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Stop using these words that lead to a “no”

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“Would you like to make an appointment?” “Are you interested in attending on Thursday?” “Would you be willing to discuss this?”

These are questions businesses often ask of their customers–whether over email, online, or face-to-face. And they all have one thing in common: They’re all yes/no questions that elicit some commitment from the other person. These questions include verbs that characterize the respondent as someone who would “like,” is “interested,” is “willing” to do something (or not). Some of these verbs lead to the answer “no” more than others.

As a professor of social interaction, I study talk “in the wild,” from settings like first dates and hostage negotiation. You see, conversations are about what people are doing with words–whether written or spoken (or produced via gestures, sign language, and so on). It’s about the actions people initiate, progress, and complete–like questions, requests, offers, flirts, complaints, assessments, and greetings. When we examine them, the highly systematic nature of action begins to reveal itself. We start at the beginning of an encounter with another person and along the conversational racetrack, complete actions. Conversations can progress smoothly without friction, or become tense and challenging depending on the words you use.

Getting to yes

In the late 1990s, I began working with community mediation services. My initial interest was in neighbor relationships and what happens when they go wrong. Mediation services provided recordings of their initial telephone calls with potential clients. For mediators, these calls are not part of the mediation process. They are encounters where clients arrange appointments. I spotted a serious problem almost immediately: Callers resisted mediation as a route to resolving their disputes. They didn’t want to resolve the conflict; they wanted to see punishments—for the police to make an arrest, or for a lawyer to initiate court proceedings.

When people call mediation services, they have to decide whether or not they want to meet with the mediator at the end of the call. If the mediators get no more than yes, then the service will cease to exist. The initial inquiry is the most critical step in the journey. By analyzing the moment in calls where mediators tried to convert callers into clients, I learned how one word could make the difference between a yes and a no.

Once the other business of the call is over, a mediator may ask, “Does mediation sound like it might be helpful to you?” Or is mediation “something you would be interested in?” or “like to try?” In response to these questions, I found people are likely to say no (or some version of it, in more polite terms).

But when mediators ask if callers were willing to mediate or propose that they are (“You’d be willing . . . “), they were more likely to say yes. Not only that, they responded with enthusiasm. And only “willing” secured a complete turnaround from resistance to yes. Why? Because, unlike their neighbor, the caller is the kind who would be willing to see the mediators. They’re the good and reasonable party. By asking callers if they are “willing” to mediate, mediators can open up a slot for the caller to say, “I’m the good one.” It’s what people in disputes want to say.

The power of “willing”

Of course, “willing” isn’t a panacea. “Willing” works best to bring people to yes in situations where they care about the type of person they are, and where they’ve resisted doing the thing you’re trying to get them to do. People are “willing” to say yes to things that make them feel good, reasonable, or altruistic, irrespective of whether they’re talking to someone face to face, or communicating something in writing.

Last year, I spoke at a medical conference and showed the audience my findings on the power of “willing.” On the second day, a medic approached me to tell me that, overnight, he’d had an exchange of emails with a manager at his hospital. The medic wanted to trial a new process locally before it rolled out across the region–using a proven research methodology called “Quality Improvement.” But the manager wanted to deliver the change immediately and to the whole organization. The medic, who heard my talk, asked his manager, “Would you be willing to speak to one of the QI team about the potential benefits of the latter?” The response was an immediate yes and the standoff was over. Six months later, the medic wrote to let me know that the QI methodology was adopted.

One of my colleagues at my university, who also knew about this research, decided to ask on Facebook if someone might be able to proofread a new manuscript. No response. He went back and edited his post, and asked if anyone was “willing” to help. Three offers pinged onto his screen immediately.

You see, the simple shift to this word changes the emphasis from what the other person would like to do to the kind of person they are. And my research found that the latter works best every time. So if you find yourself struggling to turn a no into a yes, try asking that person if they are “willing” to do something, rather than if it would interest them. You might just get a different response.


Elizabeth Stokoe is a consultant at Typeform and professor of social interaction at Loughborough University. She is the author of Talk: The Science of Conversation, published by Little, Brown (2018).


This maddening map shows everywhere T-Mobile and Sprint will dominate post-merger

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Now that the government shutdown has put the FCC’s merger reviews in limbo, wireless customers affected by the pending merger of T-Mobile and Sprint may have some time to breathe before the two companies combine to become a $146 billion behemoth. Still, it’s probably only a matter of time, and if you’ve been wondering what wireless coverage could look like after the merger, we have just the map for you.

Esri used its location intelligence tools and mapping skills to lay out for customers a potential future after the No. 3 carrier in the United States (T-Mobile) merges with the No. 4 carrier (Sprint) and becomes the predominant wireless service provider in many areas of the country, including metro areas like New York City, Atlanta, New Orleans, Houston, Los Angeles, and Chicago.

The map shows the state of cellphone coverage both before and after the merger by visualizing the predominant wireless service provider at the tract and county level. You can click any place for more information about service providers and monthly bill rates, and can even enter your zip code to see what your own neighborhood will look like. No word on where your calls will drop, though.

Check out the map here or via the embed below.

Reminder: All those “smart” devices are a growing security threat

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As Americans increasingly buy and install smart devices in their homes, all those cheap interconnected devices create new security problems for individuals and society as a whole. The problem is compounded by businesses radically expanding the number of sensors and remote monitors it uses to manage overhead lights in corporate offices and detailed manufacturing processes in factories. Governments, too, are getting into the act–cities, especially, want to use new technologies to improve energy efficiency, reduce traffic congestion, and improve water quality.

The number of these “internet of things” devices is climbing into the tens of billions. They’re creating an interconnected world with the potential to make people’s lives more enjoyable, productive, secure, and efficient. But those very same devices, many of which have no real security protections, are also becoming part of what are called “botnets,” vast networks of tiny computers vulnerable to hijacking by hackers.

Botnets have caused problems on the internet, from sending vast amounts of spam mail to disrupting websites around the world. While traditionally most botnets  comprise laptop and desktop computers, the growth of unsecured devices such as industrial sensors, webcams, televisions, and other smart home devices is leading to a growing disruptive capability.

[Source Image: George Tsartsianidis/iStock]

Tiny computers everywhere

The “internet of things” includes countless types of devices–webcams, pressure sensors, thermometers, microphones, speakersstuffed animals and many more–made by a vast array of companies. Many of these manufacturers are small and unknown, and don’t have popular brands or public reputations to protect. Their goals are to produce lots of devices to sell as cheaply as possible. Customers’ cybersecurity isn’t a real concern for them.

These devices’ variety means they’re useful for lots of things, but also means they have a wide range of vulnerabilities. They include weak passwords, unencrypted communications and insecure web interfaces. With thousands, or hundreds of thousands, of identically insecure devices scattered all over the world, they’re a wealth of targets ripe for the hacking.

If, for instance, a manufacturer has set an unchangeable administrative password on a particular type of device–it happens more often than you might think–a hacker can run a program searching the internet for those devices, and then logging in, taking control and installing their own malicious software, recruiting the device into a botnet army. The devices run normally until the hackers issue instructions, after which they can do more or less anything a computer might do–such as sending meaningless internet traffic to clog up data connections.

[Image: DownDetector/Wiki Commons]

Blocking internet access

That type of attack when emanating from thousands of devices at once, called a “distributed denial of service,” can shut down companies’ servers or even block wide swaths of the internet from being publicly accessible. A major DDoS attack in 2016 interrupted connections to Amazon, Netflix, and Paypal from customers on the east coast of the U.S.

That attack was linked to a botnet-control software program created by three teenagers seeking to use more than 100,000 hijacked webcams and other internet-connected devices from around the world to gain an advantage over other players of the Minecraft online video game.

The size and scale of these attacks–and the broad range of devices that can contribute to them–make this both a private problem and a public one. People want to secure the devices in their homes and pockets, of course. Yet the same networks that stream television shows and music also link burglar alarms to police, manage traffic lights in congested areas and let self-driving cars talk to each other.

All that activity can be drowned out if hackers flood the internet, or sections of it, with meaningless messages. Traffic would stall across towns, even counties, and police officers would have a hard time communicating with each other to try to straighten everything out. Even small devices, in their hundreds of thousands, all around the world, can work together to have huge repercussions both online and in the physical world.


Charles T. Harry is associate research professor of public policy; director of operations, Maryland Global Initiative in Cybersecurity; and a senior research associate, Center for International and Security Studies, University of Maryland. This post originally appeared on The Conversation.

Top 5 Ads Of The Week: HBO hilariously tweets out Sopranos nicknames

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Nicknames: Donald Glover famously got his Childish Gambino rap name from a Wu-Tang version. You’ve definitely found out your porn name by combining your first pet’s name with the street you grew up on (Spike Eleanor!).

But this week, to celebrate the 20th anniversary of The Sopranos, HBO took to Twitter to arbitrarily hand out nicknames inspired by the show. Look, Brand Twitter rightfully gets a lot of flack. It tries too hard. It’s too gimmicky. It’s manufactured human interaction. But this? THIS. This was goooood. It certainly didn’t hurt that celebrities and other brands raced to get Soprano’d. Roger Federer? The Feds. Wendy’s? Square Patty. Jake Tapper? Newsboy. Tinder? Wesley Swipes. The state of New Jersey? The Motherland. The only thing missing is a mobbed up MoonPie and Steak-Umm. Onward!

HBO “The Soprano’s Nicknames”

What: A brand Twitter thread actually worth reading.

Who: HBO

Why we care: One of the best ways brands can deliver on their quest to surprise and delight is by using a platform in an unexpected an fun way. Think Geico’s unskippable ad on YouTube. Or Tide’s 2018 Super Bowl commercial takeover. Here, HBO takes the increasingly tired format of Brand Twitter and turns it into a star-studded back-and-forth that quickly becomes a fun meta playtime in pop culture. Worth checking out for the WWE heat check.

Disneyland Paris “The Little Duck”

What: A new spot from Disneyland Paris that most definitely DID NOT make my eyes well up at work.

Who: Disneyland Paris, BETC Paris

Why we care: Uhh, I’m not dead inside? The spot follows the familiar journey of a child’s first love affair with the magic of comic books, and then sees their imagination come to life. Except here that child is a duckling. A criminally cute, anthropomorphized-to-play-with-my-emotions duckling.

Fiji Water “#fijiwatergirl”

What: A Golden Globe-winning photobomb performance.

Who: Fiji Water, Getty Image Studio

Why we care: Like I said earlier, brands messing with familiar formats can be fun. Here, Fiji hired a Getty photographer to get shots of its product on the red carpet. That, coupled with the deadpan gaze of model Kelleth Cuthbert, helped Fiji become the awards show brand winner of the night. First, with the wave of social media attention on Cuthbert, then with the second wave of enthusiastic earned media coverage. Here’s the thing though: Don’t do it again. Not like this. The awards show red-carpet ecosystem is already crammed with enough vapid self-interest. We don’t need more brands rushing to duplicate Fiji’s success.

Walmart “Famous Cars”

What: Almost all of Hollywood’s iconic movie vehicles picked up groceries at Walmart during the Golden Globes.

Who: Walmart, Department W

Why we care: Big stage, pop-culture nostalgia, comfort food advertising at its best. Slimer ftw.

BMW “Special Delivery”

What: A new campaign for BMW Certified pre-owned cars that uses pre-owned ads.

Who: BMW, GS&P

Why we care: If you’re trying to sell a 2015 X1, why not use a 2015 X1 commercial? What initially sounds like a panicky ad agency cop-out–“Let’s use your old ads that already worked!”–is actually another fun example of a brand playing with a familiar format. The creativity is in the gimmick, and it’s a good one.

Publisher to Netflix: Choose your own trademark

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Black Mirror creators may have wanted viewers to choose their own adventure on Bandersnatch, but they ended up somewhere unexpected—in a lawsuit with the owners of the “Choose Your Own Adventure” trademark.

Chooseco, LLC, the publisher behind the “Choose Your Own Adventure” series and owner of the trademark, has filed a lawsuit against Netflix over the immersive film Black Mirror: Bandersnatch, The Hollywood Reporter reports. According to the suit, it’s not that Netflix didn’t realize the phrase “choose your own adventure” was a trademark; it’s that it wasn’t able to secure a license from the company and used the phrase anyway.

“Chooseco and Netflix engaged in extensive negotiations that were ongoing for a number of years, but Netflix did not receive a license,” states the complaint, per THR. “On at least one occasion before the release of Bandersnatch, Chooseco sent a written cease and desist request to Netflix asking Netflix to stop using the CHOOSE YOUR OWN ADVENTURE mark in connection with its marketing efforts for another television program.”

Chooseco argues that not only did everyoneinthepressdescribe Black Mirror’s interactive film as a “choose your own adventure” experience, but in one scene in Bandersnatch, one of the characters even references Choose Your Own Adventure books by name. According to the complaint, those similarities could be enough to confuse viewers–one of the markers for a trademark infringement case.

And as a result, Chooseco argues, the Choose Your Own Adventure brand was sullied by being connected to the intensely bleak show. After all, what if some poor child thought they were watching a Choose Your Own Adventure movie and ended up in that game designer’s dark and twisty world? Chooseco wants at least $25 million in damages or profits, whichever is greater, as well as injunctive relief. Netflix is probably hoping it could choose its own ending to this suit.

A Netflix spokesperson declined to comment.

Lady Gaga removes R. Kelly duet “Do What U Want” from all streaming services

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In the wake of Lifetime‘s damning docu-series Surviving R. Kelly, Lady Gaga recently posted an apology for her 2013 duet with R. Kelly “Do What U Want (With My Body)” and promised to have the song removed from streaming services–and she’s made good on that promise.

The song has been removed from Spotify, iTunes, Amazon, and Tidal, and the audio and music video versions on YouTube have been pulled down as well.

Gaga, who’s been an outspoken advocate for sexual assault victims, said she made the song and video at a “dark time” in her life and condemns the allegations against R. Kelly as “horrifying” and “indefensible.”

“I share this not to make excuses for myself, but to explain,” Gaga wrote in her post. “Til it happens to you, you don’t know how it feels. But I do know how I feel now . . . I’m sorry, both for my poor judgment when I was young, and for not speaking out sooner.”

Feminist group flies banner over Culver City demanding RCA-Sony drop R. Kelly

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The “Mute R. Kelly” movement just earned its wings.

Anti-sexism activists flew an airplane over Sony Music headquarters in Culver City, California, today demanding that Sony-owned RCA Records sever ties with scandal-ridden music artist R. Kelly.

The flyover was commissioned by UltraViolet, an online community that fights sexism and sexual violence in the media, and in the private and public sectors. In thick, boxy letters, the airplane banner branded Kelly a “sexual predator” and called on Sony and RCA to drop him. Accusations of sexual abuse and predatory behavior against Kelly date back decades, but criticism of the singer has increased over the last week in the wake of Lifetime’s Surviving R. Kellydocumentary series, in which many of his accusers spoke out publicly for the time.

Now critics say it’s time for RCA to stop enabling Kelly by giving him a platform.

“It is long past time for RCA to dump R. Kelly and take a stand against abuse,” said Karin Roland, UltraViolet’s chief campaigns officer, in a statement. “Their inaction is beyond shameful. RCA can no longer pretend that R. Kelly’s music can be separated from his violent actions. Kelly uses his fame, musical talent, fortune, and standing in the music industry to lure in and abuse young black girls.”

I reached out to RCA Records for comment and will update if I hear back.

To make companies moral, make the employees the owners

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In the minds of many entrepreneurs, taking a company public, with shares trading on a public stock exchange, represents the pinnacle of success–a dream come true. For EA Engineering founder Loren Jensen, that dream proved a nightmare.

Located in Hunt Valley, Maryland, EA Engineering, Science and Technology is an environmental consulting firm with 500 employees and $140 million in annual revenue. For more than a decade, the firm traded on NASDAQ, but after initial success the company cycled through three presidents, saw morale plummet, and found itself in trouble with the Securities and Exchange Commission over accounting misstatements. Pressure for aggressive growth had clashed with the company’s scientific culture, damaging its environmental mission.

Jensen led a move to buy the company back in 2001. He then worked with new president Ian MacFarlane to transition to 100 percent employee ownership through an Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP). MacFarlane also organized the firm as a benefit corporation, embedding in its DNA a commitment to the environment and community.

[Source Image: Wacomka/iStock]

The company has prospered ever since. Its design keeps its environmental mission in the hands of genuine stewards, employees, rather than in the hands of absentee owners removed from the organization’s life. “Now we focus on who we are and what we’re doing. We returned immediately to the task of understanding environmental problems and knowing what to do about them,” Jensen said. “Nobody buys stock except in the hope of a good return on investment. The problem this poses for a company like EA is you confuse the goals. It was very difficult to manage in that environment.”

EA Engineering is one of multiple companies examined by my organization, the Democracy Collaborative, in research aimed at answering questions critical to 21st century enterprise design and the future of our planet: Are mission-controlled, employee-owned companies better environmental stewards than conventional finance-controlled corporations? Could these be the harbingers of next generation enterprise design?

If our goal is to design an economy that lives within planetary boundaries, we need to better understand the relationship between enterprise design and sustainability outcomes. Environmental advocates generally make the “business case” for sustainability, but research by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology found that such steps resulted in commercial benefits for only 37% of firms.

As U.K. sustainability consultant Carina Millstone observes in Frugal Value, true sustainability cannot be driven purely by commercial concerns. It requires moral decision-making. What enterprise designs enable and encourage moral decision-making?

[Source Image: Wacomka/iStock]

Our research findings, though still preliminary, point to an emerging model, viable in today’s economy: the employee-owned B Corporation or benefit corporation. Weaving together worker ownership with mission-driven governance, this model embodies design elements required for true environmental sustainability.

In this model, mission is embedded through  the B Corporation  nonprofit  certification process, or  the benefit incorporation  framework  in  state  law. Among B Corporations, we have identified 35 employee-owned firms, including Eileen Fisher, King Arthur Flour, New Belgium Brewing, Namaste Solar, and Gardener’s Supply.  In these companies, founders avoided sale to financial owners, instead passing ownership to employees as stewards, embedding a commitment to social and ecological benefit in governing documents. The companies show an alternative exit for founders, rather than going public and facing the multiple pressures that make it more difficult to have a deep sustainability mission.

Shareholders in publicly traded companies are large in number, geographically remote, disengaged from companies, and structurally unable to effectively voice social and ecological responsibility. Creating shareholders with different characteristics–fewer in number, close to the firm, engaged, committed to a common social or environmental mission–could help create companies compatible with an environmentally sustainable economy. In this configuration, owners can become moral agents.

Eileen Fisher Inc. is a good example. A $440 million company that designs and markets women’s clothing, it is 40% employee owned, a B Corp, and a leader in human rights and sustainability. Founder Eileen Fisher’s vision is of a world where business is a force for good. As the company website says, “Our vision is for an industry where human rights and sustainability are not the effect of a particular initiative, but the cause of a business well run. Where social and environmental injustices are not unfortunate outcomes, but reasons to do things differently.”
Fisher at one time thought about selling to another company. When Fisher met the CEO of Liz Claiborne and asked why she wanted to buy the company, that CEO said, “We can’t meet our mandated target of 10 percent annual growth without buying other companies.” As Fisher said, “I realized that most people were interested in what they could get out of the company, not what they could give to it.”

Instead, Fisher decided on an ESOP, in which shares are held in trust for employees until they retire or leave. The average equity share of employee-owners in an ESOP is $134,000, according to Rutgers University employee-ownership expert Joseph Blasi; this is almost 10 times the average retirement account for American households headed by someone between the ages of 55 and 64 ($14,500). The ESOP ensures that, when Fisher retires, the company will be owned by “the people who put their blood sweat and tears into it; the people who love it and care about it and think about it every day,” as Fisher said. That’s very different from owners who see the company as a way to extract maximum short-term profits.

Employee-owned benefit corporations–like Eileen Fisher and EA Engineering–embody a powerful model of enterprise design for a new era of ecological sustainability and social equity, a corporate design for the 21st century and beyond.


Marjorie Kelly is executive vice president at The Democracy Collaborative and cofounder of Fifty by Fifty, an initiative helping to catalyze 50 million employee owners by 2050. She is the author ofOwning Our Future: The Emerging Ownership Revolution and The Divine Right of Capital: Dethroning the Corporate Aristocracy.


The Air Force is launching its first Pitch Day to attract tech startups

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If you’re like me, you geek out on new technology. It’s certainly changing our lives at a dizzying pace. Many mind-blowing ideas are being birthed by U.S. startup companies, but the Pentagon largely misses out on them. For a big bureaucracy like ours, awarding a contract in months is actually pretty quick. But for startups living hand-to-mouth, that’s an eternity to wait.

As a result, we’re not competing for ideas in the accelerating tech ecosystem, opting for the passenger’s seat instead. The Pentagon has to do business at the speed of ideas: inspiring and accelerating startup creativity to meet national security challenges. The smaller the company, the faster we need to move. Instead, too often startups confront hurdles more akin to that classic amusement park sign: “You must be this tall to ride this ride.”

I am excited to announce that the Air Force is finally tearing down those obstacles: Welcome to Pitch Day. On March 6-7 in New York, we’ll put $40 million on the table as step one in a new initiative that will transform how the Air Force works with startups and universities and research centers. And we’re introducing our new bureaucracy-busting contract: a convenient one-page, one-day, credit-card-based transaction. If a company has a PayPal account, they can do business with the Air Force in $150,000 increments. Last month, we awarded 100 contracts in 40 hours as part of a trial run of Pitch Day.

You may think the Pentagon has tried this before–and indeed we have, holding a few startup events and awarding a few contracts–but nothing at this speed or scale. Our limitation wasn’t due to lack of desire; it was wading through the “molasses moat” to get money from the government into the hands of industry. Thousands of regulations make this a slow trudge.

Ironically, speed is the top priority for Air Force programs. We set a Century Challenge to trim 100 years from our programs. After seven months, we’re already at 70. This represents an exciting gearshift for the military, who need systems fielded faster. But to marshal the creativity of America’s startups in the service of the Air Force, we need to start faster.

Here’s how Pitch Day works. We’re posting our challenges online across platforms like LinkedIn this January. Companies have 30 days to submit a short proposal and pitch deck. We review and invite promising candidates to pitch their ideas in New York, also inviting commercial investors and our defense primary contractors to join. If we’re impressed by a concept and company, we sign, swipe, and say, “Congratulations! You’re partnered with the United States Air Force!”

The success of this effort ultimately translates into a permanent shift in how the Air Force works with startups. We need to energize startups to see that tackling our challenges can be a means to accelerate their own growth and vitality, even if their business plans are ultimately commercial. If orbiting Air Force challenges isn’t easy, commercially rewarding, and hopefully pretty cool, we risk estrangement from one of our nation’s greatest and growing strengths: its vibrant high-tech commercial ecosystem. A better and more secure future for the country won’t just happen within the five walls of the Pentagon.

But with over $650 million in our small business innovation budget, we can accomplish huge things outside those walls if we get Pitch Days right. So to all high-growth-potential companies, help us remove the “you must be this tall” sign from in front of the Air Force. We’re ready to be the preferred innovation partner for companies of all sizes.

Will Roper is in charge of acquisitions and technology for the U.S. Air Force

How rising Democratic stars are using Instagram to try to trump Trump’s Twitter feed

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Even a year ago, it would have been (almost) unimaginable that a rising political star would live-stream his dental cleaning as a potential stepping stone to the White House. But that’s the reality we live in today, shaped and suffused and reconstructed by social media. And Beto O’Rourke’s visit to the dentist while discussing the border wall impasse, along with Elizabeth Warren drinking a Michelob Ultra to announce a potential run for president in 2020, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez lip-syncing to Edwin Starr’s “War” to mock critics of another dancing video that went viral all represent a new front in the perpetual campaign wars that dominate American politics.

It’s the Democrats’ response to President Trump’s Twitter feed which, as everyone knows, allowed him to attract voters in 2016 and has served as a bully pulpit to spread his message, disarm his opponents, and spread misinformation. And so far, it seems to be working for the resistance–due to its visual appeal, its light tone, and its appeal to younger voters.

It sounds ludicrous, but building a friendly social media personality can make a candidate seem relatable, likable, and fun, and while none of those should be qualifying attributes to be the president of the United States, in the digital age it can’t hurt and it probably helps. After all, what better way to prove likability than with Instagram likes?

While Trump dominates Twitter–which to be honest, has a limited appeal since it largely attracts other politicians, journalists, and publicists rather than regular Americans–Instagram Live attracts a younger and bigger demographic (700 million monthly users). At the front of that wave of Instagramming political celebs is, of course, Ocasio-Cortez. And while she’s too young to run for president in 2020, she has set the standard for engaging social media presence. Her Twitter feed is informative, entertaining, and sassy, but it’s on Instagram that she really shines.

She made headlines when she went on Instagram Live to make macaroni and cheese in her Instant Pot while dishing up civics lessons to her 500,000 followers. This wasn’t the first time she cooked and politicked, either. She spent Halloween on a livestream with her Instant Pot, making ramen, using the VCR filter, and even posting the results on her Pinterest account. Yes, she figured out how to make Pinterest political. It’s that social media savviness that makes her so frightening to the old guard. When conservatives come for her–and they have, either judging her clothing or unearthing videos of her dancing in high school–her social media clapbacks are already legendary (even within her own party) and she’s been in office less than a week. While Hillary Clinton was good, she wasn’t this good.

It makes sense that Ocasio-Cortez is a natural at social media–as the youngest member of Congress, she’s a millennial and social media is her natural platform. She unseated a long-time Democrat incumbent with a grassroots, shoestring campaign powered by social media. While the conservative wing of the political spectrum spends hours analyzing her every post, her supporters are smitten by having a representative in Congress who is truly representative of them in their mac-and-cheese eating, dancing in high school, Ben & Jerry’s loving ways. And when Fox News does come for her, she trolls them back by tweeting lyrics in Spanish, claiming they’re obsessed with her. “She makes politics seem relatable, doable, possible for any young person watching,” wrote ELLE magazine.

She’s not the only one in the new class of Congress that is good at social media, either.  As of this writing, 118,000 people viewed Boston’s new representative, Ayanna Pressley’s Instagram post declaring she was rising in “opposition to the occupant of the White House.” Minnesota congresswoman Ilhan Omar has 469,000 followers on her Instagram account, compared to incumbent Senator Ted Cruz who has 297,000.

Speaking of Cruz, he was very nearly unseated by a barely known congressman from El Paso named Beto who not only used his own social media outlets to campaign, but also managed to use Cruz’s social media to his advantage, like when Cruz tried to frighten people by posting a clip of O’Rourke speaking out against police brutality, which, much to Cruz’s chagrin, quickly went viral as people applauded his words. During the course of his campaign O’Rourke frequently went on Instagram Live to eat guac and chips, make homemade slime with his daughter, or visit Whataburger. It was his way of generating press for free, getting out his message directly to voters, and meeting his fans, or at least his 756,000 Instagram followers, where they were–online–and giving them the relatable, quirky, real content that they craved and hopefully driving them to the voting booth. It nearly worked, too. His unlikely bid to turn at least one senatorial seat in Texas blue turned into the closest race in 40 years, according to the Texas Tribune, falling only roughly 220,000 votes short out of 8.3 million.

As rumors swirl that he’s considering a run for president in 2020, O’Rourke’s dental-cleaning diatribe on border security earned plenty of guffaws but free publicity is still publicity. It’s silly, but it’s humanizing and effective and helps his message rise above the din of talking heads. If done well, social media can make people remember your good deeds  and your humanity. (Remember when New Jersey’s Senator Cory Booker, a potential 2020 presidential candidate, was the mayor of Newark and used to talk a constituent through a Hot Pocket crisis?)

As the new, diverse crop of representatives enter the U.S. Capitol, they seem to be bringing with them a level of transparency that strikes many as both refreshing and unprecedented. Sure, GOP House minority whip Kevin McCarthy shares pics of his dog, who is a very good girl, but it’s not the same as Ocasio-Cortez Instagramming her bus ride home from freshman orientation, Texas freshman Rep. Dan Crenshaw sharing video of his swearing in, Rep. Ilhan Omar snapping a selfie on the floor of the Capitol, Rep. Pressley toting Compass Coffee, or newly elected Deb Haaland walking into work, social media is making our government—the ones we elect and whose salaries we pay—seem like it’s actually made up of real people. Though it’s also an easy way to build some grassroots cred even when the reality is far different, like former Massachusetts Senator Scott Brown, a millionaire, posing by his pick-up truck in one of his first campaign ads.

So get ready for a presidential cycle that includes politicians in the kitchen, at Cheesecake Factory, hanging with their dogs, getting haircuts, and doing it all for the ‘gram (and the likes, too). Just don’t be surprised if some of them turn out to be Russian trolls purporting to be politicians doing embarrassing things on social media (after all, fake video technology is advancing fast).

These posters designed by Utah teens demand action on clean air

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Every year since 2015, two professors at Utah State University (USU) have hosted a poster-design competition for high school students to address a critical issue for the state: air quality. Edwin Stafford, a professor of marketing at USU’s business school and Roslynn Brain McCann of USU Extension, came up with the idea for the competition after a local advocacy group, the Cache Clean Air Consortium, hosted a conference at the university on the state’s troubling air quality. Utah’s valleys, in particular, tend to trap pollution from cars and wood-burning stoves (which are still commonly used in the state). In areas like Cache Valley, where USU is located, concentrations of particulate matter in the air often spike to unhealthy levels.

“Our population is kind of apathetic or ambivalent about air pollution,” Stafford says. The state, he adds, is relatively conservative, and conversations around sustainability tend not to gain traction. He and McCann wanted to think of a way to engage young people, who are generally more open-minded to sustainability concerns, on the topic. In the competition, they asked students to design posters calling for an end to vehicle idling, or encouraging people to carpool or “trip chain” (complete all errands in one go to diminish driving). Over the years, the number of students participating has grown to over 550 in four school districts, Stafford says, and he eventually wants the competition to expand its reach even further.

The posters are witty, clever, and often beautiful. Some contain pop-culture references: One winning poster from Logan High School in 2016 reinterpreted the Star Wars poster, calling it “Car Wars” and asking people to “resist the dark side” and “stop idling.” Each year, the winning posters are displayed in schools, offices, and public spaces like cafes throughout the participating towns, and Stafford says they’ve helped start a conversation about air quality in the state.

[Image: courtesy Utah High School Clean Air Poster Contest]
But beyond the posters being displayed, the competition has had another, unexpected effect on the discussion of Utah’s air quality. The students who participate, Stafford says, often end up altering their behavior to be more sustainable. But they also discuss the competition with their parents. The parents, in turn, feel compelled to alter their behavior to help the air.

After hearing anecdotal evidence that young peoples’ participation in the competition was affecting their parents’ behavior, Stafford and McCann set out to quantify the phenomenon this year. For the first time in the competition’s history, they sent out a survey to parents whose kids were working on poster designs. Around 71% said their kids discussed both the competition and air-quality issues with them; around half of those who engaged in discussions starting to change their behaviors, either by cutting back on idling or reducing car dependence. The effect was strongest, Stafford says, when kids recommended specific actions to their parents, rather than just vaguely encouraging them to care about air quality.

For Stafford and McCann, evidence of this chain reaction came as a source of optimism, but also as a bit of a surprise. In 2007, the Wall Street Journal published an article detailing the frustrations of parents whose children, having learned about sustainability initiatives in school, tried to bring them home and convince their parents to change their behavior. This phenomenon was named the “Inconvenient Youth” effect, in a play on Al Gore’s climate-change documentary, An Inconvenient Truth.

But in Utah, for the most part, parents were receptive to their children’s tips. Only around 5 of the 81 parents who responded to Stafford and McCann’s survey said they were annoyed by their kids’ requests to stop idling or consider carpooling; the vast majority, instead, said they felt the information was valuable. As one parent put it: Their kid “made it [clean-air action] reasonable in my head.”

Stafford and McCann, moving forward, want to expand the poster contest out to more high schools, and with this information, they plan to further strategize around the most effective ways for kids to bring this information home. “Between the posters being up, and the teens being these kinds of evangelists, so to speak, for the issue in their homes, we’re hoping these will be two legacies of the poster contest that can change the ambivalent attitude Utahns have toward air quality,” Stafford says.

Report: Slack is planning a direct IPO in 2019, like Spotify did last year

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Slack may bypass the marquee IPO underwriters like Goldman Sachs and go directly to the market with its upcoming public offering. So says a new report from the Wall Street Journal. If Slack does so, it will be the second major company to use a direct listing after Spotify did last April on the New York Stock Exchange. The Spotify IPO was considered by most to be a success.

The report says Slack is likely to hold its IPO in the second quarter of this year. The San Francisco-based company currently plans to use a direct listing, the WSJ report says, but it could also change its plans before the time comes.

We reached out to Slack for comment and will update if we hear back.

When traditional underwriters handle a big IPO, they line up big institutional investors ahead of time, and this helps establish the asking price for the stock when trading opens. A good deal of money is also made up front for the IPO-ing company.

Slack can afford to go without that quick cash. The company raised $427 million in new funding in August, giving it a valuation of $7.1 billion. On the plus side, Slack would avoid paying large underwriting fees, and its employees would avoid a waiting period before selling their stock.

In 2018, Slack had more than 8 million daily active users, including 3 million paying users. The company launched in 2013, offering a more functional way of conducting interoffice messaging and content sharing.

The company has enjoyed lots of media attention and investor hype, and likely deserved it. We’ll know for sure when the company goes public this year.

9 clever tech ideas from CES 2019

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CES is best-known for spectacles like roll-up TVs, foldable displays, and ping-pong-playing robots. But beyond all the eye candy, the tech industry’s annual trade show in Las Vegas brings plenty of smaller-scale innovations. These are the ideas that will actually matter to people, in large part because they’ll show up in real products that you can buy at reasonable prices.

Here are some of the cleverest ideas I saw at CES 2019:

The hassle-free car mount

[Photo: Jared Newman]
Accessory vendor iOttie already makes a clever car mount for smartphones with arms that collapse into place with the press of a button. Its new Auto Sense car mount requires even less effort: Just drop your phone into the cradle, and a pair of motorized arms will clamp down around the phone’s sides, holding it securely in place while providing a wireless charge. You can then press the release buttons on the mount’s sides to open the arms up again. The Auto Sense mount will ship in Q2 for $55.

[Photo: Jared Newman]

A model for multiple AIs

Voice controls have become a smart TV staple in recent years, but LG’s 2019 TVs are going a step further by combining two voice assistants under a single button. When you use the remote’s microphone button to ask for a particular program or genre, LG’s own ThinQ AI will provide a list of results across multiple apps. For other queries, like the weather or smart home control, Google Assistant takes over and provides the results instead. The two assistants can even hand off queries to one another, so you can say, “Tell me about Chris Evans” for a bio from Google, followed by, “What movies was he in?” for a list of films from LG. If we’ll use multiple AIs to get things done in the future, LG’s TVs provide a blueprint for how that could work, with each assistant playing to its strengths.

[Photo: Jared Newman]

A piano teacher that listens

Alexa was everywhere at CES, turning up in speakers, headphones, light switches, and even smoke alarms. But the neatest Alexa-enabled device of them all was Roland’s Go:Piano keyboard, which teaches aspiring pianists to play with a bank of built-in songs. The in-development Alexa version lets you ask for a specific tune, slow the tempo, or mute either the left- or right-hand track, and it can load songs from streaming music services for when you just want to jam along. When you’re finished playing, you can even ask Alexa to order a pizza.

Roland is hoping to launch the Alexa-enabled Go:Piano this fall, but hasn’t settled on a price yet. The non-Alexa version sells for $320.

[Photo: Jared Newman]

The double-decker laptop battery

Even if you’re generally happy with your MacBook’s battery life, sometimes you just need more. The Linedock effectively doubles the charge with an aluminum-clad battery slab whose footprint perfectly matches the bottom of a 13-inch MacBook Pro. The U-shaped USB-C cable both charges the laptop and provides access to several connection types that Apple’s laptop omits, like HDMI, USB-A, and an SD card slot. There’s even an option for built-in solid state storage.

The Linedock started shipping late last year for $299 and up, and currently works best when you’re using your Mac at a desk. The makers are now working on a set of magnetized replacement screws for the MacBook that will hold the battery firmly in place, enhancing the whole set-up’s portability. A version for 15-inch MacBook Pro models is coming in 2019 as well.

[Photo: Jared Newman]

Gaming mode activated

Gaming phones are all the rage in the Android world, and Nubia’s Red Magic Mars phone embraces the trend with touch-sensitive trigger buttons and a liquid cooling system for longer play sessions. What really sets the Red Magic Mars apart, though, is its physical switch on the side that can kill background apps, overclock the processor, turn on the phone’s RGB lighting, and launch into a gaming menu. The only way to exit this mode is to flick the switch back off, ensuring that you won’t burn excess battery on overclocking and lighting effects while you check Instagram.

The Red Mars will launch in the United States this quarter for $399 and up.

[Photo: Jared Newman]

A groove for your ‘socket

With the new Otter + Pop, the extra bulk of an Otterbox phone case comes in handy for more than just drop protection. It’s a collaboration with Popsockets, the maker of finger grips that fasten to phone backs, and proves an indented spot on the back where you can attach the grip of your choice. The special twist-on version of Popsockets means you don’t have deal with adhesive that can wear out, and when the Popsocket is collapsed, it allows your phone to lay flat instead of leaving a wart-like protrusion on the back. The Otter + Pop case will launch this spring for $50, assuming the frozen-treat brand doesn’t take umbrage with the name.

[Photo: Jared Newman]

Switches that power themselves

While plenty of companies now offer connected buttons and switches to control your smart home, most of them run on battery power. Senic’s Nuimo Click instead harnesses the kinetic energy from pressing the button itself, then sends the signal to a hardwired hub. That way, you can control Philips Hue bulbs and Sonos speaker systems without ever having to think about charging your switches. The Nuimo Click launched in late 2018, with a hub and two switches selling for $220. More device control is coming later this year with support for Apple’s HomeKit.

[Photo: Jared Newman]

A clock that knows your agenda

Lenovo is hoping to occupy a spot on your nightstand with the Smart Clock, a Google Assistant-powered device with a 4-inch screen that can tell the time, play music, control smart home devices, and tell you the weather, among other things. Its cleverest feature, however, is a smart alarm that will suggest wake-up times based on your calendar, usage patterns, and eventually, your typical commute times. It’ll also try to wake you up gently by lighting up the display a few minutes before the alarm goes off. The Smart Clock will launch this spring for $79.

Smarter DVR scheduling

TiVo die-hards will soon get another reason to hang on tight to their DVRs when the company adds automatic sporting event scheduling. Working with a sports data firm called Thuuz, your TiVo will be able to monitor the length of each game and keep the recording going for extra innings or overtime. That means you don’t have to waste storage space by adding hours of buffer time to your recordings. DVR may be an old technology, but it’s still got some innovation left in it.

You don’t have to be the top boss to be a purpose champion

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As companies increasingly talk about their values and place in society, many managers have started to talk about leading with “purpose.” Ideo designer and doctoral student Nina Montgomery invited several senior executives to share their own experiences navigating the intersection of business and social responsibility; she compiled their essays in a book, Perspectives on Purpose:Leading Voices on Building Brands and Businesses for the Twenty-First Century, which will be released in February. In this excerpt, Maryam Banikarim, who has has served as a senior vice president at NBCUniversal and chief marketing officer of Univision, Gannett, and Hyatt Hotels Corporation, notes that corporations that are serious about mission and values need a a high-ranking purpose champion to keep the entire company on track.

I’ve seen purpose led by human resource leaders, innovation leaders, operations leaders, and others, depending on the company and its players. The purpose champion can come from any discipline as long as he or she is someone senior enough to be directly connected to the CEO, someone who believes in purpose, and someone who will chase it like their life depends on it.

There are a few characteristics I’ve seen that are particularly critical for purpose champions to possess. The first is an instinct for action. If the CEO plays the lead advocacy role, the champion, as his or her right hand, must be a lead “doer,” or activator. The purpose champion mobilizes people, liaises with the agency partners involved, and raises their hand to say ‘how does this align with purpose’ in critical decision-making conversations. Great champions of purpose are also great listeners. Purpose must be authentic to an organization’s people, and the purpose champion needs to hear the language, sentiments, and themes bubbling up and be insistent that the organization’s purpose represent these views. I’ve often found that being an ‘outsider’ new to a business has been immensely valuable here since I was able to serve as an objective, unbiased, and empathetic listener.

Finally, purpose champions must also be top notch leaders. Purpose requires all heads of business to deploy and advocate, and it requires all employees around the world to participate and own it. A great champion of purpose is a cheerleader, captain, coach. Sometimes you cheer others on from the sidelines. Sometimes you authoritatively call the shots. Sometimes you are on the field leading the play–rolling up your sleeves and doing. A good purpose champion knows when to wear each hat, and how to wear it successfully.

At the onset, you need this senior, dogged purpose champion who “gets it” and has a mandate from the CEO to bring their purpose agenda to life. In other words, the purpose champion needs to “own” purpose. We all know “owners,” who pick up slack no matter how big or small. We also know “renters,” who think it’s not their job, or wait for others to do the work before them. To make purpose a reality you need someone who is an owner. Someone who will make sure the ball doesn’t get dropped no matter what. At NBC Universal, for example, even though we had the green light from then-CEO Jeff Zucker to do purpose work, it took dogged conviction to actually get it done at a time when the company was being sold to cable giant Comcast, which planned to bring in new leadership.

We worked hand in hand with human resources and communications across both organizations, being conscious of the political dynamics that were in play but also staying true to representing every brand within the combined portfolio. The project started with Jeff Zucker, but was finished for incoming CEO Steve Burke–a tricky dance to say the least! But an important one to ensure that the work of purpose would live on as the CEO mantle was being passed. My role as the purpose champion here was to ensure that no one dropped the ball when there were so many things competing for CEO attention during this time of organizational transition.

The purpose champion never does this alone; he or she is always working with others to make purpose happen. Purpose is a team sport and picking your team is critical. Over the years I’ve had the privilege to work with so many incredible owners on purpose work. The team included many–so many I can’t possibly name them all here. In fact, it’s probably more of a small army than a team. But two key people, Debbie Goetz and Sandra Micek, have been on several of these purpose journeys with me and I am grateful for these two fervent purpose owners and evangelists. They are truly incredible. Debbie, Sandra, and I all had different roles wherever we went–the purpose team should never be clones of each other–but brought our different perspectives and styles together. For example, at Gannett, while Sandra used purpose to overhaul the USA Today brand inside and outside the company, Debbie used purpose to galvanize over one hundred local and digital portfolio companies to work together and with partners in ways they never knew possible. At the same time, I worked with human resources and investor relations to reframe the way we hired and retained talent, and evolved our positioning from a value investment to a growth stock.

It’s the combination of all these efforts that allowed for a successful turnaround at Gannett. And this would not have been possible without the core team. This core team is made up of early adopters who can help cascade purpose throughout the organization–because at the end of the day, success depends on bringing others into the fold. Think of purpose like a movement: you need to find the right, resonant message and get people to believe it, adopt it, and then to champion it themselves. You know your job is done when purpose can live on and grow without you.

Excerpted from Perspectives on Purpose: Leading Voices on Building Brands and Businesses for the Twenty-First Centuryedited by Nina Montgomery with permission of Routledge, a member of Taylor & Francis Group. Copyright © 2019.

California has a new plan to give a monthly check to low-income residents

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California, one of the most unaffordable states to live in in the country, is taking a fairly significant step to make itself more livable for working people. The newly sworn-in Governor Gavin Newsom, in his proposal for the state budget, intends to more than double the California Earned Income Tax, which returns up to $2,879 to families and individuals working at or below the full-time minimum wage threshold.

The CalEITC was introduced in 2015 and supplements the federal EITC, which is widely considered one of the most effective, national poverty-prevention measures in the U.S. The Federal EITC grants annual payments to families making as much as $45,802, but the CalEITC is targeted specifically at helping the lowest-income residents of the state (families making less than $22,000 annually). Last year, the CalEITC was funded with $400 million annually, and reached around 2 million families. Rebranded as the Working Families Tax Credit, Newsom’s proposal will raise the program funding to $1 billion. This will enable more assistance to go to the very low income families the CalEITC already serves, and bring an additional 400,000 low-income families into the program. In an economically unequal state like California, this expansion of assistance for people across a wider range of the poverty spectrum is crucial.

Newsom’s proposal has largely been met with support as it prepares to move to the state legislature for approval. But an aspect that’s very exciting to Adam Ruben, campaigns director for the Economic Security Project (ESP)–a nonprofit focused on creating equity through cash-assistance and basic income programs–is how the tax credit will be delivered. Instead of the money reaching families as a lump sum once a year as part of their tax refund, Newsom’s budget calls for the payments to be delivered in smaller chunks monthly.

“The typical pattern with the EITC is that you get deeper and deeper into debt over the course of a year,” Ruben says, “and then you use the big payment at tax time to try to pay everything off and break even.” Giving people the option to receive the credit on a monthly basis will help people plan their budgets on a more immediate basis. Benefits like food stamps are delivered monthly, so families receiving both will have a more accurate sense of their financial landscape. And in months when a household finds itself on more stable financial footing, they might be able to put some of the tax credit money aside in savings. “What we’re seeing is the idea of the importance of a steady drumbeat of financial security throughout the year,” Ruben says.

Newsom is by no means the first politician to propose modernizing the EITC through switching to a monthly payment structure. Bonnie Watson Coleman, a representative from New Jersey, proposed doing so in the EITC Modernization Act of 2018, a bill she introduced last year. And Senator Kamala Harris’s LIFT The Middle Class Act, introduced last year as a rebuttal to Donald Trump’s tax bill, proposes the same thing. The idea of steady, monthly cash payments also lies at the foundation of basic income, the concept of lifting the poverty floor by equipping people with regular, no-strings-attached stipends.

But Ruben cautions against comparing Newsom’s budget proposal and bills like Harris’s and Coleman’s too closely to a true basic income. In its purest form, basic income is universal, delivered to all people, regardless of employment or socioeconomic status. The legislative and budget proposals we’re seeing around EITC expansion are targeted specifically at people who work but still struggle to make ends meet. “It is recognizing that for many people who work, it’s not enough,” Ruben says. Even raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour–as states like California are in the process of doing–often does not provide enough income to people. Often, they can’t secure enough shifts, or the cost of childcare adds an extra burden. Especially in California, exorbitant housing costs keep that necessity out of reach.

Newsom’s budget proposal aims to tackle these challenges. It will raise the household income threshold to over $30,000 (or what someone would take home working full-time at the projected $15 per hour minimum wage) to include more families. And the expanded funding will grant parents with children under six an additional $500 per year. That may not seem like a lot, Ruben says, but in focus groups run by the ESP over the past year, one woman said anyone who looks at that money and responds in that way “has never had to choose between paying rent and buying food.”

It’s important to emphasize, Ruben says, that Newsom’s budget proposal is just scratching the surface of what the state could do in terms of delivering more money to low-income working people. Specifics on how the Working Families Tax Credit will be funded, for instance, are still scant, but the state will mostly rely on adjustments to corporate taxes to raise the extra $600 million. Harris, in her Senate bill, proposes raising the funds for monthly cash assistance payments by raising taxes on wealthy Americans (instead of rolling them back, as Trump has done).

Newsom’s budget doesn’t touch personal income taxes as a funding source for tax credit expansion, but it certainly could in the future, Ruben says. In a report released in December 2018 calling for an expansion of the CalEITC, the ESP says the income threshold for the credit should be raised to $75,000 to truly acknowledge income disparity and unaffordability in the state. California would need to raise significantly more funding for the program to reach that goal, Ruben says, and it’s not inconceivable the state could turn to personal incomes of the wealthy to make it happen. “In every poll we’ve conducted on the subject, around 80% of people support the idea that the wealthiest people should pay more to even out the economy,” Ruben says.

California’s new budget is setting the state up to lead, both in terms of how cash assistance is prioritized, and how it’s delivered, and Ruben says at least 10 other states are exploring similar EITC modernization efforts.


4 reasons leaders should be able to do any job at the company (even the entry level ones)

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When people think of leaders who carry the illustrious title of CEO, they might envision someone who sits in a plush office all day, looks out of a big window, and has a personal assistant to bring them coffee. (By the way, did you say you wanted that with sugar and cream, or just hot and gently stirred?)

However, most successful CEOs, both with established brands or startups, will tell you very quickly that this couldn’t be further from the truth. In actuality, many successful leaders have had to roll up their sleeves to get into the “grit and grime” of hard work in order to grow their companies. It’s those menial tasks, the stuff no else wants to do, even the downright dirty work, that helped them achieve the level of success they now enjoy.

As a veteran startup leader, I have yet to see a successful company with leadership that wasn’t afraid to put on a hard hat, throw on some work boots, and get right into the weeds of the most “unenjoyable” tasks that were required for them to sustain or grow their business.

Take me, for example. When I first started Newchip, I was sleeping in a 100-ish-square-foot office (henceforth called the closet) that I leased while renting out my apartment on Airbnb to pay the bills for the office and to meet payroll. It just made more sense since I was at the office nonstop anyway (Hey, if Elon could do it, so could I). However, living at an office was no walk in the park because I had to make it without certain amenities that naturally come with the comforts of home. And while I definitely missed having a real bed, warm showers, and a full kitchen (mostly, my bed), I also realized that this sacrifice was necessary in order to build my company with the limited resources I had at the time.


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Ironically, even as my company started to grow, and I was able to staff up, there were still many times that I was found in the muck and mire of cleaning up the conference room after meetings, sweeping the office floors to keep the place tidy for the next investor’s meeting, and yes, even taking out the trash. How’s that for stroking your ego?

This is why it’s so important to understand that leadership can often come with highs and lows. For example: Picture a day in which you were finally able to land millions of dollars from some of your key investors. (It’s time to celebrate, right?) But also on this same day, you have to throw on some jeans, grab a T-shirt from the drawer, and head right back to the office to make your own copies, send over your own paperwork, and order a pizza just so you have something to eat after a long day.

Despite the hardships, the great thing about doing the dirty work is that as you grow and scale your teams, you have a fundamental understanding of every aspect of what it takes to run your business–because you’ve done it all. With this in mind, here are four great reasons not to be afraid of doing the dirty work:

It shows humility

If it needs to get done and you are the only one with the bandwidth to do it, then be willing to it take on, regardless of how big or small. At the end of the day, it shows that you’re willing and able to pitch in wherever needed. It also shows humility and creates an atmosphere for excellent teamwork. By demonstrating that there’s no task that’s beneath you, you’ll inspire loyalty that can never be earned otherwise. Even if it’s just serving as an extra set of hands during a busy time or taking over for an employee who needs a quick 15-minute break, employees who see you contribute in these small but significant ways will be much more willing to do the same themselves.

It takes the focus off your title

Leadership isn’t about seniority, rank, or entitlement. In fact, great leaders don’t care about any of those things. Launching a business takes vision, resourcefulness, determination, and a willingness to get down and dirty. A strong leader doesn’t just tell their team how to work, a strong leader models this behavior in everything they do–whether it’s an elevated task like creating the company’s big vision or day-to-day things like working alongside service reps to help them answer phone calls.

It identifies roadblocks and pain points

As a leader, your time is immensely valuable and it’s also in short supply. This is especially true during the phase of scaling your business. During this time, you have to have a good pulse on all the areas of your business so you can easily identify the gaps and friction points. Being in the trenches is a good way to accomplish this.


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If you have a customer service problem, handle the matter yourself. This allows you to learn about any rough spots firsthand. If you have a supply challenge, take the time to dig into the details yourself so you can determine the best solution. You will gain a fundamental understanding of how to make things operate more smoothly, which will, in turn, support long-term sustainable growth.

It helps you sweat

You can’t build a successful business without sweat equity. For the CEO, this usually means actual sweat. That’s true for companies in every industry, from tech to finance to food. You simply have to use your elbow grease. Even genius developers and programmers have found themselves not only coding software programs but also poring over financial statements or managing invoices at 2 a.m.

While this is very time consuming, it allows you and your dedicated team to handle multiple job functions in-house without extra cash compensation, as a way to save costs while you grow your organization. In the end, this will all pay off.

Doing the dirty work isn’t always fun but it can provide you with some very valuable insights and personal growth opportunities along the way. Running a successful organization requires you to be ready to dive in and do whatever it takes to keep your team moving forward.

Ryan Rafols is the founder and CEO of Newchip.

What to do when your new company name is shared by a gang of criminal fraudsters

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Last month, a North Carolina marketing agency formerly called Textivia was all set to announce its rebrand to 3VE when partner David Christopher received an ominous email.

“Goodbye 3ve,” read part of the subject line of an automated message from Google.

It wasn’t that the internet giant had anything against the 15-person agency. It was just that the name, which partner and COO Neal Maier says cost more than $150,000 to develop, including internal labor costs, turned out to also be a code name that FBI investigators and tech firms had used to refer to an alleged multimillion-dollar international fraud ring.

The code name was revealed by federal prosecutors and investigators at Google and security firm White Ops in November, and it first came on the marketing agency’s radar when the email arrived heralding Google’s role in taking down a massive automated botnet tied to the alleged fraud.

“Coincidentally, we were a couple of days away from notifying our clients that this [rebranding] announcement was going to come on January 3,” says Maier.

To make matters worse, the alleged crimes were themselves linked to online advertising: Prosecutors say eight people indicted last month were involved in creating bogus websites to run online ads and driving malware-infected computers to those sites, where they impersonated human viewers to collect payments from advertisers.

That meant online searches for 3VE, even with industry-specific keywords like “marketing” or “advertising,” would turn up coverage of the accused fraudsters. That could confuse potential clients and employees and make it hard to even find the agency’s online presence.

“Pretty instantly we knew the brand was dead”

“Pretty instantly we knew the brand was dead, especially being that it was in our niche,” Maier says. “There’s just no clear path to overcome it.”

The marketing firm, which is now playfully calling itself The Agency Without A Name, had started on the rebranding last March. Partners felt the company had outgrown the name Textivia, which originated with a text-messaging trivia game built early in the firm’s lifetime, and which some potential customers found difficult to pronounce.

The company, which has grown into broader marketing and strategy consulting, had adopted a process it calls “solve, move, evolve,” Maier says. That, along with the fact that the firm is led by three partners, inspired the name. The 3VE name was set to officially launch on January 3, and the company had already designed a website, acquired the costly 3ve.com domain, and filed legal paperwork to register the new name.

Now, it’s asking the public to help come up with a new identity. The Agency Without a Name is hoping to shed that status over the next couple of months, running a contest to drum up ideas for another new moniker.

“What we’re looking for is a name that’s unique and also reflects not only who we are but also what we are,” he says.

While the crowdsourcing effort is likely to bring in some publicity, Maier says it will also be easier for the agency than coming up with another name in-house so soon after being burned.

“When you’re heartbroken, it’s hard to paint another masterpiece,” he says.

Not the first to suffer from unfortunate coincidences: ISIS, Ayds, Osama

The agency isn’t the first organization to have to change its name after such an unfortunate coincidence: After the terrorist group ISIS began to draw headlines in the Middle East, many similarly named organizations and projects around the world changed their names. A weight loss supplement candy called Ayds saw sales plummet during the 1980s, after the similarly pronounced immune disease became prominent. And in 2009, a Chicago hair salon saw business grow after renaming from Ossama’s Hair Design to Obama’s Hair Design, honoring the newly elected president and removing associations with Osama bin Laden.

“The rule of thumb for this probably is: If the negative name association is too big for you to resist it and absorb the difficulties, consider changing names,” says Chris Silver Smith, president and strategist at Dallas online marketing company Argent Media, in an email. He’s previously written about other issues with unfortunate name overlaps.

“A small, new company facing a hugely visible negative news spike should move as quickly as possible to get out from under the cloud,” he suggests.

The Agency Without a Name is looking to collect some ideas by the end of this month, with the hopes of having a name and logo ready by late February, says Maier.

“We don’t play the victim in this–we shed a tear or two, but immediately you’ve got to pull yourselves up by your bootstraps,” Maier says.

Unpaid government workers turn to gig platforms like Fiverr for help

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A veteran American diplomat is currently doing two very different jobs. The first is the one she’s trained for and has held for many years: Analyzing the complex political affairs of a strategically important country for the U.S. State Department. The other is reviewing cosmetic products. According to a report in the Washington Post, that latter position is the only job she’s being paid for at the moment, thanks to the current government shutdown, which now threatens to become the longest in U.S history.

This is the predicament that over 420,000 federal employees find themselves in. Some employees who hold positions deemed essential are working without pay, while roughly 380,000 have been placed on unpaid leave or furloughed.

At New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport alone, as many as 170 TSA employees have called out sick each day this week. At Dallas-Fort Worth International, call-outs are up 200% to 300%. This is ironic, given that the government is shut down due to an alleged security threat at the border, yet TSA agents calling out at record levels leave our borders less secure.


Related:What’s the economic impact of a government shutdown?


One of the saddest parts of the whole sordid affair is that some say the shutdown seems to be disproportionately affecting low-wage workers, including those who clean some of the most visible symbols of our democracy: Washington, D.C., monuments, museums, and government buildings. Yet these workers are the very people who historically don’t win congressional approval to recoup lost wages once the government reopens. To borrow a well-worn phrase from President Trump, “Very unfair.”

So what do these hundreds of thousands of employees and contractors do when the U.S. government tells them they’re not getting paid? They turn to the gig economy and sign on with companies like Fiverr, Uber, Airbnb, and TaskRabbit for work.

On Fiverr, our data shows that of all gigs opened by U.S.-based sellers in the seven weeks prior to the shutdown, 0.46% out of roughly 50,000 came from Washington, D.C. Since the shutdown began on December 22, we have seen that number jump to 0.65%. That represents a 41% relative increase in services being offered in that single geographic area. This spike (particularly in services such as online marketing, programming, and tech) is especially significant, given that it took place over the holidays. At this time across the U.S.–with the exception of a select few markets–Fiverr saw a decrease in new gigs opened. During the same time last year, there was a 26% relative decrease of U.S. gigs opened in the D.C. area.

One of those select few markets is the California-Lexington Park area of Maryland. This is an area where federal workers represent almost 16% of the population–the most in the nation. There, Fiverr experienced a whopping 350% increase in gigs opened.

While Fiverr is happy our platform can offer some financial security to those affected by the shutdown, we certainly don’t see this increase in activity as a good thing. There are plenty of people on the platform who are earning six figures, and even millions of dollars. But we also know that building a successful business on Fiverr doesn’t happen overnight, and in the short term, gig work isn’t comparable to their salaries. These people need to pay their mortgages, pay for childcare, and put food on the table for their families. Right now they can’t do so because the administration believes a routine political dispute is more important than their well-being.

The shutdown is affecting everyone in one way or another. Whether it’s deadly accidents that are going uninvestigated by the National Transportation Safety Board or the piles of trash and overflowing toilets in our national parks, the whole country seems to be stuck in an unrelenting downward spiral until Democrats and Republicans come to some sort of agreement and reopen the government. Let’s hope that happens soon.


Brent Messenger is the global head of community at Fiverr.

How to watch the NFL divisional playoffs online without cable

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American football fans are gearing up for the final games of the NFL season this weekend, and that means many who haven’t been paying attention will probably start to tune in. For cord cutters, that can be tricky stuff, especially when you realize that you ditched cable a while ago, have been watching Netflix almost exclusively, and have basically forgotten how to watch regular TV.

First, the good news: You only need access to three networks—NBC, CBS, and Fox—to catch all the divisional playoff games on Saturday and Sunday. Here’s the lineup:

  • NBC: Saturday, January 12, 4:35 p.m. ET: Colts at Chiefs
  • Fox: Saturday, January 12, 8:15 p.m. ET: Cowboys at Rams
  • CBS: Sunday, January 13, 1:05 p.m. ET: Chargers at Patriots
  • Fox: Sunday, January 13, 4:40 p.m. ET: Eagles at Saints

If you’re looking to live-stream these games on your smart TV, computer, or mobile device, you’ll need to access NBC, Fox, and CBS either through their websites or mobile apps (with pay-TV login credentials), or through a standalone streaming service that lets you watch live TV. I’ve rounded up a few services below that offer some combination of the three, but fair warning: The networks aren’t offered in all areas, so it’s best to check your zip code before you sign up.

A lot of these services have been running NFL promotions in the lead-up to the end of the season, so you might be able to get a free week. However, you may want to keep your subscription active at least until the conference championships next weekend and the Super Bowl on Sunday, February 3. CBS is airing the big game this year. Good luck!

Travel to these 13 places if you want more than just a vacation

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Certain travel destinations have the power to teach us something new and surprising and drastically alter our perspective on ourselves and the world. We may discover a spiritual connection to a certain culture, learn more about our roots, discover how to unplug and more deeply connect to the people we love, or find that a place inspires us creatively or professionally.

We asked the Thrive Global community to share their most meaningful travel memories from the past year to inspire our 2019 wanderlust.

A “someday” trip to Paris

“My sister and I had been talking about going to Paris together since we were little girls, but had never took the time to plan things out. It was always a ‘someday’ conversation when we talked about it. So we finally scheduled the trip after serving as my father’s caretakers at the end of his life. We realized how precious family time is, and we didn’t want to put it off any longer. It not only brought us closer, but also was a meaningful way to honor my father’s memory and his love of travel. Those moments will stay with us for the rest of our lives–especially seeing the sunset from the top of the Eiffel Tower.”

—Mim Senft, CEO, Blooming Grove, NY

A transformational climb in Switzerland

“I went to the Berner Oberland region in Switzerland. I’d never seen such breathtaking beauty up until that point. Cowbells rang in the distance as livestock grazed. The air was crisp and clear. We made it to the top of Birg, which was the hardest physical and mental effort I’ve experienced. But the climb was transformational–my emotions ranged from fear, to anger, to awe, and gratitude. This unforgettable moment will hold a place in my heart for the rest of my life. I will definitely return there.”

—Tracy LaPorte, health and wellness coach, Alexandria, VA

A connect-to-your-heritage trip to Europe

“Visiting Berlin, Prague, and Amsterdam this past August was unforgettable. While I’m not particularly religious, I felt deeply connected to my Jewish heritage while learning how the Holocaust began in Berlin and then spread throughout much of Europe. The memorials in each city were especially touching, like Berlin’s Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, the Terezin Concentration Camp Memorial near Prague, and the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam, where I sobbed openly. It was a meaningful, enlightening, and surprisingly uplifting experience.”

—Shira Miller, chief communications officer, Atlanta

Strengthening generational bonds at “The Happiest Place on Earth”

“The most meaningful destination I went to this year was Walt Disney World, with my family. Although it was hectic, this was a special trip for my mother who had wanted to go for years, and finally got the chance to go with her children and grandchildren. It reminded me of the joy and love of family life, which is something that can get lost as we strive to do our best in all areas of life everyday.”

—Rob Whitcomb, director, Rochester, NY

A bucket list trip to South Africa

“I loved South Africa, which was the destination on my husband’s bucket list. My daughters and I gave him that trip as a gift for his 65th birthday. South Africa, from the safari, to Cape Town and the Cape Winelands, was all a giant surprise! I encourage everyone to visit!”

—Allyson Altit, leisure travel expert, Israel

Slowing down amid the natural beauty of Sedona

“My husband, parents, and I went to Sedona, AZ, in the late fall of 2018, and took in its natural beauty. It really gave us the opportunity to slow down, breathe, talk for hours while hiking, and focus on what’s important in life: family and health. We are planning more family vacations this year based on experiences–rather than just locations to eat and drink–including Spain, Mexico, and Chile.”

—Eve Dawes, founder, Las Vegas

Connecting over food, art, and nature in Costa Rica

“When my mother (who happens to be 93 years young) agreed to go on a family reunion with my adult children and grandchildren, we traveled to beautiful Costa Rica. Four generations of us connected over cooked meals, swimming, creating art, watching toucans, and ‘living outdoors’ at Sunrise Sunset Retreat on the central Pacific coast.”

—Pennie Sempell, health advocate, San Francisco

A life-changing journey to Nepal

“In 2018, I traveled to Nepal to hike. When I came home, everything changed. I let go of the old habits that didn’t work for me, and realized that I had been living in a box with the hopes of playing it safe. After that trip, I decided to build on the inspiration that I found in Nepal. So in 2019, I am manifesting my dream and moving to L.A. I have so much gratitude for what Nepal has shown me, and I am beyond excited for this new year!”

—Aleks Slijepcevic, project coordinator, Newark, DE

Walking through Holocaust history in Dachau

“The city that most impacted me was Dachau, and the WWII concentration camp tucked inside it. As a 22-year-old Jewish girl living in America, I had found the Holocaust’s atrocities to be soul-shattering, yet intangible. There’s also a stark difference between reading about and experiencing places. As my dad and I walked through the camp, I began to feel the pain of all those who lost their lives during WWII, and I physically ached. That visit, though heartbreaking, taught me about the importance of educating future generations so that we can learn from our mistakes. Exiting the gates of Dachau was nauseating, and an act that so many of my people have never experienced. But as we walked away, I vowed to always remember that moment.”

—Samantha Sontag, Thrive Global Campus editor-at-large from University of Florida, Gainesville, FL

Finding inspiration in Egypt

“The pyramids, tombs, museums, and monuments . . . despite consuming scores of books, websites, BBC documentaries, and DVDs, I was still unprepared for the stunning grandeur of the art and architecture of ancient Egypt. It was simultaneously humbling and uplifting. I had trouble wrapping my mind around the artistic and technological accomplishments of these humans from thousands of years ago!

“Interacting with the modern-day Egyptians, however, was the absolute best part of the trip for me. They were so warm and welcoming! I will never forget the children who raced along the banks of the Nile, waving madly, smiling, and yelling greetings to us as we sailed past. Fishermen in traditional dress, kids in school uniforms, teenage girls wearing jeans, T-shirts, and headscarves, and matrons in full hijab would all wave at us with shy smiles. Egypt has beautiful people, delicious food, sunshine, and pyramids–it was unforgettable!”

—Sharon Watts, emotional freedom techniques practitioner, Austin

Indulging your inner adventurer in Greenland

“Sometimes you choose a destination, and other times it chooses you. I’m grateful that I acted on my urge to travel to Greenland. Remote and unblemished, Greenland has a lot of appeal to the adventurous traveler–icebergs, whales, and postcard-perfect villages–but it was my time spent at Camp Ice Cap that changed me. For 24 hours, we hiked and explored the vast ice sheet, and at times, it was overwhelming to be only one of nine people atop the expanse of white/blue ice. I felt like I’d been on a spiritual pilgrimage.”

—Zoe Macfarlane, freelance travel writer, Auckland, NZ

Celebrating the old and the new in Pompeii

“My husband and I had the privilege of touring Pompeii last fall during our honeymoon. It was an enlightening reminder of how short life is, which is something that we all readily acknowledge. Seeing a civilization taken by surprise during the eruption of nearby the Mount Vesuvius volcano was significant to us as newlyweds. We were in awe of this ancient Roman city’s modern function and form: from running water, spas, and deliberate urban planning, to homes with mosaic tile, courtyards, and atriums. Everything in this city was so well thought out, much like our own lives. It was another wake-up call for us to live each day to the fullest, to count our blessings and to be grateful for every modern-day luxury and to not take anything for granted.”

—Jennifer Zar, marketing, New York City

Immersing yourself in paradise (and finding inner peace) on Terceira

This article originally appeared on Thrive Global and is reprinted with permission.

“The enchanting island of Terceira, part of the Portuguese Azores and one of many archipelago islands, is in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. It’s paradise–unassuming and genuine. For me, it was a great place to test myself. I learned Portuguese on YouTube beforehand, I ran, wrote, and recorded songs. But I also found inner peace and a renewed belief in myself that I’m able to take on anything, even by myself. I plan to head back there in 2019!”

—Craig Dubecki, singer/musician, speaker, author, Ontario, Canada


This article originally appeared on Thrive Global and is reprinted with permission. 

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