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Women Will Come To The Fore In The Feeling Economy

The Horizons Tracker

It’s also noticeable that in Google’s famous Project Oxygen a few years ago, they found that of the eight skills associated with Google employees’ jobs, STEM skills were bottom of the pile in terms of importance. Far more important was the kind of soft skills that humans, and especially women, excel in.

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White Gold: A Story of Persistence

RapidStart Leadership

Before long, oil wells were popping up all over the place. After weeks of laborious effort, he had managed to drill through 686 feet of solid limestone with no luck. Platt was ready to give up. We have to be willing to roll up our sleeves and do the work. Eric Ries Click To Tweet. Stick with it. Ignore the haters.

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Put Failure in Its Place

Harvard Business Review

You've started a company and it goes belly-up. As we practice innovating we are propelled up a personal learning curve — and we begin to accomplish our dreams. The business I fronted that went belly-up: shouldn't I have better read the situation? Learning is the essential unit of progress for start-ups," writes Ries.

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Put Failure in Its Place

Harvard Business Review

You've started a company and it goes belly-up. As we practice innovating we are propelled up a personal learning curve — and we begin to accomplish our dreams. The business I fronted that went belly-up: shouldn't I have better read the situation? Learning is the essential unit of progress for start-ups," writes Ries.

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Why GE’s Jeff Immelt Lost His Job: Disruption and Activist Investors

Harvard Business Review

In his Harvard Business Review article summing up his tenure, Immelt recalls that the two things that influenced him most were Marc Andreessen’s 2011 Wall Street Journal article “ Why Software Is Eating the World ” and Eric Ries’s book The Lean Startup. He doubled GE’s investment in R&D.

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Fail Bigger Cheaper: A Three Word Manifesto

Harvard Business Review

To illustrate, consider the most straightforward example: Wall Street megabanks were propped up and lavishly resurrected, and your grandkids will likely still be paying the price — because they were too big to fail. Silicon Valley's latest buzzword is the " pivot " — geek-ese for "this isn't working: let's change it up."

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Big Bets vs. Little Bets and the future of HP

Harvard Business Review

HP had grown so large, to about $30 billion in sales, that Barnholt and other senior managers felt pinched to reach their double-digit growth goals. To launch HP's big new businesses, the company's managers took rigorously logical steps. It averaged 18% annual growth from 1939 to 1999. But by the mid-1990s, the challenges mounted.

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