
The Company’s AI Agent Refused to Do Math, So I Had It Close My Account Instead
A Fortune 500 company’s AI chat agent could not perform a simple addition, leading the author to terminate the account after a frustrating 15‑minute exchange. The incident occurred while the author tried to verify a spending requirement for a bonus, only to find the AI unable to confirm the math. The agent eventually offered to close the account, which the author accepted. The episode underscores how even basic computational failures can erode trust in automated customer service.

How BYD Scaled to 1 Million Exports—And Why North America Is Next
Chinese automaker BYD, the world’s largest electric‑vehicle maker, has surpassed 1 million exported units in 2025 after investing more than $13 billion in research and development. The company rolled out a $10,000 Seagull EV in China, a high‑performance YangWang U9 Xtreme, and a...

This Brazen LAPD Hack Is a Warning for Companies. Make Sure Yours Is Secure by Taking These Simple Steps
Hackers identified as the World Leaks group breached the Los Angeles Police Department’s digital storage, stealing roughly 7.7 terabytes of data across more than 337,000 files. The leak includes sensitive law‑enforcement case files, witness information, health data and other records rarely...

The Bourbon Market Is Tanking. So Why Did the Maker of Evan Williams and Elijah Craig Just Spend $200 Million?
Despite a 15% drop in Kentucky whiskey exports and a wave of distillery bankruptcies, Heaven Hill announced a $200 million investment in a new Bardstown distillery. The facility can produce over 33,000 gallons per day and includes a live‑yeast propagation system....

A Celebrity Photographer Built—And Lost—A $29 Million Luxury Watch Empire. Now His Investors Are Calling It Fraud
Dominic Khoo, a former celebrity photographer, built The WatchFund, a luxury‑watch investment vehicle that amassed roughly $29 million in assets. The fund bought high‑end timepieces below retail, resold them at modest discounts, and charged a 5 percent management fee while offering piecemeal...

Whitney Leavitt Says This Utah Company Is the New Stanley Cup
HydroJug, a Utah‑based water‑bottle maker, is being hailed as the new Stanley cup after a design tweak—flexible, lock‑able straws—won over celebrity Whitney Leavitt and Gen Z consumers. The brand surged 9,032% since its 2017 launch, hitting over $10 million in revenue within...

New Study Reveals a Hidden Heart Risk in Your Bedtime Routine
A University of Oulu study found that adults with highly irregular bedtimes face twice the risk of major heart events, even when they achieve recommended sleep duration. Researchers monitored 3,231 participants with wearables for a week and followed them for...

Ending Quarterly Earnings Reports Might Be the Best Thing to Happen to U.S. Companies in Decades
The U.S. SEC is considering making quarterly earnings reports optional, shifting most public companies toward mandatory semiannual filings while retaining rapid disclosure of material events. Proponents argue that the current quarterly cadence forces executives into short‑term thinking and costly reporting...

The Founder Myth Is Wrong: The Best Leaders Fail Early, Often—And Plan for It
The article debunks the myth that successful founders never fail, arguing that early and frequent setbacks are common and valuable. It emphasizes that the real competitive edge lies in surviving failures, extracting lessons, and iterating quickly. The author shares personal...

Adam Grant Just Endorsed Ben Franklin’s 200-Year-Old Advice on How to Win Over Skeptics
Adam Grant and Brené Brown reconcile their long‑standing feud on the new podcast The Curiosity Shop, crediting a 200‑year‑old tactic popularized by Benjamin Franklin. The method—asking a skeptic for help—turned a hostile interaction into a collaborative opportunity, allowing Grant to secure...

Why the Most Powerful Computer of 2026 Might Be Made of Living Cells, Not Microchips
Researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz have trained lab‑grown brain organoids to solve the classic cart‑pole balancing problem, demonstrating a proof‑of‑concept for biological computing. The experiment used stem‑cell‑derived neural tissue, electrically interfaced to provide training signals, and was...

Most Self-Published Books Fail. These Marketing Strategies Help Entrepreneurs Win
Self‑published books face a high failure rate, but entrepreneurs can turn them into profitable assets by adopting an "authorpreneur" mindset. Treating the manuscript as a business requires a clear purpose, niche focus, and a structured marketing plan. Effective promotion meets...

OpenAI Is Making Microsoft and Ashton Kutcher Incredibly Rich
Microsoft now owns a 26.79% stake in OpenAI, valued at about $228 billion, after investing $23 billion since 2019. The leaked cap table shows CEO Sam Altman holds no equity, while actor Ashton Kutcher’s Sound Ventures controls a 0.15% share worth roughly $400 million....

Busy Doesn’t Mean Productive. How Quiet Time Makes You a Better Leader
The article argues that constant busyness is often mistaken for productivity, especially among senior executives. It highlights how the brain craves stimulation, leading leaders to fill every gap with meetings or digital distractions. By deliberately carving out quiet time—through calendar...

Economists Calculated Exactly How Much Trump Tariffs Will Cost You in 2026—And Who Is Paying the Most
Economists estimate the average U.S. household will shoulder about $600 in tariff‑related costs in 2026, down from roughly $1,000 in 2025. The figure aligns with Yale Budget Lab’s $570 estimate and reflects the impact of Supreme Court rulings that have...

How Entrepreneurs Can Stay Relevant in the Age of AI and Disruption
Entrepreneur Adam Witty, founder of Advantage, discussed on Yahoo Finance’s *The Big Idea* how founders can stay relevant amid AI‑driven disruption. Advantage uses a hybrid publishing model that turns executive books into credibility and growth tools rather than pure sales...

How Disney Imagineering Has Increased Its Pace of Innovation by Thinking Like a Startup
Bruce Vaughn, a veteran Disney Imagineer, returned to the company in 2021 after leading a tech startup and a stint at Airbnb, bringing a startup mindset to the division. Since his comeback, Imagineering has dramatically accelerated project timelines, delivering the...

This 1 Weird Mental Shift Is Scientifically Proven to Make You Happier
A recent study by Seoul National University of over 7,000 participants found that people who view happiness as changeable report higher well‑being than those who see it as innate. Participants rating happiness as predetermined were less happy overall and less...

The Marketing Playbook That Propelled This Cat Food Brand to $100 Million in Less Than a Decade
Smalls, a fresh cat‑food DTC brand founded in 2017, hit $100 million in annual revenue last year, achieving the milestone in under a decade. The co‑founders targeted the underserved cat‑owner segment, positioning their meals as human‑grade, protein‑rich upgrades. Early on they...

Here’s 1 Reason Steve Jobs Was So Successful No One Ever Talks About
Apple celebrated its 50th anniversary by revisiting a 1981 Inc. cover story that highlighted Steve Jobs' unconventional generosity. The article details how Jobs introduced a "loan‑to‑own" program, letting any employee who mastered two applications take home an Apple II Plus, disk drive,...

Your NCAA Bracket Is Wrong—And That’s Exactly What Advertisers Are Betting On
Advertisers are capitalizing on the "bracket busted" narrative that dominates March Madness, turning fans' disappointment into brand engagement. Companies like Reese’s, Degree, and All Elite Wrestling have launched campaigns that reward busted brackets with sweepstakes, pop‑up bars, and social media...

CEO of Health Tracking Startup Bevel Speaks Out After Whoop Files Lawsuit
Whoop, the wearable health‑tech leader that recently secured $575 million in funding and reached a $10.1 billion valuation, filed a lawsuit accusing Bevel of trade‑dress, copyright and patent infringement. The 111‑page complaint claims Bevel copied the look and feel of the Whoop...

Faster Than Light: Science May Have Just Disproved Einstein’s Famous Theory. The Implications for Business Are Very Real
A team of scientists at Technion‑Israel Institute of Technology has experimentally shown that optical vortices—dark points in a light field—can move faster than the light wave that creates them when the light is converted into slow‑moving polaritons in hexagonal boron...

This Startup Helps Companies Solve an AI Dilemma—And Could Be Worth $1.3 Billion
OpenRouter, a startup that offers a single API to access and switch among hundreds of AI models, is in the final stages of a $120 million funding round led by Google’s CapitalG, valuing the company at $1.3 billion. The firm reports annualized...

Will Tech Layoffs Increase in 2026? Kalshi and Polymarket Think So—Here’s What the Data Really Says
Prediction markets are signaling a sharp rise in tech layoffs for 2026. Kalshi shows an 85 percent probability, while Polymarket pushes that figure to 92 percent. The odds are based on a broad Information Sector benchmark of 447,000 cuts, compared with roughly...

This Simple Phone Tattoo Idea Just Landed a 6-Figure Deal on ‘Shark Tank’
Screen Skinz, a startup that creates personalized tempered‑glass phone protectors, landed a $300,000 investment from Kevin O’Leary and a matching $300,000 from Alexis Ohanian on Shark Tank. Founded by Clay Canning in his parents’ laundry room, the company offers designs that...

Jamie Dimon Warns the U.S. Faces Its Riskiest Moment Since World War II. Here’s Why
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon warned that the United States is confronting its most complex convergence of threats since World War II, driven by rapid AI advancement, escalating geopolitical tensions, and mounting fiscal strain. He argued that AI could displace large...

Startups Are Paying AI Talent Up to $400,000—And Equity Is No Longer the Main Lure
Startups are now offering base salaries between $170,000 and $400,000 to attract AI‑focused talent, a jump of roughly 25% since 2022. The higher cash component has pushed total compensation up 18% when equity is added, reducing the traditional reliance on...

A Harvard Professor’s 5-Step Plan for Better Conversations With People You Disagree With
Harvard Business School professor Julia Minson, author of *How to Disagree Better*, outlines a five‑step framework for civilizing conversations with ideological opponents. She argues that the instinct to win arguments triggers shutdowns, preventing the exchange of useful information. A recent...

The Storytelling Secret That Made Apple a Global Icon
Steve Jobs transformed Apple product launches into cultural narratives, turning hardware into symbols of rebellion and personal empowerment. By pairing Wozniak’s engineering with his storytelling, Apple cultivated a mythic brand that still resonates five decades later. Former Apple executive Tony...

The 3 Most Common Email Mistakes That Guarantee You’ll Get Ghosted
Despite claims that email is dead, roughly 392 billion messages will be sent in 2026. Only 57% of personal emails and 80% of work emails are opened, underscoring fierce competition for inbox attention. The article pinpoints three common email mistakes—weak subject...

50 Inspiring Steve Jobs Quotes for Apple’s 50th Anniversary
Apple marked its 50th anniversary by publishing 50 of Steve Jobs’ most influential quotes, tracing his guidance from the garage‑born Apple I to today’s $3.72 trillion empire. The collection highlights themes of focus, simplicity, hiring for ideas, and relentless perseverance that...

Would You Share Your Phone Calls With a Company to Make Money? This Startup Is Banking on It
Neon, a new app, pays users to record and sell their phone calls for AI training, quickly rising to the top of the App Store. An early security flaw exposed call metadata and transcripts, prompting a public backlash. After securing...

How Amy Liu Built Tower 28 Into One of Sephora’s Fastest-Growing Skincare Brands
Amy Liu founded Tower 28 in 2019 and has turned it into one of Sephora’s fastest‑growing skincare lines. The brand’s entire portfolio follows the National Eczema Association’s ingredient guidelines, and its SOS Rescue set carries seals from the NEA, Psoriasis Foundation...

Why Hustle Culture Is Failing Women Founders
The article argues that hustle culture is causing severe burnout among women founders and executives, who feel pressured to work nonstop and equate rest with laziness. It highlights that genuine rest—high‑quality sleep or short power naps—restores cognitive function and productivity,...

6 Simple LinkedIn Engagement Strategies When You Don’t Know What to Post
LinkedIn now rewards personal engagement over brand‑only posting, making consistent interaction essential for professionals. The article outlines six low‑effort tactics—such as using the My Network catch‑up prompts, replying to comments on past posts, and searching industry keywords—to stay visible without...

Google Maps Just Got Its Biggest Update Since 2009. Here’s How AI Is Changing the Way You Drive
Google Maps rolled out its most extensive redesign since 2009 on March 12, adding AI‑enhanced, real‑time 3D navigation that displays buildings, crosswalks and off‑ramps. The update also refines turn‑by‑turn prompts to reduce driver distraction and stress. With roughly 2 billion users...

I Had Breakfast With Richard Branson. Here’s His Best Customer Service Advice
Richard Branson shared his customer‑service philosophy over breakfast, emphasizing that luxury should feel authentic, not rigid. He argues that scripted interactions stifle genuine hospitality and that employees need only clear guidelines to deliver personalized experiences. Branson recommends replacing scripts with...

Why Self-Promotion Matters More Than You Think at Work
The article argues that staying silent about achievements makes even top performers invisible in the workplace. It distinguishes genuine bragging—strategic self‑promotion—from self‑aggrandizing, which can alienate peers. The author notes that many professionals, especially women, avoid self‑advocacy due to cultural conditioning,...

Amex Platinum and Chase Sapphire Made Airport Lounges the Ultimate Perk. Capital One’s New Travel App Targets the Next Step
Capital One unveiled a standalone travel app for iOS and Android, consolidating booking, rewards, airport lounge access, and trip management into a single platform. The move follows a ten‑fold increase in booking volume since the 2021 launch of Capital One...

Should You Hire a Writer or Use AI? Here’s Why Journalists Still Win
Marketing teams are weighing whether to fund human writers or rely on AI‑generated copy. While AI can produce text quickly and cheaply, it struggles to replicate the depth of source relationships and storytelling instincts that journalists develop. Journalists bring years...

Why Writing a Book Is the Fastest Way to Establish Authority in Your Industry
The article argues that writing a book is the quickest way to turn expertise into recognized authority, outpacing social media, speaking gigs, and referrals. By reading a manuscript aloud, the author discovered how a concise 67‑page book can solidify credibility....

The Hidden Loneliness of Founders and 4 Ways to Protect Your Mental Health
Entrepreneurial founders often experience profound loneliness, with one‑third of startup CEOs reporting no one to confide in and more than half struggling with anxiety. Their businesses dominate daily life, leaving little room for vulnerability with teams, investors, or families. The...

Why People Tune Out Your Presentations and How to Fix It
Presenters often lose their audience because the brain instantly filters out predictable, low‑energy information. Neuroscientist Dr. John Medina explains that our prehistoric wiring still governs attention, favoring novelty and emotional relevance. The article outlines four key signals that capture focus,...

His Income Fell 80 Percent Last Year. This Solopreneur Says ChatGPT Kept His Business Alive
Michael Wall, a solo entrepreneur who provides dance accompaniment music, saw his income plunge 80% last year but kept Sound for Movement afloat by leveraging ChatGPT. After spending about $20,000 on traditional web development, he turned to AI for coding,...

KPIs Are Cringe: Why the Old Rules of Branding Are Dying in 2026
Marketers are abandoning multi‑year plans in favor of ultra‑short, culture‑driven tactics as consumer attention fragments faster than ever. Brands like MAC and Bobbie are leveraging viral personalities and “vibe” marketing to spark emotional purchases, while traditional KPIs are deemed outdated....

This Pretzel Startup Turned a Viral TikTok Moment Into Months’ Worth of Sales—In Just Three Days
Baltimore entrepreneur Marcus Moore’s pretzel brand Moore Crunch went viral on TikTok after a news clip hit 2 million views, prompting a three‑day order volume normally seen over three to four months. The company, launched in October 2022, offers five flavors at...

‘Update Now’: Apple Issues Urgent Warning to iPhone Users
Apple released iOS 26.4 on March 26, 2026, urging all iPhone 11 and newer, plus recent iPad models, to install immediately. The update bundles 37 security fixes, including six WebKit XSS patches, mitigation of the DarkSword full‑chain exploit, and kernel‑level protections against privilege escalation....

Steve Jobs Meets Brain Rot: Inside Apple’s Bold New Social Strategy
Apple unveiled the $599 MacBook Neo on March 4, positioning it as an affordable, color‑rich laptop aimed at Gen Z. Simultaneously, the company erased its existing TikTok library and relaunched the channel with 15 curated videos that blend Y2K nostalgia, brain‑rot aesthetics, and...

This New Perk for Amex’s Business Cards Is a Big Bet on the Future of AI
American Express is rolling out a $300 annual statement credit on its U.S. Business Platinum and Business Gold cards for ChatGPT Business subscriptions, launching this spring. The perk aims to help enterprise customers offset AI software costs and boost productivity....