Skip to main content

Home/ WomensLearningStudio/ Group items matching ""new york"" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

What HSN CEO Mindy Grossman told the Women's Forum of New York about the 'boys' club' in the corporate boardroom - Tampa Bay Business Journal - 0 views

  • HSN (NASDAQ: HSNI), a multichannel retailer in St. Petersburg, is the only company from the Tampa Bay area to hit the 40 percent level, according to a recent report from the advocacy group 2020 Women on Boards. Nationally, women hold 18.8 percent of board seats, while the percentage of board seats held by women at Tampa Bay’s largest public companies is 14.3 percent.
  •  
    HSN with Mindy Grossman's leadership has women as 40% of its board members. Tampa Bay Business Journal, November 30, 2015.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

These Women's Magazines Aren't Just for Women - The New York Times - 0 views

  •  
    Discusses new women's magazines including Mary Review, Hannah, The Gentlewoman, Gravitas (Sarasota), and The Riveter
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

The New Making It - The New York Times - 0 views

  •  
    profiles of six artists--musicians who are "cobbling together livelihoods that would have been impossible 15 years ago."
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Living by the Numbers: A Tyranny of Data? - SPIEGEL ONLINE - 0 views

  • So far, many companies have tried to dispel such fears by noting that the data they gather, store and analyze remains "anonymous." But that, as it turns out, is not entirely accurate, in that it sells the power of data analysis radically short. Take the analysis of anonymous movement profiles, for example. According to a current study by the online journal Scientific Reports, our mobility patterns are so different that that they can be used to "uniquely identify 95 percent of the individuals." The more data is in circulation and available for analysis, the more likely it is that anonymity becomes "algorithmically impossible," says Princeton computer scientist Arvind Narayanan. In his blog, Narayanan writes that only 33 bits of information are sufficient to identify a person.
  • A study by New York advertising agency Ogilvy One concludes that 75 percent of respondents don't want companies to store their personal data, while almost 90 percent were opposed to companies tracking their surfing behavior on the Internet.
  • Is it truly desirable for cultural assets like TV series or music albums to be tailored to our predicted tastes by means of data-driven analyses? What happens to creativity, intuition and the element of surprise in this totally calculated world?
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • But for a modern society, an even more pressing question is whether it wishes to accept everything that becomes possible in a data-driven economy. Do we want to live in a world in which algorithms predict how well a child will do in school, how suitable he or she is for a specific job -- or whether that person is at risk of becoming a criminal or developing cancer?
  • Users, of course, "voluntarily" relinquish their data step by step, just as we voluntarily and sometimes revealingly post private photos on Facebook or air our political views through Twitter. Everyone is ultimately a supplier of this large, new data resource, even in the analog world, where we use loyalty cards, earn miles and rent cars.
  •  
    #7 in a series on big data by Martin Muller, Marcel Rosenback and Thomas Schulz
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Learning on the Fly: Rapid Tech Shift Requires a New Type of Thinker - Millennial CEO - 0 views

  • Keeping Your Skill Set Current Can Be Key to Keeping Your Job Small and midsize companies can’t afford to not keep up with technology, and neither can enterprise-level companies. This past fall, IBM notified employees, who it had determined needed additional training, they were required to step up their technological game, and that they would receive only 90% of their salary while embarking upon this additional training. Talk about an incentive to stay on top of changes in technology ! According to the article in the New York Times covering this move, some IBM workers received an email letting them know that an assessment had determined certain members of the team had “not kept pace with acquiring the skills and expertise needed to address changing client needs, technology and market requirements.” While some criticized the move, the reality is that employees can no longer be complacent when it comes to their grasp of technology and how to use it to help their businesses grow. That’s something to keep in mind, for sure, whether you’re just embarking on a career or whether you’re already in the workforce and want to make sure you have the skills you need to stay marketable.
  • The Modern Worker Needs to Be Constantly Learning
  •  
    blog post by Daniel Newman, author of Millennial CEO on need to learn continuously and quickly.  Find the reference to IBM asking employees to acquire tech skills.  could be reference in ECO Byte #1. 
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Slack Aims to Become a Control Panel for Your Job - The New York Times - 1 views

  • About two million people a day now use Slack, mainly to chat with others at work. On Tuesday, the company is unveiling a couple of initiatives that will add new capabilities to the system. The first is an app store that will let developers of business software more easily plug their programs into Slack. Together with its investors, the company is also creating an $80 million fund to invest in apps that can be integrated with Slack.
  • Atlassian makes HipChat, one of Slack’s chief rivals, which also offers integration with other applications.
  • In its first incarnation, the directory will feature 150 apps that are compatible with Slack, including programs from Google, Twitter, Dropbox and Box.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • “Slack is useful all by itself, but it’s much more useful if all these things are integrated with it,”
  •  
    How Slack will become a centralized integration point for many functions, NYT, Farhad Manjoo, Bits, December 15, 2015, making it more possible for workers to work remotely.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Sisterhood Is Not Enough: Why Workplace Equality Needs Men, Too - The New York Times - 0 views

  •  
    Preoccupations feature by Peggy Klaus, August 14, 2016, speaks to whether women-only conferences, corporate workshops, and networking soirees (single-sex type events) enable women to move up in the workplace. May be an overreliance in some corporations.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

How Wall Street Bro Talk Keeps Women Down - The New York Times - 0 views

  • When you create a culture where women are casually torn apart in conversation, how can you ever stomach promoting them, or working for them?
  • It’s hard to violate social norms; it’s even harder when doing so means jeopardizing millions of dollars in future earnings. For an intern, a connection with a managing director can mean a foothold in one of the most lucrative career paths in the world.
  • A woman has never been the chief executive of a major investment bank. Only about 2 percent of hedge fund managers are women. During my years on Wall Street I never saw a woman run a trading or sales desk, which is the first step toward executive management.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • If you think that this violence has nothing to do with bro talk, you’re wrong. When we dehumanize people in conversation, we give permission for them to be degraded in other ways as well. And even if we don’t participate, our silence condones this language. I deeply regret remaining quiet while women were being disparaged during my eight years as a trader.
  •  
    good article by Sam Polk, July 2016, on how sexist talk by men about women catapults even worse behavior by men
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

A Family-Friendly Policy That's Friendliest to Male Professors - The New York Times - 0 views

  • They have advanced the careers of male economists, often at women’s expense
  • The central problem is that employment policies that are gender-neutral on paper may not be gender-neutral in effect.
  • Succeed within seven years and you have a job for life. Fall short, and you’re fired.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • The policies led to a 19 percentage-point rise in the probability that a male economist would earn tenure at his first job. In contrast, women’s chances of gaining tenure fell by 22 percentage points. Before the arrival of tenure extension, a little less than 30 percent of both women and men at these institutions gained tenure at their first jobs. The decline for women is therefore very large.
  • They found that men who took parental leave used the extra year to publish their research, amassing impressive publication records. But there was no parallel rise in the output of female economists.
  • ng birth is not a gender-neutral event,” recalling that during her pregnancy, “I threw up every day.” She argued, “Policies that are neutral in the eyes of a lawyer are not neutral in fact.”
  • Better policies could help economics — not to mention the sciences and other fields — look like less of a boys’ club.
  • Three female economists have shown that the tools of economics — which enable a careful assessment of incentives and constraints informed by real-world data — suggest that a more nuanced policy would lead to better outcomes. It leaves me wondering how many other policy mistakes we could avoid, if only we had more female economists.
  •  
    informed assessment/report by Justin Wolfers, NYTimes, on how extending parental leave policies cause unintended impacts
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Remote? That's No Way to Describe This Work - The New York Times - 0 views

  •  
    article on what to call remote workers--work in place
anonymous

Dropbox, Google Analytics, Gmail Top List of the 25 Most Popular Tools for Freelancers According to BestVendor - BroadcastNewsroom - 0 views

  •  
    BestVendor Survey of Freelancers Around the World Demonstrates Rise of Cloud Apps August 16, 2012 -- NEW YORK, NY -- (Marketwire) -- 08/16/12 -- BestVendor today released the results of its "2012 Freelancer Survey" focusing on the most popular software and apps used by freelancers to manage their work.
Lisa Levinson

Online Book Clubs - Talk That Stays on the Page - NYTimes.com - 2 views

  •  
    benefits of online book clubs: get along with participants as you don't have to hear about their lives, can go online to discussion at anytime, be exposed to books you would not read ordinarily, and no small talk about kids, jobs, kitchen remodels, etc. Something for us to think about!
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

F.T.C. Fines Google $22.5 Million for Safari Privacy Violations - The New York Times - 0 views

  • On the call with reporters, Mr. Vladeck said he had little patience with Google’s explanation, and referred to other privacy violations about which Google has also said it was unaware, like collecting personal data with its Street View cars. “As a regulator, it is hard to know which answer is worse — I didn’t know or I did it deliberately,”
  • Google and other advertising companies use cookies, which are small files that contain information about Web users, to show personalized ads as Internet users travel around the Web. If an Internet user visits fashion Web sites, for instance, Google might show the person ads for clothing companies on other Web sites that person visits.
  •  
    Article from NYT Blogs by Claire Cain Miller, 2012, on $22.5m fine levied by Consumer Protection, FTC, against Google for collecting data on where Safari browser users visit online to construct ads to market to them.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

The Creative Apocalypse That Wasn't - The New York Times - 0 views

  •  
    all about creative careers in the digital economy, weekly magazine, August 23, 2015
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Smart Workers Seek Out Advice, Study Suggests - The New York Times - 0 views

  • They are afraid to ask for advice.
  • fear it will make them appear incompetent,
  • those who seek advice are perceived as more competent than those who do not
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • “Information sharing is very important in organizations,”
  • people who felt anxious should be cautious about seeking advice, because those who were less confident in their own judgments would be less able to discern whether a piece of advice was poor, or coming from someone with a clear conflict of interest.
  •  
    Phyllis Korkki in Applied Science for NYT, September 2015 on when to seek advice from co-workers
Lisa Levinson

What is Digital Literacy? - Enhancing Digital Literacy - New York City Department of Education - 0 views

  •  
    Digital Literacy, NYC Department of Education "Digital literacy is more than knowing how to send a text or watch a music video. It means having the knowledge and ability to use a range of technology tools for varied purposes. A digitally literate person can use technology strategically to find and evaluate information, connect and collaborate with others, produce and share original content, and use the Internet and technology tools to achieve many academic, professional, and personal goals. "
  •  
    "Digital literacy is more than knowing how to send a text or watch a music video. It means having the knowledge and ability to use a range of technology tools for varied purposes. A digitally literate person can use technology strategically to find and evaluate information, connect and collaborate with others, produce and share original content, and use the Internet and technology tools to achieve many academic, professional, and personal goals."
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

The New York Times > Job Market > Winning With Diversity > Affinity and Networking Groups - 0 views

  •  
    article written by Jason Forsythe for participating advertisers in the NYT, 2004. Yet it explains what Eli Lilly, CIA, and Ford do to use affinity groups (also called networking groups) to bring together employees based on country of origin, religion, physical disabilities, military service, age, sexual orientation and other parameters to organize their own learning events, attract business candidates, and marketing services/products to like communities.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Why I Taught Myself to Procrastinate - The New York Times - 0 views

  •  
    article by Adam Grant on value of procrastination which for many is a time for letting everything marinate before the Eureka moment
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

The Modern Meeting: Call In, Turn Off, Tune Out - The New York Times - 0 views

  • Wainhouse Research, a consulting firm in Duxbury, Mass., estimates that a knowledge worker — one whose job focuses on handling information — in the United States spends an average of 104 minutes each month in conference ca
  • lls. Such calls have become an orgy of multitasking, serving as a backdrop for a free-for-all of household chores, personal hygiene, online shopping and last-minute income tax filing
  • Mr. Reece asks his clients to use videoconferencing. He says there are always people who will resist, telling him their Internet connection is too weak, for example. Giving them the benefit of the doubt, he asks that they put up a still photo. “Even if you only get a photo, it’s more humanizing,” he said.
  •  
    The scoop on what happens in audio conference calls--Katie Hafner, December 4, 2015. 
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Do You Suffer From Decision Fatigue? - The New York Times - 0 views

  •  
    tremendous article by John Tierney on research relating to decision fatigue, August 17, 2011, and willpower.
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 49 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page