
LinkedIn’s Chief Economic Opportunity Officer on How to Get Ahead in the Age of AI
LinkedIn’s chief economic opportunity officer Aneesh Raman co‑authored *Open to Work*, arguing that AI won’t replace engineers but will shift their focus from pure coding to client interaction, ethics, and strategic tasks. The book proposes categorizing job tasks into automatable, AI‑enhanced, and uniquely human buckets, emphasizing the latter as a career safeguard. Raman introduces the five C’s—curiosity, compassion, creativity, communication, courage—as soft skills that can be deliberately developed. He advises recent graduates to leverage AI fluency and an entrepreneurial mindset, while warning that workers accustomed to linear career paths may be most at risk.

Burnt-Out Managers Are Destroying Teams. These 5 Daily Habits Reverse It
Managerial burnout is surging, with 47% of managers reporting severe stress—higher than the 37% rate among employees. Gallup research links managers to 70% of team engagement and well‑being, meaning their exhaustion ripples through entire groups. The article outlines five daily...

Richard Branson Says Everyone Should Read This Cult-Classic Novel—It Changed How He Made Decisions
Richard Branson credits the 1971 cult novel *The Dice Man* with shaping his early decision‑making as he launched Virgin Records in 1972. He literally rolled dice to choose which artists to sign, using the book’s chance‑based philosophy to break routine...

Don’t Drift Into Monday—Set These Six Rituals Instead
Monday sets the week’s tempo, and a disciplined six‑step ritual can turn chaos into forward momentum. Research from Wharton, cited by Adam Grant, shows structured weekly planning accelerates teams by 30% and improves cohesion. Leaders at Microsoft, McKinsey, and Peter...

The Numbers Are the Numbers
Rene Schooler reflects on a recent workshop where 150 participants received a clear, step‑by‑step blueprint for action. While many left inspired, only a small fraction executed the plan consistently, illustrating that desire alone doesn’t produce results. The piece argues that...

The Small Changes Revolution: Novotel’s Star-Studded Collective Makes Longevity Accessible to All
Novotel has launched the Novotel 37 Collective, a global community of athletes, chefs and wellness experts that champions the idea that a 1% daily improvement can compound into a 37‑fold health boost over a year. The initiative, backed by research from...
Why Great Organizations Never Stop Learning
Great organizations stay ahead by institutionalizing continuous learning, which the author calls the "Golden Thread." The thread ties culture, employee experience, customer experience, and business outcomes into a self‑reinforcing loop. Companies that only gather data without turning it into understanding...

Why Reason Alone Doesn’t Motivate Us
Ira Bedzow argues that knowing what’s right rarely translates into action because reason alone lacks motivational force. He identifies a "motivation gap" between understanding and wanting, noting that people act on what they care about, especially when actions align with...

Developing True Resilience: Think Like a Scientist
Darby Bonomi argues that resilience is a cultivated skill rather than a fixed trait, emphasizing that exposure to challenges is essential for growth. She likens setbacks to scientific experiments, urging individuals to treat failures as data to be analyzed and...

I Grew up in a Family of Entrepreneurs. Here’s What I Had to Unlearn to Build a $1 Billion Business
The founder of Swiss‑based Scandit reflects on how his family‑business upbringing both helped and hindered the company’s rise to a $1 billion enterprise. Early lessons in resilience, cash‑flow discipline and local focus enabled bootstrapping, but scaling required unlearning those instincts. By...

Settling
Seth Godin’s brief post on "Settling" draws a line between celebrating genuine achievements and accepting outcomes that result from compromise. He argues that discerning this difference is crucial for individuals and organizations alike. The piece urges readers to recognize when...
The Cruelest Myth About Self-Discipline Is that You Have to Feel Ready – You Don’t, You Never Will, and the...
The article debunks the myth that self‑discipline begins with feeling ready, arguing that action must come first. It cites behavioral activation research showing motivation follows behavior, and explains how repeated actions become automatic as the prefrontal cortex disengages. Procrastination is...

Women's Network for Mid-Life Wellbeing Launches
Lisa de‑Laune, a 52‑year‑old from Weston‑super‑Mare, has launched Women In Wellness, a monthly network that supports women navigating menopause, endometriosis and other mid‑life health challenges. The group is open to wellness professionals and anyone interested in personal wellbeing, with the...

The Background Research Trick That Kills the Rabbit Hole: Perplexity + Slack
A new workflow links Perplexity’s real‑time research AI to a dedicated Slack channel, letting knowledge workers drop research topics into #research‑queue and receive concise summaries without opening tabs. The integration, built via Zapier or Lindy, runs asynchronously, eliminating costly context...

Why Some Days Your Work Is Done 90 Minutes Faster (M)
The article explains why a worker’s output can vary by as much as ninety minutes between a “good” and a “bad” day. It attributes the gap to fluctuations in energy, hormone levels, and mental focus that follow circadian rhythms and...

Former Tesla President Reveals the ‘Single Most Important Thing’ You Can Do for Your Career—It’s a Habit Elon Musk and...
Former Tesla president Jon McNeill says daily reading is the single most important habit for career growth, a practice shared by Elon Musk and Warren Buffett. He devotes 90 minutes each morning to books, crediting the habit for his rise...
3 Eating Habits That Could Lead To Clear & Firm Skin
Registered dietitian Rhaki Roy, known as the “Gut Skin Nutritionist,” argues that clear, firm skin starts on the plate, not just in a 10‑step skincare routine. She recommends three core eating habits: consuming a diverse array of plant foods (at...
Conviction over Knowledge: The Missing Link in Behaviour Change
The article argues that information alone is insufficient for lasting behavior change, emphasizing the need for personal conviction. It uses a personal anecdote of a friend who reverted to unhealthy eating despite detailed meal‑planning advice to illustrate this gap. The...

“Even”
The piece explores how the phrase “even better” subtly reinforces existing success while encouraging improvement, whereas “even worse” amplifies negativity. It argues that language shapes perception, setting a baseline that can either motivate or demoralize. By highlighting the psychological impact...

The 80/20 Flip: Why Getting Better at AI Coding Means Writing Less Code
The article argues that mastering AI‑assisted coding means flipping the classic 80/20 rule: seasoned users spend roughly 80% of their time crafting a precise specification and only 20% writing code. Beginners waste time debugging because vague prompts generate low‑quality output,...

The Jump Rope Queen of Beverly Hills
Annie Judis, an 82‑year‑old Beverly Hills resident, continues to dominate as the world’s oldest competitive rope skipper, holding a Guinness World Record. She films daily jump‑rope routines in her home, sharing them on Instagram where she has 187,000 followers. The...

Why 8 Months of YouTube Tutorials Couldn’t Do What 6 Weeks of Building Did
A construction intern spent eight months watching YouTube coding tutorials but produced only basic knowledge, while six weeks of guided, project‑based work with an AI coding partner yielded a functional construction‑management app at an intermediate level. The contrast highlights that...

One Shot at a Time: Guy Harrison’s Journey to National Golf Title
Guy Harrison, a New Zealander with cerebral palsy, captured the NZ All Abilities golf championship, ending three years of Australian dominance. His win marks the first national title for a Kiwi since the event’s inception and underscores golf’s inclusive nature....

Jamie Dimon Reveals the Most Valuable Career Secret He’s Learned and Has Had to Relearn: ‘I Still Make This Mistake’
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon told NPR that making big decisions on Fridays while exhausted leads to poor judgment, a lesson he’s learned and relearned over his 20‑year tenure. He also emphasized emotional discipline, warning that anger can cloud leadership choices....

Every Runner Hits a Breaking Point in a Race. This Is the Mental Skill You Need to Get Through It.
Runners inevitably hit a mental breaking point when fatigue, breathlessness, and pain surge during a race. Dr. Mike Gross argues that the key to overcoming this is cultivating "willingness"—the ability to sit with discomfort instead of fighting it. He recommends...

The Real Reason Your Productivity Setup Isn’t Helping Anymore
The article challenges the blind adoption of popular productivity frameworks, arguing that many—such as the Eisenhower Matrix, Two‑Minute Rule, and hyper‑scheduled calendars—can hinder rather than help when they don’t match an individual’s rhythm. It highlights emerging concepts like "Type A...
Not All Procrastination Is Created Equal
The piece introduces a three‑tier model of procrastination—negative, neutral, and positive—and cites a University of Virginia study showing that neutral and positive forms do not harm academic performance. It argues that naming and reframing these habits can reduce self‑criticism and...

Creating the Conditions for Magic
Seth Godin argues that extraordinary outcomes don’t happen by accident; they require intentional design of the human interaction that precedes a meeting, pitch, or negotiation. He likens meetings to products, saying we often treat them as afterthoughts instead of investing...
Jobsite Energy: How Daily Habits Impact Performance
Construction firms are re‑evaluating how worker fatigue affects project outcomes, recognizing that energy management is an operational issue rather than a personal one. Small, consistent habits—such as balanced meals, regular hydration, and moderate caffeine alternatives—help maintain steady focus and reduce...

What Roger Federer Can Teach CEOs About Staying In The Moment
Roger Federer’s legendary tennis career is rooted in his ability to stay fully present on the court, a habit that translates into powerful leadership lessons for CEOs. The article highlights Federer’s disciplined routines, mental rehearsal, and acceptance of setbacks as...

Kat Edwards Anderson
Professional ultra‑trail runner and coach Kat Edwards Anderson is gearing up for her second start at the 250‑mile Cocodona race. In a recent interview, she recounts her evolution from a burned‑out high‑school runner to a rising star in ultrarunning, crediting...

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon Says He’s ‘Learned and Relearned’ to Not Make Big Decisions when He’s Tired on Fridays
JPMorgan chief executive Jamie Dimon told NPR he deliberately avoids making major decisions on Fridays because fatigue impairs judgment. He described the habit as a lesson learned over four decades in finance, yet admits he sometimes slips back into the...
“No One Cares If You Get Second”: Oregon’s Simeon Birnbaum on Why Winning Is All That Matters
Simeon Birnbaum, the former #2 all‑time U.S. high‑school miler, is emerging as a top contender in NCAA track, highlighted by an All‑American cross‑country finish and a runner‑up spot in the 3,000 m indoor championship. Despite the strong showing, Birnbaum insists that...
What the Best Private Equity-Backed CEOs Do Differently
Private‑equity‑backed CEOs operate under compressed timelines, yet more than half fail to meet value‑creation targets. A two‑year study of 75 interviews uncovered 53 “super‑performer” CEOs who delivered an average 6.2× multiple on invested capital—about double the industry norm. These leaders...

Quest Nutrition Co-Founder Tom Bilyeu Built a $1 Billion Brand Using 1 Uncomfortable Rule About Emotions
Tom Bilyeu, co‑founder of Quest Nutrition, turned a modest protein‑bar startup into a $1 billion exit by insisting on a single uncomfortable rule: rigorously regulate his emotions. After leaving a security‑software firm and walking away from $2 million in equity, he spent...

Discipline Isn’t Strength. It’s Trained Attention.
The article reframes discipline as a trainable skill of directed attention rather than a fixed character trait. Neuroscience shows that attentional capacity, not a finite willpower reserve, determines focus performance. Structured cognitive training can rewire neural pathways, boosting attention and...

How to Have Your Follow-Up Email Written Before You Close Your Laptop
After every meeting there is a narrow window when follow‑up is most effective, yet most professionals delay writing the email, losing momentum. Early AI notetakers such as Fireflies and Otter capture and summarize conversations but stop short of automating next...

Why I Stopped Typing My Prompts (And What I Use Instead)
The author switched from typing to using WhisperFlow, an AI‑enhanced voice dictation app, for emails, AI prompts, and messaging. WhisperFlow’s processing layer cleans up natural speech, allowing users to ramble and think aloud while producing polished text. This change reduced...

‘We Make People Feel Something as a Result of Our Work:’ Figma’s Chief Design Officer on How to Build Impactful...
Loredana Crisan, Figma’s chief design officer, credits her classical piano training and later sound‑engineering career for shaping her visual design instincts. After moving from Romania to San Francisco, she joined a startup, Lexy, to prototype audio interfaces before transitioning to Figma....

Why Smart Leaders Do Less
Smart leaders are increasingly embracing a "do less" mindset, recognizing that constant decision‑making drains mental energy and degrades judgment. Research shows that repeated choices impair the prefrontal cortex, leading to poorer self‑control and lower decision quality. By standardizing routines, delegating...

Emma Grede’s Unfiltered Take on Modern Leadership
Emma Grede, co‑founder of Good American and former CFO of Spanx, shares a blunt take on modern leadership in a Fast Company video. She argues that true leadership hinges on a relentless mindset of excellence rather than trying to satisfy...
Do One Thing Every Day That Scares You
Venture partner Linda Bain recounts how a childhood performance panic sparked a lifelong habit of embracing uncomfortable choices, ultimately guiding her from a farming town to senior roles in big pharma and biotech. She argues that the biotech sector thrives...
Still Thinking Old? That’s Why You’re Falling Behind
The article argues that relying on outdated frameworks—"old maps"—prevents organizations and individuals from thriving in today’s fast‑changing environment. It illustrates how legacy companies often retrofit new technologies onto legacy models, leading to stagnation, while truly transformative firms redesign value creation...

Stop Wasting Time: Kill 30% of Meetings With 2 Steps
The article introduces a two‑step filter that can slash 30% of calendar meetings by demanding a clear decision or output and by distinguishing between decision‑making and information‑distribution roles. Step 1 forces organizers to state the exact decision or artifact expected, while...

How to Improve Your Prioritization Skills and Stop Procrastinating
Productivity coach emphasizes treating prioritization as a daily, non‑negotiable habit, likening it to learning to swim. Procrastination often stems from waiting for emergencies before prioritizing. Daily practice, verbal commitment, and mindset shifts help entrepreneurs consistently rank tasks. Implementing these habits...

Netflix Cofounder Says He Stopped Work at 5 P.m. Every Tuesday for 30 Years to Stay ‘Sane,’ No Matter the...
Marc Randolph, Netflix co‑founder, adhered to a strict rule of leaving work at 5 p.m. every Tuesday for thirty years, even during his tenure as CEO of the $416 billion streaming giant. The habit gave him predictable personal time and helped maintain...

Six Lessons From A Billionaire Who Once Sold His Blood To Buy Food
David Walentas, the billionaire behind Brooklyn’s DUMBO renaissance, rose from Depression‑era farm labor and even selling his blood to fund meals. After a Navy ROTC scholarship led him to the University of Virginia, he earned an MBA and entered real‑estate...
Must Watch: No Turning Back - The Hayden Zablotny Rampage Documentary
Rocky Mountain released a 20‑minute documentary on April 5, 2026, chronicling Hayden Zablotny’s winning run at Red Bull Rampage 2025. The film pulls back the curtain on the months of line‑building, desert training, and relentless dedication that powered his victory. Directed by Matty Miles and...
I’m 66 and the Most Important Relationship of My Adult Life Has Been with Solitude — Not as a Consolation...
A 66‑year‑old electrician reflects on a lifelong preference for solitude, describing how alone time has been the source of his greatest honesty, creativity, and personal growth. He recounts decades of guilt and cultural pressure to conform to social expectations, especially...

March Madness Taught Candace Parker Life Lessons She Still Uses
Candace Parker, a two‑time NCAA champion and future Hall of Famer, is now a TNT analyst covering March Madness. She reflects on how the tournament’s pressure taught her preparation, confidence, and the importance of controlling what you can, like rebounding....