Entrepreneurs are inherently problem-solvers. After all, we start our businesses because we recognize a need that needs to be filled. Take me, for instance: Part of my previous job at an internet ...
If at first you don't succeed, stop wasting time and ask for help, says Tory Burch Foundation president Tiffany Dufu. You can solve problems and build relationships faster if you ask people with ...
And in industries where people have spent decades-long careers trying (and often failing) to solve problems, why would young entrepreneurs be expected to fare any better? Jain is the first to admit ...
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The most successful businesses solve a problem for the end-user. Lyft gets people from Point A to Point B quickly and cheaply. Amazon brings the world’s markets to your doorstep in two days, flat.
Local entrepreneurs and nonprofit managers gather for a day of sharing information and experiences in problem-solving.
What if three days a week is the new full-time, and five days were always arbitrary? Fractional executives are quietly proving a taboo hypothesis: Effective leadership doesn't happen on a factory ...
Innovative nonprofit leaders take a different tack from their predecessors, writes David Brooks in an opinion piece in The New York Times. Instead of looking to government to identify social problems ...
If at first you don't succeed, stop wasting time and ask for help, says Tory Burch Foundation president Tiffany Dufu. You can solve problems and build relationships faster if you ask people with ...