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3 Noticias economicas ingles

Earnings Kick Off With Sky-High Forecasts, Record Stock Market

The Wall Street Journal Business - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 11:30
Observers will be watching to see whether companies trounce Wall Street’s expectations and, with stock valuations sitting above long-term norms, seeking clues on what the future holds for company profits.

Heat Wave Hit Northwest Businesses

The Wall Street Journal Business - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 11:30
Some farms expect to ship less fruit this year; Voodoo Doughnut in Portland, Ore., shifted production to early mornings and evenings as some workers went on strike; a Christmas Tree farm hopes seedlings’ new growth bounces back.

How Dollar Tree Sells Nearly Everything for $1, Even When Inflation Lurks

The Wall Street Journal Business - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 11:30
In a world where costs are rising, the discount chain’s challenge is to find ways to buy holiday decorations, snacks and craft supplies for around 43 cents, then charge $1 to shoppers.

Will US consumer prices continue rising at a rapid clip?

Financial Times World - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 10:00
Market Questions is the FT’s guide to the week ahead

Will US consumer prices continue rising at a rapid clip?

Financial Times Markets - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 10:00
Market Questions is the FT’s guide to the week ahead

Four-day working week: Iceland shows the long and the short of it

Financial Times World - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 08:00
Even bosses stand to gain when workers toil fewer days for the same pay

Four-day working week: Iceland shows the long and the short of it

Financial Times Companies - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 08:00
Even bosses stand to gain when workers toil fewer days for the same pay

Exactly how to approach your goals so you make meaningful progress (and quit procrastinating)

Fast Company - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 07:00

We’re at that point in the year when bright-eyed intentions start to go a little sideways.

The bullet journals begun so diligently in January gather dust.

The morning meditation sessions get shorter and shorter.

Those resolutions made a mere months ago seem, in retrospect, far too cumbersome.

Enter: Kaizen.

The Japanese term meaning “improvement” requires no apps, journals, or time commitments, but rather a subtle shift in the way you operate.

First coined as a business tool after World War II, Kaizen has come to represent a philosophy of continual progress—a constant recalibration that yields slow but steady improvements, like an ever-hastening tortoise. The goal is a smoother process and increased productivity, which then makes your larger goals more possible.

Kaizen is traditionally employed in the workplace—the most common example is the Toyota factory line, on which all employees are constantly working to improve the process—but the philosophy can translate to most areas of life.

Want to improve your money skills? Finally establish a writing routine? Get more work done in less time? Consider Kaizen.

The philosophy writes Alan Henry on Lifehacker, can be distilled into six steps: standardize, measure, compare, innovate, standardize (again), repeat. Put simply, it’s the practice of thinking about what you’re doing, looking for ways to improve it, making those changes, then continuing to act upon them.

“Kaizen is not change for change’s sake,” Henry writes. “It’s deliberate, constant improvement, and changes that don’t actually bring you rewards shouldn’t be made. Productivity is a double-edged sword after all. You can spend more time trying out new things and researching new tools than you would actually doing your work.”

Instead, you’ll want your changes to help you out in some way—by eliminating busywork, for example, or establishing accountability.

Interested? Here’s how to incorporate the philosophy into your daily life.

Start Small

Change is exciting! The possibilities seem endless! But pause before you get carried away, since tackling too big a task can lead to frustration or stalling when things don’t move as quickly as you’d hoped.

Instead of trying to improve your largest, most important project, start with something manageable, like your lunch routine.

Say you buy lunch most days each week. Rather than vowing to make lunch every day for the next month, look at why you’re buying lunch so often. Is it a matter of convenience? Boredom? Does the small splurge help keep your budget on track in other ways? Once you’ve figured that out, take a small step toward improvement. Perhaps you bring lunch on Mondays, while your motivation is high. Or maybe you just switch to a cheaper option and continue to buy lunch.

Once you’ve made that first small change, you can prepare for the next shift, then the next.

Remember: The focus is on progress, not an overhaul.

Find Focus By Auditing Your Time

Once a week or so, scan your recent tasks for ways to improve. You may find yourself spending hours fielding emails, for example, or regularly waiting on input from colleagues before you can really get cracking.

Outside of work, you might realize that heading home, rather than straight to the gym, usually means you skip your planned workout.

Tools like your phone can help clue you in to time spent swiping through social media, or checking email, while keeping track of your day’s activities can give you an idea of what gets done in 24 hours.

Once you have a better picture of how you spend your time, you can adjust accordingly. The same goes for in-the-moment realizations, too: If you get halfway through a task only to realize things could be far easier than you’ve made them, pause and jot that thought down. The next time you go to perform that task, make the necessary adjustments and see how things go. Remember, it’s all about the small pivots.

Get Feedback

The term “performance review” sends a shiver down even the straightest of spines, but asking for more casual feedback can be gamechanger. A boss or co-worker’s perspective can offer much-needed distance, and help you to see potential in hidden places. And as you look at what to change and how, don’t forget to consider the way that others do things.

Progress doesn’t always require reinventing the wheel.

Consider a Kaizen Blitz

In corporate-speak, a short period of rapid improvement is referred to as a “Kaizen Blitz.” A group of employees will focus on one particular pain point—say, a clunky payroll system—and rework the process to remove the hold ups within a few days, following a set of guidelines.

The business approach is a multifaceted battle plan, but you can apply the same idea to your own life.

Say you typically pay your bills over the course of each month. Some are online only, while others come as paper statements. You pay your internet from one account, and credit card from another. You have a hazy idea of how it all comes together.

After your next payday, try a Kaizen Blitz: Take a look at what’s been working so far, streamline payments, centralize accounts, create a spreadsheet or two, and clean everything up. You’ll get everything done for that month, and set yourself up for future success. The key is to stay small, reworking tiny tasks that make a large impact overall.

Leave Room to Waste Time

Let’s face it: 100% productivity is a recipe for burnout. Sometimes we need to do things inefficiently to give us time to process, or to discover something we would have otherwise skipped over.

Kaizen is all about making progress—not turning you into a machine. Be sure to avoid changing too much at once, and consider using any gained free time to go for a walk or take a bathroom stall dance break, rather than taking on more work.

Just as small steps can lead to massive progress, so too can small breaks prevent massive burnout.

This article originally appeared on Shine and is reprinted with permission. You can download the Shine app here for daily self-care support, personalized to you. Explore meditations, articles, and more to help you calm your anxiety and feel more confident at work.

More From Shine:
5 Lessons Startup Co-Founders Learn in Their First 5 Years
4 Science-Backed Reasons to Say Your Self-Talk Out Loud
2020 Made It OK to Talk About Our Mental Health. We Can’t Stop Now.

Richard Branson space launch: Watch the livestream of the historic Virgin Galactic flight

Fast Company - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 06:45

Update Sunday, 8:48 a.m.:

According to Virgin Galactic, the flight has been delayed 90 minutes due to overnight weather. It’s now scheduled for 10:30 a.m.

Original post:

It’s the weekend after Independence Day, and the Brits are maybe, finally, getting us back for that whole Revolutionary War thing. Sir Richard Charles Nicholas Branson, an English business magnate extraordinaire and Buckingham Palace knight, will be launching himself into outer space nine days ahead of American billionaire and Amazon kingpin Jeff Bezos.

Branson is set to blast off this Sunday, July 11, around 9 a.m. EST, courtesy of his own Virgin Galactic spaceflight company and its VSS Unity SpaceShipTwo.

When Branson revealed his surprise plans this month—mere weeks after Bezos—we got the mega-billionaire space race we never asked for. Branson, for his part, insists his ambitious timing has nothing to do with beating Bezos’s Blue Origin to the suborbital cosmos, but he’s still a man who has tried multiple times to break various world records (e.g., fastest crossing of the English Channel in an amphibious vehicle, which he holds; attempted fastest Atlantic Ocean crossing, which concluded with a helicopter rescue).

Nevertheless, his flight promises to be a landmark moment for commercial space travel, and the whole world has a front-row seat.

The launch—which is occurring, prophetically, near the town of Truth or Consequences, New Mexico—will be broadcast globally. You can watch the livestream on Virgin Galactic’s YouTube channel. We’ve also embedded it below.

You would be forgiven for thinking billionaires in space are becoming commonplace, but it’s worth remembering that Branson, like Bezos, will be taking real risks when he rockets to the edge of space at 2,400 mph, suspends briefly in microgravity, and then carefully glides back down to the runway (the whole process takes about an hour). We’re wishing him a safe flight!

The political awakening of Melinda French Gates

Noticias del Financial Times (Ingles) - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 06:00
The philanthropist has shifted from an intensely private figure to a leader comfortable in the spotlight

Landlords swap offices for student housing as pandemic hastens change

Noticias del Financial Times (Ingles) - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 06:00
Retail space also makes way for warehousing and life science campuses as property investors reposition portfolios

Latin America urgently needs vaccines from west, top official warns

Noticias del Financial Times (Ingles) - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 06:00
Wealthy nations urged to send surplus Covid-19 jabs immediately to region hardest-hit by pandemic

German climate group challenges ‘establishment’ Greens

Financial Times World - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 06:00
Growing activist movement presents double-edged sword for mainstream party ahead of elections

The handshake is back, sort of, and it’s causing etiquette chaos

Financial Times World - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 06:00
Business meetings are back, bringing disastrous collisions between shakers, bumpers and fist knockers

Latin America urgently needs vaccines from west, top official warns

Financial Times World - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 06:00
Wealthy nations urged to send surplus Covid-19 jabs immediately to region hardest-hit by pandemic

Hancock affair highlights opaque world of Whitehall non-execs

Financial Times World - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 06:00
Ministers usually make final decision on appointments, despite part of role being to scrutinise government

Landlords swap offices for student housing as pandemic hastens change

Financial Times Companies - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 06:00
Retail space also makes way for warehousing and life science campuses as property investors reposition portfolios

Hancock affair highlights opaque world of Whitehall non-execs

Financial Times Companies - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 06:00
Ministers usually make final decision on appointments, despite part of role being to scrutinise government

A wave of covid-19 is engulfing Indonesia

The Economist Asia - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 06:00
The government’s response is too little, too late

China threat tempers Taiwan’s welcome of Hong Kong exiles

Noticias del Financial Times (Ingles) - Dom, 07/11/2021 - 04:01
Taipei wary of provoking Beijing and fear mainland agents infiltrated protest movement

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