Future Of The Internet Using Wild West As Road Map
Posted on11 Sep 2017
Tagscommunications, control, Facebook, future, Google, internet, Microsoft, Apple (company), homogeneity, Wild West, Amazon, Comcast, Charter (Spectrum), AT&T, Verizon, internet of things, human nature
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Technology brings change. Human nature does not change. That means human nature exerts itself in the same way using new means. Knowing... Read More
Making Good Leadership Decisions Has Two Keys
Making good leadership decisions is easy to know. Doing it is another matter. A Harvard Business Review article talked about four behaviors... Read More
2 Final Free Morale Boosters for Work to Use Now
Posted on10 Oct 2016
TagsGoogle, leadership, morale, relationship building techniques, venting, venting-wetsuit analogy, No-cost Moral Builders Series
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The free morale boosters for work in this series have one thing in common. They only require a leader, nothing else. They... Read More
Building Great Teams, Applying What Google Learned
Posted on12 Sep 2016
Tagscommunication, Google, Harvard Business Review, New York Times, sensitivity, team building, emotional states
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From a relational view, in business it’s the age of collaboration. Managers and employees collaborate 50% more than they did two decades... Read More
Decision Making Tips from Google’s Artificial Intelligence
Posted on14 Mar 2016
Tagsartificial intelligence, decision-making process, decisions, experience, Google, The Economist, Wired Magazine, Wall Street Journal, bias
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Go is the most complex strategy game. It surpasses Chess by far. There are more possibilities in a game of Go than... Read More
Personalities Lurk Behind Twitter Streams
Posted on25 Jul 2013
Tagsadvertising, behavioral economics, business, computers, decisions, education, free will, Google, logic, marketing, merchandising, neoclassical economics, Personality, politics, rational actor theory, relationships, The Economist, Twitter, Bloomberg Businessweek, Joshua Green, Eric Schmidt, Barack Obama, seed planting analogy, personality as software analogy
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Increasingly, we are seeing the connection between all that we do and our personalities. Why is this “groundbreaking?” For centuries now, we’ve... Read More
The Seduction of Rankings
Posted on02 Jan 2012
Tagscomplexity, Google, Greek mythology, knowledge, numbers, quantify, rankings, sirens, statistics, unique, unknown
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Even though rankings are extremely subjective, they seduce us as strongly as the sirens did sailors in Greek mythology. Consequently, we often... Read More