Entrepreneurship

Advertiser-Supported Advertising

We’ve gone out to the wider web to bring you the most relevant news and information.

Published on: Tuesday, February 19, 2008       Comments (0)       Category: EntrepreneurshipSales & Marketing
Posted by: From the Wider Web
 


Advertiser-Supported Advertising
From AdAge by Steve Rubell


Brands are increasingly launching their own content platforms. Some, such as Budweiser’s Bud.TV, go it alone. Others partner with online media properties. P&G, for example, embedded Capessa inside Yahoo Health.

In the future, some of the more successful marketer-sponsored content sites will accept advertising. The retail space is especially ripe here. Barnes & Noble’s media site in theory could partially support itself by allowing publishers, with whom it already co-markets, to buy ads.



 

The Value Of Being A “Generalist”

We’ve gone out to the wider web to bring you the most relevant news and information.

Published on: Thursday, February 14, 2008       Comments (0)       Category: EntrepreneurshipLeadershipReality Check
Posted by: From the Wider Web
 


The Value Of Being A “Generalist”
from Collaborative Thinking by Mike Gotta


What does it take to be “good at everything but nothing in particular”? The article below does a great job at describing traits necessary for people to excel in a variety of jobs and professions. Well articulated and worth reading:

Nothing can substitute for depth of analysis, and there’s proven value in specialization – it’s what education, career paths, scientific research, and technological innovation are built on – but generalism is a secret talent. With so much complex information, fragmented in so many ways and developing faster and faster, it is increasingly important to have generalists around to make sense of it all, of the big picture. People who appreciate diversity, who are in the know about the wider world and who understand how things interact are invaluable observers, matchmakers, and pioneers of the intersectional ideas so vital for success in today’s knowledge economy, conceptual age, and global community.

But what exactly do generalists do? That’s the question most often asked of me and it’s not an easy one to answer. By definition, generalists tend not to focus (actually, they do focus but just not to the extent that specialists do), they don’t often travel in groups (lacking common associations, designations, and unions), and their shape-shifting versatility changes them frequently. But they are definable and there most certainly are essential traits and skills inherent to them.

I’ve identified five core areas at which Creative Generalists excel. They are:


  1. Wander & Wonder - finding possibility

  2. Synthesize & Summarize - presenting information

  3. Link & Leap - generating ideas

  4. Mix & Match - connecting people

  5. Experience & Empathize - understanding worldview



 

Doing Well by Being Rather Nice

Jim Goodnight of SAS is reaping the benefits of treating his employees well in actions that began with free M&Ms and now include subsidized cafes, child care and lifestyle education

Published on: Tuesday, January 15, 2008       Comments (6)       Category: EntrepreneurshipHuman CapitalLeadershipManaging
Posted by: Economist.com
 


imageThe ritual of handing out free M&Ms every Wednesday began accidentally, when an assistant collecting supplies accepted a big bag of the chocolate sweets as a substitute from a local grocer who had run short of change. Yet, recalls Jim Goodnight, the co-founder and boss of SAS, probably the world’s biggest privately owned software-maker, the M&Ms have come to symbolise the famously employee-friendly culture that he has cultivated at his firm—a culture that seems more valuable with each passing day.

Every aspect of life on the large, leafy SAS campus in Cary, North Carolina, is designed to bring the best out of employees by treating them well. Most SAS employees have their own offices, for example, with the exception of one sales team which wanted to be open-plan, though Mr Goodnight does not expect that experiment to last for long. “You are so much more productive in your own office than when you are being distracted by the people either side,” he says—a belief formed when he worked in an open office on the Apollo space project. Offices mean bare walls to fill, so he started to buy art to adorn them; the SAS campus now boasts 5,000 pieces. It also has plenty of outdoor sculpture.



 

Page 1 of 2 pages  1 2 >

RSS

image View our RSS Feeds.


Join the Community

Members enjoy access to special events, thought leadership and each other. It's fast, easy and FREE! Register Now! >>


From the Resource Center



Newsletter

Complimentary Career E-Letter:
Market data, leadership insights, career tips and much more delivered every two weeks.

Resource Center

Weekly Indicators
Cities Guide
Executive Careers
MBA Executive Education
Find Top Talent
Intelligent Life
Business Gifts and Tools


 
-->