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McKinsey Digital Assessment

Management Consulted

We have to give credit where credit is due – McKinsey is trying to make recruiting (somewhat) fun. One of the more recent additions to McKinsey’s recruiting process is the McKinsey Digital Assessment, a video game that is used to … Continue Reading.

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Abundance and ideas

Seth Godin Blog

I’m not waiting for royalty checks or even credit lines any time soon. No, don’t take credit for an idea that’s not yours. You look smarter and more confident when you give credit where credit is due. Giving credit is generative and raises your status.

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Setting Up a Foundation for Consulting Success

Successful Independent Consulting

Have a dedicated credit card that you use only for business expenses. Tip: Download the credit card's year-end summary so you have a spending breakdown by category. This will give you about 10 days to make the payments. April 5 – Annual tax returns are usually due on April 15. Let’s tackle the tax question first.

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Give Credit Where Credit Is Due

Chad Barr

So, I was surprised to learn that Jack Daniels, eternally credited for concocting this famous liquor, actually learned the art of whiskey distillation from another man. Always give credit where credit is due. The post Give Credit Where Credit Is Due appeared first on The Chad Barr Group.

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Are you a confident leader?

Peter Stark

Give Credit where it is Due. Leaders who lack confidence are not comfortable giving credit or expressing gratitude to members of their team. These leaders tend to take credit for the wins and are quick to point out the mistakes of others. Confident leaders believe they can accomplish their goals.

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6 Ways to Overcome Loss Aversion

Tom Spencer

Well, when a consumer considers replacing a good, the presence of loss aversion can lead her to experience more pain in giving up the existing good than she feels joy in acquiring a comparable new one. And the term “credit card surcharge” frames the price difference as a loss by implicitly defining the lower price as normal.

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2008 Financial Crisis – Causes and historical context

Tom Spencer

The MBS market boomed due to a general consensus that property prices would always go up, mortgages were extremely unlikely to fail on a large scale, and the fact that credit rating agencies were willing to give AAA-ratings to the senior slices of CDOs even if the underlying pool of mortgages were all “subprime”.