When A License Needs A Paw Print
There is a story in today's newspapers about a Shiloh Shepherd (German Shepherd/Malamute mix) who ran a mile down an interstate on the Vermont/New Hampshire border which attracted the state police. The dog kept running from them back to where
Guest Column: Three Words to Avoid and What to Say Instead
By Karen Laos There are many words we use by habit that take away from our credibility. Most of the time we don’t even realize we’re using them. Want to see if you do? More importantly, what to say instead? Here they are:
There Is A Comet
I've been repeating here forever: We cannot eradicate Covid. It is endemic, like the flu, and we have to learn to live with it. Forcing small businesses (the largest provider of net new jobs in the country) to go out
Episode 221 – Gratitude
Tune in to the latest episode of Alan Weiss's The Uncomfortable Truth® - Episode 221 - Gratitude. Listen to this episode on your favorite podcast platform: Alan Weiss's The Uncomfortable Truth® · Episode 221 - Gratitude
Come On, Man: Stop Asking Me
Everyone is sending surveys about their service these days—airlines, hotels, online venders, health clubs, pet groomers. They want to know what your opinion is. The problem, however, is that the service seldom if ever improves. They believe that merely by asking you
Alan Weiss’s Word of the Week™ — 01/05/2022
Word of the week™: Axiology
Traveling in these Times
Over 3,000 flights were cancelled yesterday. The LAX-BOS flights on Jet Blue just before and after ours were cancelled, but ours was fine. I noticed several Jet Blue flight attendants in uniform dead-heading back. On the way out, my wife's TV
Dream On
Have. you ever visited an arcade and played the machine that has a derrick or crane mechanism that you can control to hover over an object? The prizes are stuffed toys usually. When ideally positioned by your controls, you push
Alan Weiss’s Monday Morning Memo® – 01/03/2022
The Babylonians, about 4,000 years ago, began recorded New Year’s celebrations. Theirs was on the vernal equinox, March 21, when the day had equal amounts of light and darkness. Hammurabi, he of the great laws, didn’t rule Babylon until 2,000