Act Before Your Employees Fall Out Of Love With Worksciart0Nov 151 min readMost people don't quit their jobs so much as they fall out of love with them. It begins subtly. Work that had felt energizing is now routine. The sense of connection that once anchored them starts to thin. They still show up, still deliver, look entirely committed from the outside—but inside, something essential has changed. Long before anyone hands in a resignation letter, the relationship between the person and the employer has already begun to fade.
The First Prophet of AbundanceDavid Lilienthal’s account of his years running the Tennessee Valley Authority can read like the Abundance of 1944. We still have a lot to learn from what the book says — and from what it leaves out.
WHY IS ROBERT F. KENNEDY JR. SO CONVINCED HE’S RIGHT?How an outsider, once ignored by the public-health establishment, became the most powerful man in science
What the S&P 500 is hiding about the economyA few trillion-dollar companies are powering the market’s gains. Here’s what’s happening to most other businesses in the United States. Thanks Tom!