Baby boomers, now between 48 and 67 years old, have already shown a greater propensity to suicide than previous generations, according to a data analysis from researchers at Rutgers University and Emory University. Male boomers had abnormally high suicide rates in their teen and early 20s, peaking for many boomers at 26 suicides per 100,000 lives at an age when the rate among next older generations were below 20 suicides per 100,000 lives, data showed. Patterns were similar for women, though their rates are lower, Emory epidemiologist Ellen Idler said.
Management
401k Loan Gold – Employee Benefit News
401k loan gold seen on Capitol Hill – Articles – Employee Benefit News.
Pretty stiff content copyright on Reuters articles. I’ve provided the link but no quotes or frames. The article is worth reading.
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The Rise of the Creative Service Worker – Big Think
The Rise of the Creative Service Worker | Think Tank | Big Think.
Watch this video.
Employee Benefit News – Will Poverty Await Future Retirees?
Why Idleness Is the Best Investment You Can Make
In today’s Western culture, we mistake productivity for the appearance of productivity. The frantic attentiveness to smartphones which characterizes corporate ambition, for example, is a display of how hard someone is working, not an actual measure of their productivity.
via Why Idleness Is the Best Investment You Can Make | IdeaFeed | Big Think.
I am not doing very much today so that I can be more productive.
How to Rewire Your Brain For Success
In neuroscience, the previous prevailing belief had been that the adult human brain is essentially “hardwired,” so that by the time we reach adulthood we are stuck with what we have. Now we understand that the adult brain retains impressive powers of “neuroplasticity”—the ability to change its structure and function in response to experiences real or imagined.
via How to Rewire Your Brain For Success | Experts’ Corner | Big Think.
Luck v. Skill – Finding Success as an Expert Witness in Life Underwriting
Economist’s View: Luck vs. Skill.
Here’s a nice blog post to get your cognitive processes started on this fine Sunday morning. Success – luck or skills and hard work? This is a topic I’ve been thinking a lot about recently. Unlike other missives I will purposely avoid politics. To me,the answer is quite simple.
Both.
I work hard and have worked hard for a very long time to achieve success. But at the same time, I recognize and appreciate how luck is as crucial a factor to success as skill and hard work. Think about it.
Ten Reasons Winners Keep Winning, Aside from Skill – Rosabeth Moss Kanter – Harvard Business Review
Winners gain ten important advantages as a result of victory — and that smart leaders can cultivate and build on these advantages to make the next success possible.
via Ten Reasons Winners Keep Winning, Aside from Skill – Rosabeth Moss Kanter – Harvard Business Review.
Why Firms Should Care About the Plight of Un-Free Agents
Can empathy increase business results? I think it probably can when it comes to contingent workers.Companies are turning increasing to contractors, temps and outsourced workers. Some of them are happily self-employed or untroubled to be working for a temporary staffing agency—high-skilled professionals especially seem to like independent contractor status. But a good portion of today’s free agents aren’t working that way voluntarily. They would prefer the steadier situation of regular employment. They may have been laid off during the downturn, or they may be straight out of college and eager to grasp the lowest rung of the career ladder. For these folks, temp or contractor work is a last resort rather than a first choice. They are more un-free than free agents. As such, they probably enter into work assignments with an engagement deficit. They may be determined to do a decent job, but by definition aren’t thrilled to be working as they are.
via Why Firms Should Care About the Plight of Un-Free Agents – Work In Progress Blog – Workforce.
Arms-Length Embrace – Work In Progress Blog – Workforce.
I agree with more empathy. I totally disagree with the notion that higher levels of empathy will reduce or eliminate the so-called issue of “engagement deficit”. You reduce or eliminate “engagement deficit” by hiring these individuals to regular jobs with benefits.
What ever happened to common sense? Are numbers more important than people? Never forget the simple fact people who get the work done create the numbers.
You Can’t Do Your Job if You Don’t Sleep
You Can’t Do Your Job if You Don’t Sleep – Tony Schwartz – Harvard Business Review.
I’m going to be more productive today. I’m taking a nap.
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