The Surprising Secret to Surviving a Crisis: Why This CEO Told His Team to Go for a Walk

Most leaders would have demanded 80-hour weeks. We focused on trust and rest instead—and ran faster than ever. When a business faces a massive crisis, the traditional leadership playbook usually calls for “all hands on deck.” We’ve been conditioned to believe that extreme challenges require 80-hour workweeks, canceled vacations, and endless pots of coffee. ButContinueContinue reading “The Surprising Secret to Surviving a Crisis: Why This CEO Told His Team to Go for a Walk”

How to Improve Your Memory With the 2-7-30 Method

150 years of science shows this brain hack can radically improve your memory. Entrepreneurs and anyone else who needs to learn things fast should take note. đź§  Stop Forgetting: How the 2-7-30 Rule Can Radically Improve Your Memory Have you ever finished a fascinating book or a deep-dive long-read, only to realize a week laterContinueContinue reading “How to Improve Your Memory With the 2-7-30 Method”

100 Best Motivational Quotes to Inspire Anyone

Motivational and inspirational quotes can pick you up on a bad day and inspire you to even greater heights. Harnessing the Power of Perspective: Lessons from Jeff Haden’s Top 100 Quotes In the fast-paced world of modern business, we often wait for a “spark” of inspiration to strike before we begin a difficult task. However,ContinueContinue reading “100 Best Motivational Quotes to Inspire Anyone”

The five rĂ©sumĂ© trends you need to know about for 2026

Hiring in 2026 won’t look much like hiring even two years ago. If you don’t pay attention, you will get left behind. I was a retained search consultant for 25-plus years. I’ve written executive and board rĂ©sumĂ©s for the last 10 years. I’ve never seen so much change in candidate sourcing happen so quickly. CEOContinueContinue reading “The five rĂ©sumĂ© trends you need to know about for 2026”

The next hot career: Mining engineering

It’s a little-known fact that Columbia University, in Manhattan, was home to the first mining school in America—the School of Mines—founded in 1864.  For the past three decades, the university’s program has been mothballed. Parts of its curriculum were subsumed into the more fashionable subjects of earth and environmental engineering.  But next fall, Columbia UniversityContinueContinue reading “The next hot career: Mining engineering”

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