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Twenty Practical Steps to Better Corporate Governance | The Corporate Secretaries International Association (CSIA) Please click the li...
Vía All News on ‘The Twitter Times: Muzaffar69/corpgov’ http://ift.tt/2sQ6BTw
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Anyone who’s been in a relationship knows that a person’s “work personality” doesn’t always match up to their “home personality.”
As in: There’s a slim chance your partner would blow up at a coworker for playing his music slightly too loud. But she might very well let into you for listening to an annoying podcast without headphones while she’s trying to sleep.
In his 2012 book, “Search Inside Yourself,” former Google engineer Chade-Meng Tan shares how he’s learned to take parts of his work personality home with him.
Tan, who was Google employee No. 107, is also the creator of the wildly popular emotional-intelligence course by the same name as the book, which he taught to thousands of his coworkers. (The course has since spread across the globe.)
In the book, Tan explains how an adaption of the “Just Like Me/Loving Kindness” practice, which he teaches in SIY, has benefitted his interpersonal relationships — specifically, his marriage.
Tan writes:
“Whenever I have a fight with my wife or a co-worker, I go to another room to calm down and after a few minutes of calming down, I do this exercise in stealth.
“I visualize the other person in the next room. I remind myself that this person is just like me, wants to be free from suffering just like me, wants to be happy just like me, and so on. And then I wish that person wellness, happiness, freedom from suffering, and so on.
“After just a few minutes of doing this, I feel much better about myself, about the other person, and about the whole situation. A large part of my anger dissipates immediately.”
Tan goes on: “I reckon this practice is a major reason being married to me does not totally suck.”
This exercise can be harder than it sounds. When you’re in the middle of a heated conflict with your partner, you’ll have to override the natural impulse to shout something cruel and hurtful. It’ll take some time before it becomes a habit.
But this exercise is also a neat example of how you can help defuse a conflict by working on your own response. Instead of focusing on changing your partner’s behavior, you’re reframing the way you see the situation — which, in the end, is really all you can control.
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NOW WATCH: Deepak Chopra’s go-to 3-minute meditation to stay focused
June 13, 2017 at 10:27PM
from Shana Lebowitz
Daimler, the German automaker best known in the US as the parent company of Mercedes-Benz, is angling to have the very first commercial vehicle plant that runs entirely on renewable energy.
Daimler’s trucking division oversees four separate brands, but its BharatBenz division is entirely focused on the Indian market. Since launching in 2012, Bharatbenz has sold over 50,000 trucks, making it a formidable contender against legacy India-based truck companies like Tata Motors.
Now Daimler is working to convert its manufacturing plant in Oragadam, an industrial town in Chennai, India, to 100% renewable energy by the end of next year.
“Our target is, by next year, we will have the first commercial vehicle plant in the world which is totally sourced by renewable energy,” Marc Llistosella, Head of Daimler Trucks Asia, told Business Insider.
The 400-acre facility is already relying almost entirely on renewable energy by using wind power to cover 57% of the plant’s energy demand. Daimler doesn’t own the wind turbines, but draws the energy from a provider that runs wind farms in the south of India.
Daimler has set up solar panels at the facility, but they only cover 16% of the facility’s overall energy consumption.
Now the trucking umbrella will look to convert the entire plant to renewable energy by either installing more solar panels or buying more green energy from a provider.
Bharatbenz currently produces 22 models of light-, medium-, and heavy-duty trucks in India, all of which meet the Bharat Stage emissions standards set by India’s government to lower pollution levels.
The Daimler trucking unit has capitalized the most on the stricter emissions standards, allowing it to catch up with Indian trucking giants Tata Motors and Ashok Leyland that have been slow to implement the new technology, McClatchy-Tribune reported in April.
India has become a leader in sustainable energy. In November, the country built the world’s largest solar plant and the government plans to draw 40% of the country’s energy from renewables by 2030.
SEE ALSO: Daimler is building a truck that will rival Tesla — and an exec says Elon Musk isn’t a threat
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NOW WATCH: Mercedes recently announced their first pickup truck — and it’s gorgeous
June 13, 2017 at 10:36PM
from Danielle Muoio
Well that was quick.
For a brief time, it looked like water had been thrown on the red-hot tech sector. Then stock investors executed one of their favorite bull market strategies: adding to positions by scooping up shares at a discount.
That buying sent the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 index as much as 0.9% higher on Tuesday. The group was also the best-performing sector in the S&P 500.
“That was just a little nervous selling as we awaited second-quarter earnings results,” Diane Jaffee, a senior portfolio manager at TCW Group, which oversees $195 billion, said to Business Insider by phone. “We shouldn’t get so hung up on just a little bit of market rebalancing.”
The recovery in tech shares is the latest example of investors buying the dip, a tried and true method that’s underpinned stock gains for the past eight years. We’ve seen equities escape from seemingly dire straits on multiple occasions.
For evidence of this, look no further than the S&P 500’s 1.8% single-day decline last month. The index recovered 85% of that loss over the following three days, the second-fastest retracement of a loss that big in S&P 500 history, according to data compiled by Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
Going further back in time, after the S&P 500 fell by 5.3% over two trading sessions following the UK’s vote last June to leave the European Union, the benchmark recovered those losses in about a week.
The same dynamic was in play when China unexpectedly devalued its currency in August 2015. After the S&P 500 underwent an 11% correction, traders bought the dip and restored the benchmark to its pre-sell-off levels within about two months.
Meanwhile, improving earnings growth for US corporations is also painting a rosy picture, particularly for tech stocks. Companies in the sector saw 21% profit expansion in the first quarter, the best of any group, according to Bloomberg data. It’s expected to see 14% earnings growth in the second quarter, almost double that of the S&P 500.
If there’s an argument against tech stocks right now, it’s that share prices have run too far. In a recent research note, Bank of America highlighted the ratio of tech enterprise value to sales, which sits at its highest since the dotcom bubble, relative to the S&P 500.
However, the firm found that the price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) for the group remains low relative to history. The resulting impasse highlights the situation facing tech stocks: for every negative indicator, there’s a positive one to offset it.
Hence the continued buying on weakness.
SEE ALSO: Traders haven’t been this nervous about tech stocks in 14 years
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NOW WATCH: An economist explains the key issues that Trump needs to address to boost the economy
June 13, 2017 at 10:36PM
from Joe Ciolli