Author name: Dan Pink

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Spatial sorting and means metros

Richard Florida offers a very interesting analysis in this month’s Atlantic showing a (somewhat alarming) demographic realignment in America’s metro areas — a “geographic sorting of people by economic potential” that he dubs “the means migration.” In short, the most “highly skilled, highly educated, and highly paid Americans” are clustering in a small number of […]

Email update (September 12, 9pm EDT)

We’re still having trouble getting email on danpink.com. (See Sept. 9 entry below) But we’ve managed to salvage a bunch of email from recent days — and we should have the problem licked pretty soon. That said, if you’ve sent me an email in the last couple of days and haven’t heard back, please send

B-school as clown college?

Are business schools trying to develop a whole new mind in their students? According to the The Wall Street Journal, “During the past school year, M.B.A. students at U.S. and European schools have cooked a gourmet French meal, built sandcastles on the beach, visited the Musee du Louvre, and filmed a parody of ‘The Wizard

Did your email bounce back?

We’ve been having some server woes over the past day or so. If you’ve tried unsuccessfully to email me in the last 24 hours, please try again using this address: dhpink at mac dot com. (Of course, type the address in the traditional format. I had to render it that way to elude the spambots.)

Entrepreneurs 1, Terrorists 0

I travel a fair bit, but I never check bags. Ever. That’s made the TSA’s new “no liquids or gels” regime a challenge. (Let’s just say that in a series of contests between speed and hygiene, speed remains undefeated.) But now, this being America and all, an entrepreneur has ridden to the rescue. His name:

No boss, no tie, no problem

Virginia Postrel, author of two great books (this one and that one), quotes Cathy Siepp on one of the central themes of Free Agent Nation: Diversification applies to human capital, too; You’re better off with several clients and customers than with one boss. (Three post-Labor Day cheers for Harry Markowitz!) Meanwhile, across the pond, Kathryn

A CEO’s home is his castle

Just came across a fascinating, but infuriating, Slate story about how public companies are protecting their executives from falling housing prices by guaranteeing the sale price of execs’ homes. Nothing illegal here. Just disgraceful. And hypocritcal. As Michelle Leder writes, “companies that depend on free markets are making sure their own executives are safeguarded from

Zen and the Art of Presentations

Garr Reynolds, whose Presentation Zen blog is one of about 15 must-reads in my NetNewsWire Lite RSS reader, has a great post that applies the lessons of AWNM to presentations. More important, if you haven’t been hipped to Presentation Zen, visit the site and add it to your own RSS reader. It’s one of those

Viva la southpaw — part deux

Penn’s Joel Waldfogel reviews a couple of recent studies (mentioned here on August 3) showing an earnings edge for left-handed males. The reasons seem to trace back to right-brain thinking, our brains being contralateral and all. What’s most interesting is that advantage intensifies with education. As Waldfogel writes, “These results suggest that education and an

Just back . . .

The Pinks have just returned from two weeks in Mexico. Here young Saul Pink enjoys a little leche de fresa at Taqueria Tlaquepaque, one of our favorite Mexico City eateries. Along with downing lots of good food, we climbed the world’s third largest pyramid, visited what’s got to be one of the world’s best children’s

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