Somewhere between childhood and adulthood, we stopped introducing ourselves to people we don't know. The simplest move in the world might also be the most powerful.
I work with thousands of companies transforming their workforce with AI. The ones succeeding are taking decisive steps to bring HR, IT and finance together and drive real change.
While new technologies often attract attention by making systems easier to see and interact with, real disruption only occurs when the underlying incentives of an industry begin to change.
Companies are experiencing the rise of the quiet AI workforce — employees who are actively using AI to be more productive and effective, but doing so under the radar.
For years, founders have been told to skip the business plan and just start. But the rise of directionless businesses suggests that ditching planning may have created a bigger problem.
The tactics that once drove startup momentum are losing power in saturated markets. What stands out now is not more pressure, but more coherence, restraint and trust.
Here's how the rapidly growing and financially powerful senior demographic is driving the next wave of innovation, spotlighting four high-potential business ideas built around their evolving needs and lifestyles.
Contrary to popular belief, cutting out procrastination isn't a matter of willpower or even self-discipline. You don't need to punish yourself. You need a system.
We are living in a time of extraordinary cognitive convenience and that isn't always a good thing. AI isn't the real risk to leadership — shallow thinking is.
Done-For-You businesses are exploding in 2026. Here's why entrepreneurs are choosing outcomes over DIY and how models like DFY Amazon stores are reshaping modern business.
We asked a retired special operations leader about what makes effective leadership. His answer challenges everything you think you know about who gets to lead.
In large organizations, major initiatives rarely fail overnight. The real problem is that the system quietly trains people not to surface issues until the cost of fixing them becomes far greater.
Livvy Dunne built a million-dollar business from NIL deals and her social media following, partnering with brands like Accelerator Active Energy. Now, she's shifting her focus toward equity and ownership.