Want to Stand Out in A Crowd? Just Pay For It.
Most of us—maybe some of us—realize that being in a Who's Who simply means that you've paid for the placement and agreed to buy books, and that a great many "top ten" books in the Times and Wall Street Journal are the
The Numbers
The average number of followers per person on Twitter is 704, and 60% of Linkedin users have fewer than 1,000 connections (source: Google). For most people, no matter what they put on there, very few people are seeing it, and
Black Friday, White Christmas
Before you sit back and deride Black Friday: I don't think people madly trying to buy things to give as gifts to other people at Christmas is exactly the worst thing going on in the world right now. In fact,
Happy Thanksgiving
We all have a great deal to be thankful for yet we too seldom acknowledge that fact. But here we have an "official" holiday enabling us to pay a few minutes to our lives aside from stuffing ourselves with turkey. From
Episode 59: Truth and Consequences
There is a singular answer to everything you wish to accomplish but you won't find it with motivational speakers or "The Secret." Here's a hint, simply wanting something isn't good enough.
Alan Weiss’s Word of the Week™ – 11/21/18
Today's word: picaresque.
Uh, oh…
Business is usually in a huge reactive mode, which is why there is so little innovation in most places. For example, how many major businesses do you suspect right now are doing a hasty forensic audit of their top executives'
Altitude and Attitude: Dumb Ass Stupid Management
Why do we seem shocked when a wealthy, high level executive is found to be violating the law, or cheating, or unethical? A personality flaw, behavioral disorder, narcissism or arrogance aren't erased by a large paycheck and a big office. What
Alan Weiss’s Monday Morning Memo® – 11/19/18
Thanksgiving in the US (and, I believe, Canada) is the largest of what are considered secular holidays. While many people attend church on Thanksgiving, it is considered non-denominational, of course. The first observance here is believed to be in 1619.