Quote of the Day: No means yes
“Strategy is what you choose not to do.”— Harvard President Drew Gilpin Faust, with an assist from Michael Porter
“Strategy is what you choose not to do.”— Harvard President Drew Gilpin Faust, with an assist from Michael Porter
My old friend and college classmate Sharon Roth sends this tangle of a sign, which she snapped on the mean streets of Park Ridge, Illinois. The “Stop Means Stop” addendum at the bottom could be effective, she says. But there’s so much clutter and noise surrounding it that many drivers tune out rather than slow down. (In other
Jason Soll — a sprinter, a TEDster, and a central Ohio homeboy — sends this sign from his dorm at Claremont McKenna College. It’s clever. And by getting us to look twice, the sign might prod us into following its instructions.
I’ve been on the road a lot lately — which means that my posts have been infrequent and that they have a travel theme. Today’s the same. Sitting on the tarmac in O’Hare for two hours tonight, I came across this stunner in today’s Wall Street Journal:“There are an estimated 10 trillion unused frequent-flier miles
That’s the question that power-mad (in the electrical sense) travelers ask when they arrive at an airport with their phones and laptops screaming “battery low.”The search can quickly lead an upstanding citizen down the low road. I’ll cop to: scouring every baseboard in a terminal in a mouse-like quest for a power hole; pinching the
On a visit to Bogota last week, I saw all kinds of cool things — including some negative space. From Alqueria, a Colombian dairy company run by the innovative Carlos Enrique Cavalier, comes this logo, which simultaneously depicts Alqueria’s main product and the source of that product.
If you’re interested in education, motivation, or doing right by our kids, you owe it to yourself to watch this Edutopia interview with James Paul Gee.In eleven minutes, he offers an array of compelling insights, including: How games, unlike schools, avoid the mistake of separating learning and assessment, Why we should use textbooks the same way
“For the first time in history, adults aged 100 or older are a fast-growing population group. Most industrialized countries now average one centenarian per 10,000 residents, but the figure is moving toward one in 5,000.“University of Georgia gerontologist Leonard Poon looked at common threads among the centenarians he interviewed: They exercised regularly, ate breakfast daily,
The traditional approach is to offer economic incentives, which can be effective in some circumstances but often fall short.So here’s a small but intriguing alternative from Sweden: Motivation through engagement. (HT: Scott Underwood)
Jennifer Davis — and her trusty four-legged companion, Priest — send this example of an invoice that uses empathy and emotional intelligence in an intriguing way. On the initial patient visit to Leawood Animal Hospital outside Kansas City, Jen explains, “the nurse snaps a shot of your pup (or kitty) and before the doctor finishes