• Trustworthy leaders drive organizational success in the face of rapid change
    www.fastcompany.com
    National Leadership Day, which takes place every Feb. 20, offers a chance to reflect on what truly defines leadership not just strategy or decision-making, but the ability to build trust. In an era of rapid change, when teams look to leaders for stability and direction, trust is the invisible currency that fuels organizational success.As an economist, I know theres a lot of research proving this point. Ive conducted some myself, including work on how trust is essential for leaders in cross-cultural business environments. In an expansive study of Chinas fast-paced restaurant industry, my colleagues and I found that leaders who cultivate trust can significantly reduce employee churn and improve organizational performance.While my study focuses on one sector, its lessons extend far beyond that. It offers insights for leaders in any field, from corporate executives to community organizers.Understanding the impactIn China, as in the U.S., the restaurant industry is known for high turnover rates and cutthroat competition. But our study found that managers who demonstrate trustworthiness can keep employees from fleeing to rivals, creating a more stable and committed workforce.First, we conducted a field experiment in which we asked managers at around 115 restaurants how much money they were willing to send to employees in an investment game an indicator of trust. We then found that for every 10% increase in managers trust-driven actions, employee turnover fell by 3.7 percentage points. Thats a testament to the power of trust in the workplace.When managers are trustworthy, workers tend to be more loyal, engaged in their job and productive. Employees who perceive their managers as trustworthy report higher job satisfaction and are more willing to exert extra effort, which directly benefits the organization.We also found that when employees trust one another, managers get better performance evaluations. That makes sense, since trust fosters improved cooperation and innovation across the board.Practical steps to foster trustFortunately for managers and workers theres a lot of research into how to be a more trustworthy leader. Here are a few insights: Empower your team. Let employees take ownership of their responsibilities and make decisions within their roles. This not only boosts their engagement but also aligns their objectives with the broader goals of the organization. Empowerment is a key strategy in building trust. Be fair and transparent. Managers should strive to be consistent in their actions, address concerns promptly and distribute rewards equitably. Those practices can create a psychologically safe and supportive work environment. Promote collaboration. Encourage an atmosphere in which employees can openly share ideas and support one another. Activities that promote team cohesion and open communication can significantly enhance trust within the team. Measure and manage trust. Implementing regular surveys or feedback sessions can help assess and manage trust levels within an organization. Consider integrating trust metrics into performance evaluations to emphasize their importance.Some takeaways for National Leadership DayWhether helming a business, a nonprofit or a local community initiative, leaders should recognize that being trustworthy isnt just a soft skill. Its a measurable force that drives success. By making trust-building a deliberate goal, leaders can create stronger, more resilient teams.So this National Leadership Day is a good time to reflect: How do you build trust in your leadership? And how can you foster a culture of trustworthiness?Managers should commit to leading with trust, acting with integrity and fostering workplaces where people feel valued and empowered. The impact will speak for itself.Yufei Ren is an associate professor of economics at the Labovitz School of Business and Economics at the University of Minnesota Duluth.This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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  • 5 tips for mastering virtual communication
    www.fastcompany.com
    Andrew Brodsky is a management professor at McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin. He is also CEO of Ping Group and has received numerous awards, including being chosen byPoets & Quantsas one of the Best 40-Under-40 MBA Professors of 2023.Whats the big idea?Instant messaging, email, video calls, and other digital tools have largely replaced in-person communication for most workplaces. We have all become virtual communicators, and with this comes a new set of rules for interpersonal success. The PING framework distills best practices for optimal outcomes when relying on technology to communicate.Below, Andrew shares five key insights from his new book,Ping: The Secrets of Successful Virtual Communication.Listen to the audio versionread by Andrew himselfin the Next Big Idea App.1. P is forperspective taking.When interacting virtually, misinterpretations and misunderstandings are more likely. But this is due to more than the commonly cited fact that we pick up on fewer nonverbal behaviors. In person, it is hard to forget that you are interacting with a human being because they are standing right in front of you. But when looking at a thumbnail-sized video of the person you are interacting with, hearing only their voice through the phone, or seeing nothing but their words in an email, it can be easy to forget that another person is on the other end of your communication.As a result, theres a tendency to be more self-focused virtually than when interacting in person. To see this in action, think of a song you are confident other people would recognize. Then, tap out that song on the nearest hard surface. Once youve done that, estimate how likely it would be for someone else to identify the song if you tapped it out again.This same scenario was played out by Stanford researcher Elizabeth Newton. She found that participants expected 50 percent of listeners would be able to correctly identify their song. However, listeners only recognized the song three percent of the time. This huge discrepancy happens because we hear the music in our heads as we are tapping it out, so it seems obvious to us. All the listeners are just hearing a series of taps.The same applies to virtual communication. We may think our meaning was clear, but because we are so self-focused when interacting from behind a screen, we dont realize the person on the receiving end doesnt have the same context for accurately understanding our meaning. What you think is an obviously friendly and supportive email may come off as condescending to your coworker if they arent privy to all the same information as you.The solution is pausing to consider the recipients perspective before sending or speaking a message virtually. One research-proven strategy for this in text-based communication is reading aloud what you wrote in a different tone than you intended, such as sarcastic or enthusiastic. Does the meaning drastically change? Knowing that the voice someone hears when reading a message isnt necessarily the same one you heard while composing it will help avoid self-focused overconfidence that leads to misinterpretations.2. I is forinitiative.You may have heard about the Fyre Festival debacle in 2017, when a team led by Billy McFarland created hype for a festival that was supposed to have the best of the best in food, music, celebrities, and even buried treasure. What festivalgoers actually found when they arrived were barren parking lots, soggy cheese sandwiches in Styrofoam containers, and a lack of bathroom facilities. Pretty disappointing for what was billed as the biggest FOMO-inducing event of the year. This incredible mismatch in expectations and reality resulted in a $26 million fine and jail time for McFarland.In virtual communication, theres often a disconnect between impressions and reality. Consider how these disconnects can make someone who works incredibly hard seem like a low performer. Imagine you are a manager with two subordinates. From one, you get a single five-paragraph email each Friday about the work they did for the week. From the other, you get a few-sentence email each day, updating you on their tasks. Which one seems to be a harder worker?To show effort and engagement, take the initiative to communicate more frequently.Despite the fact that both employees sent the exact same amount of text, if you are like most managers, you will say the employee who sends a brief few-sentence update each day is a harder worker because that employee seems like they are likely working each day. The one who sends the longer Friday update might just be doing all their work at the end of the week. This is why an important strategy in virtual communication is taking initiative in showing your effort.Whether sending an email to your boss while working remotely or sending them an instant message from the next cubicle over, without taking this kind of initiative you end up in the of out of sight, out of mind pitfall. To show effort and engagement, take the initiative to communicate more frequently. Also, turning on your camera during meetings can help to show that you are physically and mentally present. These small steps make it more likely that those you interact with will perceive your work as a high-end lobster feast as opposed to a Fyre festival soggy cheese sandwich.3. N is fornonverbal.A Canadian farmer got himself into trouble when he responded to a customers text about an order of flax seed with a thumbs-up emoji. The issue was that the customer thought the thumbs up meant the contract was accepted. The farmer disagreed, saying he hadnt planned on accepting it just yet. The court sided with the customer, stating that the thumbs up constituted a legally binding agreement. The farmer had to pay almost $62,000.Undergraduates and MBA students often ask me, Should I use emojis in my virtual communication? The answer isnt simple because research shows emojis can help or hurt depending on the situation. Dont focus so much on what cues are best or worst. Rather, pay attention to how the person you are interacting with communicates and become a conversational chameleon. If they fill their texts with emojis and exclamation points, then feel free to do the same. If they use business jargon, follow their lead. If they take a more formal approach, it can behoove you to do the same.A study led by Kate Muir found that negotiators who mimicked their partners behavior style by using similar nonverbal behaviors improved their individual outcomes by 39 percent and joint outcomes by over 30 percent. These mimicry effects are driven by two factors. First, we generally all think that our own communication style is the best, so when someone else communicates like us, we think they are doing it effectively. Second, we trust people who are similar to us, so when someone communicates in a way that feels familiar, we tend to trust them more. Even in the barest of virtual communication modes, nonverbal behavior plays a central role in how our messages are perceived.4. G is forgoals.Should you schedule a meeting or send an email? Is phone or video better for reconnecting with old contacts? Whats the best mode to use when meeting someone for the first time? Too often, people thoughtlessly approach these and similar questions by defaulting to whichever mode is right in front of them without considering the consequences.A while back, I was giving a talk to a group of retail executives, and someone asked a great question: whats the best mode choice when you need to display emotions you might not really be feeling? Such as needing to seem excited during a customer interaction, even when you may be stressed or frustrated for unrelated reasons.Telephone seems much higher effort and thus more authentic than email, yet it allows you to avoid leaking nonverbal behavior indicating your true emotions.I ran a series of studies on this topic, using study contexts including negotiators, coworkers, and teachers and parents from international schools in Vietnam. Imagine you are a teacher in a school where parents pay a lot of money for their child to attend. Now, you have to tell one of these parents why their perfect angel is failing your course and being suspended due to serious misbehavior. Despite your frustrations with the studentand the parents for not helping improve mattersyou need to put on your best smile to ensure the interaction goes smoothly.There were three key findings in these studies. First, if you are being authentic, then the richest mode of interactionface-to-face or videois best as it comes off as the highest effort and lets your authenticity shine through. If you need to fake it, I found that many people choose email, but that is the worst choice because email seems so low effort that it comes off as most inauthentic. For those who aimed to appear authentic while masking underlying emotions, audio interactions were the sweet spot. Telephone seems much higher effort and thus more authentic than email, yet it allows you to avoid leaking nonverbal behavior indicating your true emotions.This choice was consequential as in my studies. It determined everything from parent satisfaction with their teacher, how much coworkers were willing to engage with each other going forward, and to what degree negotiators punished one another with severe counteroffers. By defining your interaction goals, you will be able to strategically select the right mode and message to improve outcomes and avoid situations that risk you making bad impressions.5. AI will never replace the human touch.Imagine receiving a sympathy email from a colleague after the death of a loved one. The email is supportive, but you immediately recognize the message was AI-generated because your colleague doesnt normally use formal words like elevate and profound. After making this observation, you probably think your colleague doesnt really care about you because they did not write the message themselves. When it comes to the most important interactions, theres no replacement for the human touch.Researchers have found that people instinctively think of everything from songs to recipes to paintings as more authentic when we believe they were created by a human, as opposed to identical ones that were AI-generated. When something is hand-crafted, it seems more effortful and special.In the vast majority of interactions, it will be impossible for others to tell that you used AI to create something on your behalf, but all it takes is one slip up for your interaction partner to suspect you did not write the message personally. Then, they will question every single virtual interaction youve had with them and wonder whether you were simply outsourcing your communication and not putting effort into the relationship. They will ask themselves why they interact with you personally in the first place if all they are doing is speaking with an AI.There are times when AI increases productivity, such as using AI as an assistant for ancillary aspects of communicationsuch as generating ideas, editing, and summarizing conversations. This can free up valuable time and mental energy for more complex, nuanced interactions. But, as AI replacing human communication becomes more common, adding that human touch to core parts of communication is likely to become an ever-more-valuable signal of how much you value a relationship and how vital you are as a person to that interaction.Thisarticleoriginally appeared inNext Big Idea Clubmagazine and is reprinted with permission.
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  • Earths 1st Asteroid Mining Prospector Heads to the Launchpad
    www.nytimes.com
    The dream of mining metals in deep space crashed and burned in the 2010s. AstroForges Odin mission to survey a potentially metallic asteroid is packed and ready to lift off.
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  • Heres what Phone 17 Pro Max will probably look like
    9to5mac.com
    With the iPhone 16e announcement behind us, the next big thing to anticipate is the upcoming iPhone 17 lineup. A new leak gives us our best look yet at how the iPhone 17 Pro Max will most likely lookThe design rumor is shared by longtime Apple leaker Sonny Dickson. In a post on social media, Sonny shares an image of a supposed iPhone 17 Pro Max rendering and a MagSafe case designed to fit the new design. The most significant difference thats apparent in the rendering is the redesigned camera system.In place of a camera system contained in the upper left corner is a more spread out layout that separates the flash, microphone, and LiDAR sensor from the triple lens arrangement. This so-called camera bar design is expected on the iPhone 17 Pro, iPhone 17 Pro Max, and all-new ultra-thin iPhone 17 Air. The standard iPhone 17 and iPhone 17 Plus are not expected to change visually in the camera department. Best Apple accessoriesFollow Zac Hall on X, Threads, and Bluesky, and listen to Runtime with co-host Sophia Tung on Apple Podcasts and YouTube.Add 9to5Mac to your Google News feed. FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.Youre reading 9to5Mac experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Dont know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel
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  • Video: Welcome to Jurassic Park (+Breakdown)
    www.blendernation.com
    Video: Welcome to Jurassic Park (+Breakdown) By Bart on February 23, 2025 Video BlindIllusionist shared this impressive short scene that he re-created in Blender from Jurassic World.After seeing the announcement for a new Jurassic World movie I rewatched the original Jurassic Park and wanted to see if I might be able to achieve something similar as the scene in the beginning, where the helicopter approaches Isla Nublar and we see the water crashing against the rock in the water.I simulated the water with the Flip fluids addon for Blender and everything else was also done in Blender of course!
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  • I think you're all a bit too obsessed with Pokemon, because what do you mean a Charizard-shaped Cheeto is selling for thousands of dollars
    www.vg247.com
    Dangerously CheesyI think you're all a bit too obsessed with Pokemon, because what do you mean a Charizard-shaped Cheeto is selling for thousands of dollarsLike at least spend that money on Pokemon cards or something.Image credit: The Pokemon Company News by Oisin Kuhnke Contributor Published on Feb. 23, 2025 Pokemania is out in full force, it seems, as Pokemon fans have genuinely bid four figures on a Charizard-shaped Flamin' Hot Cheeto.Pokemon is massive enough that most of us have probably partaken in the sweet fruit of Pokemania somewhere along the line. That time has passed for me, I think, having become disillusioned with the franchise thanks to the waste of $60 Pokemon Scarlet and Violet was, though I do still enjoy some of the older titles from time to time, and I do like to pick up a packet of the trading card game just so I can feel alive again. Maybe I'm just getting older, too, but here's one thing I can't understand: why on this beautiful green rock of a planet called Earth would you spend upwards of $4000 on a Flamin' Hot Cheeto that just so happens to be shaped like Pokemon poster-boy Charizard? To see this content please enable targeting cookies.This might sound like a story from The Onion, but no, this is a very real thing that you yourself can currently bid on over at Goldin, a site that describes itself as "the leading auction house for trading cards, collectibles and memorabilia." And look, here's the thing: that Flamin' Hot Cheeto absolutely looks like Charizard, undeniably. The shape of the head, the wings, the tail, even the arms and legs are more or less proportionate. You really can't look at this guy and think anything but "woah what the hell, that Flamin' Hot Cheeto looks just like Charizard!" The seller has even put it in a little custom frame that looks like a Pokemon card, dubbing it Cheetozard, perhaps predictably.To see this content please enable targeting cookies. The thing I'm struggling with is the fact that someone has a genuine bid of $4250, a ridiculous sum of money for a food item that is literally up to seven years old - seriously, the description notes that it was "initially discovered and preserved sometime between 2018-2022." Each to their own, I suppose.In any case, the rest of us more casual Pokemon fans have something to look forward to that won't stain our hands red, which is a new Pokemon Presents presentation slated for next week's annual Pokemon Day. That'll almost certainly provide a proper look at Pokemon Legends: Z-A, so make sure to tune in if you're desperate to know more.
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  • Poll: Box Art Brawl - River King: Mystic Valley (DS)
    www.nintendolife.com
    Image: Nintendo LifeHello folks, and welcome to another edition of Box Art Brawl!Last time, we looked at Star Fox 64, and gosh, it was quite a close match. Both designs are pretty great in our eyes, but ultimately Japan won the day with 54% of the vote, while the Western design managed to nab 46%. Well done, Japan!We've got a bit of a doozy for you this time folks; if only because one of the designs here is hilariously bad. We're looking at River King: Mystic Valley for the DS, a Marvelous Entertainment game originally launched in 2008. We have Tokyo Game Life on Bluesky to thank for this one.Subscribe to Nintendo Life on YouTube797kWatch on YouTube We have another instance here in which the game's titled was altered for its European release, so River King: Mystic Valley is now... Harvest Fishing. Not only that, but the accompanying box art is... well, you'll see.Let battle commence!Be sure to cast your votes in the poll below; but first, let's check out the box art designs themselves.North AmericaNorth America and Japan share many similarities with their cover designs. North America has its logo situated on the top, while the cast of characters makes up the bulk of the composition beneath. It's quite busy, but we reckon it works quite well; especially with the slightly blurred out background.JapanJapan flips things around and has its logo located on the bottom of the composition. We can't speak for you fine folks, but we actually prefer this approach. Our eyes are automatically drawn to the characters above (which are slightly larger here), and it feels like a slightly more natural layout. The background is also significantly lighter, which makes the characters stand out a bit more.EuropeUhh.......Okay, so let's vote!Which region got the best River King: Mystic Valley box art? (91 votes)North America52%Japan34%Europe14%Thanks for voting! We'll see you next time for another round of Box Art Brawl.
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  • How to clear the cache on your Windows 11 PC (and why you shouldn't wait to do it)
    www.zdnet.com
    Clearing out cache and temporary files can significantly improve your PC's performance - and it is easy to do without installing additional software.
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