Top News
If you're one of the many, many professionals who feel huge chunks of their life are being eaten up by email, there's no shortage of solutions on offer. From elaborate systems that turn yesterday's inbox into your to-do list, to pleas for radical mass deletions, and even programs to modify your own behavior and boost your email karma, experts and fellow entrepreneurs have suggested just about every fix you can think of. (Inc.)
Visit http://www.inc.com/jessica-stillman/use-mindfulness-to-conquer-your-inbox-3-principles.html to view the full article online.
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The difference between productivity and procrastination is largely the psychology we apply to ourselves. Let’s face it: getting things done is hard. Even when you have a solid "to-do" list. (Fortune)
Visit http://fortune.com/2015/11/20/to-do-list/ to view the full article online.
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You know the vibe of a workplace in the holiday season. It's an empty vibe, in more ways than one. Colleagues are away. The fiscal year is all but over. Sales calls may as well wait till early January, when new budgets beg for bursting. At some point in mid-December, there's often a holiday party of some sort, a great excuse for a half-day of accomplishing next to nothing if ever there were. (Inc.)
Visit http://www.inc.com/ilan-mochari/5-reasons-you-should-work-through-holidays.html to view the full article online.
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Career
Of all the industries MBAs could end up in, the largest single chunk of them flock to one: consulting. But Bloomberg data show that they're not likely to stick with it. Even though consulting is the most popular of the three industries that claimed the majority of business school graduates this spring (financial services and technology are the other two), it's also the one MBAs are most likely to move on from a few years later. (Bloomberg)
Visit http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-11-20/why-consulting-is-a-revolving-door-for-mbas to view the full article online.
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On LinkedIn, hundreds of thousands of users note on their profiles that they have taken online classes or earned certificates from coding boot camps. But when Richard Fye, the top recruiter at IT firm Fino Consulting, looks at candidates’ profiles, those credentials aren’t what helps them get hired – not yet, anyway. (The Wall Street Journal)
Visit http://www.wsj.com/articles/online-skills-are-hot-but-will-they-land-you-a-job-1447806460 to view the full article online.
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Ask anyone who travels for work: It’s not as glamorous as it looks. Yes, sometimes you get to explore new places, meet interesting people, and rack up frequent flyer miles for future vacations. But you’re also yanked out of your regular, comfortable routine, spend too much time standing in airport security lines, and you’re miles away from people who know you well. The excitement can wear off easily – and many business travelers are left feeling lonely. (Harvard Business Review)
Visit https://hbr.org/2015/11/dealing-with-loneliness-while-traveling-for-work to view the full article online.
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Diversity in the Workplace
Anyone who’s been following the news about the campus turmoil across the U.S. in recent weeks has probably heard of "microaggressions" – the casual, everyday slights and insults that make clear that racial bias and sex discrimination haven’t gone away, they’ve just gone underground. (Fortune)
Visit http://fortune.com/2015/11/19/microaggressions-talent-business/ to view the full article online.
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International
Tim Carr, an American working for a defense company based in the midwestern United States, was about to enter a sensitive bargaining session with a high-level Saudi Arabian customer, but he wasn’t particularly concerned. Carr was an experienced negotiator and was well-trained in basic principles: Separate the people from the problem. Define your BATNA (best alternative to a negotiated agreement) up front. Focus on interests, not positions. He’d been there, read that, and done the training. (Harvard Business Review)
Visit https://hbr.org/2015/12/getting-to-si-ja-oui-hai-and-da to view the full article online.
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Education
Last year, I substituted a couple of times in a third-grade class that had two little black girls in it amid mostly Latino and a few white children. All the kids loved me for introducing them to the Roald Dahl book, The Witches, but afterwards I noticed something: While the other kids in the class eagerly waved at me while passing in the hallway, those two little black girls went out of their way to give me a hug every time they saw me. (Black Enterprise)
Visit http://www.blackenterprise.com/education/black-like-them-why-a-surge-of-color-could-change-the-face-of-ed-reform/ to view the full article online.
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What if you could earn a technology-centric credential at a similar level to a postgraduate for less than $1,000? And what if earning that high-level credential took about six to nine months? What if, after earning this credential, you went into a job interview with solid evidence revealing your skills, backed by several relevant projects you created that very clearly disclosed your innovativeness and creativity, along with showing how advanced you were in relation to the latest developments in your field of study? (Fast Company)
Visit http://www.fastcompany.com/3053305/the-future-of-work/could-nanodegrees-be-the-solution-to-the-student-debt-crisis to view the full article online.
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NBMBAA
Founded in 2015, the LOT® Endowment Fund is a $1,000,000 award campaign that aims to improve scholastic opportunities through funding for Black youth between the ages of 15-18, through charitable support from the NBMBAA’s members, along with its corporate partners, friends and advocates.
Help us to foster financial and educational assistance for Black students across the nation through undergraduate scholarships, with the goal of sending them to college at no or reduced cost.
Donate Today!
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With more than 9,000 members, the NBMBAA is the largest non-profit organization advocating minority business professionals year-round. Our members are professionals from all over the world. Join our dynamic membership pool today to enhance your career and professional portfolio. Membership includes exclusive corporate partner discounts from Black Enterprise, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles US LLC, Dell, Ford and Nationwide.
Not a member? Join Today!
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Entrepreneurship
Wendell Pierce is best known for his roles on acclaimed HBO series The Wire and Treme, and countless other stage and screen acting roles. But his recent book The Wind In The Reeds tells a personal story of place, family, art, and commerce, culminating in his community redevelopment work in his native New Orleans. (Money)
Visit http://time.com/money/4119928/wendell-pierce-book-talking-money/?xid=homepage to view the full article online.
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Being a founder of a company is a tricky career path. Unlike the typical corporate-ladder structure, there is no roadmap telling you how to run a company. But as the founder of Leadnomics, digital-marketing agency, I have learned that when the path is unknown, it is important to listen to your instincts. (Entrepreneur)
Visit http://www.wired.com/2015/11/amazons-ingenious-scheme-to-undermine-black-friday/ to view the full article online.
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Personal Finance
Putting out the traditional Thanksgiving spread will cost the host or hostess a little more this year, according to a new estimate from the Farm Bureau. This year’s average cost for a turkey dinner with all the trimmings plus dessert comes to $50.11, a 70ยข increase. (Money)
Visit http://time.com/money/4120497/thanksgiving-dinner-cost/?xid=homepage to view the full article online.
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Corporate America
Eric Ries became a celebrity in the business world for his "Lean Startup" methodology, a set of principles that helps small companies move fast and stay nimble. Lately, he's been devoting much of his time to counseling big companies that want to do those same things. (Inc.)
Visit http://www.inc.com/jeff-bercovici/eric-ries-entrepreneurial-companies.html to view the full article online.
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Leadership
Much as war is too important to leave to the generals, love is too precious to entrust to the romantics. So don’t. Organizations looking for their people to love them better be pragmatic about their idealism. To do "what it really takes to become a company employees love" requires leaders to ask, "What kind of love do we really want from people?" (Harvard Business Review)
Visit https://hbr.org/2015/11/love-your-ex-employees-and-theyll-love-you-back to view the full article online.
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