News You Can Use: 2/19/2020


Photo by Dawid Zawiła on Unsplash

  • How Millennials Became The Burnout Generation

    I never thought the system was equitable. I knew it was winnable for only a small few. I just believed I could continue to optimize myself to become one of them. And it’s taken me years to understand the true ramifications of that mindset. I’d worked hard in college, but as an old millennial, the expectations for labor were tempered. We liked to say we worked hard, played hard — and there were clear boundaries around each of those activities. Grad school, then, is where I learned to work like a millennial, which is to say, all the time. My new watchword was “Everything that’s good is bad, everything that’s bad is good”: Things that should’ve felt good (leisure, not working) felt bad because I felt guilty for not working; things that should’ve felt “bad” (working all the time) felt good because I was doing what I thought I should and needed to be doing in order to succeed.

    https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/annehelenpetersen/millennials-burnout-generation-debt-work

  • How to demonstrate 3 important soft skills during an interview

    “When I’m assessing new talent, I want to see how the individual can create ease in a room, connect quickly with peers, and demonstrate capability,” she says. “All of that is done through soft skills of conversation starting, putting people at ease, creating an environment that leads to productivity. It means waiting for your interviewer to finish their sentences before starting, being introspective about the answer, and connecting with them as a person.”

    “Though interviews can be rehearsed, a good conversation is one of the strongest indicators that a candidate has the soft skills needed to excel in a given position,” says Essenfeld.

    https://www.fastcompany.com/90463823/how-to-demonstrate-3-important-soft-skills-during-an-interview

  • How to use skepticism
  • Why every workday needs to be fun (and how to have it)

    Of course, back in the days of clients who overpaid, of overhead that was used to fund more overhead, and of computers that cost $5,000 and can’t be found on eBay for $5, there were a whole lot more people doing the same work that a whole lot fewer people do today. This is where I (and the science) argue that a layer of fat in the workplace, in all its iterations, is a good thing. It acts as insulation from burnout, anxiety, stress, and everything else these poor young people experience every day as they die a slow death while making a living.

    From a practical standpoint, this is not about installing a climbing wall in the conference room or setting up a keg near the coffee maker. We’re talking minutes of investment, not mountains of money. And it must come from the top: Fun and productivity are not an oxymoron but a generous paradox. CEOs, especially boomer CEOs, may have forgotten how much fun they used to have at work and how that fun helped develop them as leaders.

    https://www.fastcompany.com/90460615/why-every-workday-needs-to-be-fun-and-how-to-have-it

News You Can Use: 6/26/2019


Photo by Ümit Yıldırım on Unsplash

  • To Take Down Big Tech, They First Need to Reinvent the Law

    For decades, antitrust regulation has been overwhelmingly focused on the welfare of the consumer. No cost to the consumer, no problem. That opened the door for Google, Facebook, Apple and Amazon — which offered digital services that were cheap or free — to become immensely profitable and powerful.

    Now a backlash is mounting as renegade scholars try to reverse years of established doctrine that they say does not appropriately take the clout of those companies into account. Economic absolutism is making way for other considerations as antitrust goes back to its roots.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/20/technology/tech-giants-antitrust-law.html

  • GDPR Has Been a Boon for Google and Facebook

    The rules have also made it harder for third parties to collect lucrative personal information like location data in Europe to target ads. This gives the tech giants another advantage: They have direct relationships with consumers that use their products, allowing them to ask for consent directly from a much larger pool of individuals.

    “GDPR has tended to hand power to the big platforms because they have the ability to collect and process the data,” says Mark Read, CEO of advertising giant WPP PLC. It has “entrenched the interests of the incumbent, and made it harder for smaller ad-tech companies, who ironically tend to be European.”

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/gdpr-has-been-a-boon-for-google-and-facebook-11560789219

  • Why a great education means engaging with controversy
  • How 13 Became the Internet’s Age of Adulthood

    In his initial bill, then-Rep. Markey said a child was someone under 16. But there was pushback from e-commerce companies about cutting off their access to this lucrative market. Those companies found an unlikely ally in civil liberties groups.

    The fear: Requiring teens to obtain parental permission might curtail their ability to access information about birth control and abortion, or resources for getting help in abusive situations, according to Kathryn Montgomery, who ran the Center for Media Education, the group that had nudged the FTC to investigate kids’ sites in the first place. “I agreed that those were concerns,” she said.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-13-became-the-internets-age-of-adulthood-11560850201