Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Weekly Hotlist: I Joined Airbnb at 52, and Here's What I Learned About Age, Wisdom, and the Tech Industry

 


THE WEEKLY HOTLIST: Harvard Business Review

April 24, 2017

I Joined Airbnb at 52, and Here's What I Learned About Age, Wisdom, and the Tech Industry

By Chip Conley


Leading teams

What to Do About Mediocrity on Your Team by Joseph Grenny

Four ways to raise the bar.


Economy

Why the U.S. Is Still Richer Than Every Other Large Country by Martin S. Feldstein

But can it maintain its advantage?


Leadership transitions

What Sets Successful CEOs Apart by Elena Lytkina Botelho, Kim Rosenkoetter Powell, Stephen Kincaid, Dina Wang

The four essential behaviors that help them win the top job and thrive once they get it


Diversity

Mentor People Who Aren't Like You by Richard Farnell

It takes a concentrated effort, but it's good for the organization.


Decision making

Creating Simple Rules for Complex Decisions by Jongbin Jung, Connor Concannon, Ravi Shroff, Sharad Goel, Daniel G. Goldstein

This tool can outperform human experts.  


Collaboration

When One Person's High Performance Creates Resentment in Your Team by Hui Liao, Elizabeth Campbell, Aichia Chuang, Jing Zhou, Yuntao Dong

How managers can make everyone feel valued.


Gender

Have Our Attitudes About Sexual Harassment Really Changed? by Sarah Green Carmichael

Bill O'Reilly's firing inspires a look back at a 1981 HBR article.


Crisis communication

Trust Your Employees, Not Your Rule Book by Bill Taylor

United has changed its policies, but that's not the right way to win over customers.


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“Disrupt yourself or be disrupted!” is the relentless message business leaders hear. Conventional wisdom today says that to survive, companies must move beyond incremental innovation and invest in some form of radical innovation. “The Power of Little Ideas” argues there’s a “third way” that is neither sustaining nor disruptive. This low-risk, high-reward strategy has three key elements: Creating a family of complementary innovations around a product or service; The complementary innovations work together to carry out a single strategy or purpose; Crucially, innovation around the key product does not change the central product in any fundamental way. Aimed at leaders seeking strategies for sustained innovation “The Power of Little Ideas” provides a logical, organic, and enduring third way to innovate.

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HBR Guide to Leading Teams Ebook + Tools

Harvard Business Review

Great teams don’t just happen. The HBR Guide to Leading Teams Ebook + Tools, written by team expert Mary Shapiro, offers step-by-step advice, time-tested principles, and practical exercises plus downloadable tools and customizable worksheets to help you get your team working together and producing results.

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