georgia. By early morning, thrillers might start to look more appealing. And if Philip K. Dick is your favorite author, books about beer are probably more up your alley than anything about wine or liquor. Read more of this post