Translate

Pages

Pages

Pages

Intro Video

Thursday, February 6, 2020

Executives Impart “What it Takes” to Lead in Today’s Business Landscape

largest black-owned businesses

It’s fairly indisputable that a prospering company or organization wouldn’t be enjoying any notable measure of success without highly effective leadership. Potent leadership is, in fact, often a primary driver of business innovation, development, and growth overall.

Commanding a team, department, or company at-large isn’t (or shouldn’t be) about the prestige, accolades, lofty titles, or that sweet corner suite. Rather, genuine leaders are able to establish and sustain a mindset that profoundly resonates with the masses—one that galvanizes committees, groups, companies, and organizations in a common mission. Of course, there’s isn’t a one-size-fits-all leadership style that every CEO “must” adopt. In fact, much is learned by trial-and-error throughout a leader’s oft-jagged trajectory to the top.

Successful leaders certainly can—and should—play to their innate strengths and abilities. However, those that go over-and-above to recognize and parlay those of key stakeholders, recognizing (and being willing to admit) their own abilities aren’t enough, often exceed achievement expectations. To do this effectively, a leader must maintain an uber-awareness of the human resource assets at hand.

Toward this end, it’s imperative for leaders to identify their superstar players across all departments and stay in-tune with the proverbial “pulse” of their workforce. But this is easier said than done amid a widening gap among the c-suite and “everyone else” that’s sure to make doing so a bit more complex. “An important challenge facing U.S. leaders in 2020 is the growing generation gap in attitudes and capabilities between themselves and workers soon to be entering the labor market,” Rob Anthony, a professor of management at the Boston campus of Hult International Business School, recently told Forbes. The article also offered results of a study conducted by organizational advisory firm Korn Ferry, which put “the average age for CEOs at 58, chief HR officers at 55 and CFOs at 53. At the other end of the spectrum, the post-millennial Generation Z will start to turn 23 and soon command the largest share of the US labor force.”

Relative to mind-sets, this widening age gap will also surely breed emotional rifts that can further alienate an inflexible or stubborn c-suite. Another Forbes article underscored the importance of leaders ensuring every employee understands their organization’s purpose: “In the past, most employees focused on their paychecks and job titles. Times have changed. Purpose matters more than ever before. Individuals who have a clear sense of purpose are more likely to stick around and love their jobs.” The article also cited a study that found that “nine out of ten workers were willing to make less money to do more meaningful work.” So, a leader with his or her ear to the ground, with a keen understanding of what will motivate a team, can be a make-or-break differential.

With the modern business landscape changing so profoundly, I connected with a few business leaders who are known for being particularly progressive to get some perspective. Below, they share some philosophies on “what it takes” to lead in this competitive and transformative new decade.

Nimble, Organized, and Ready

Leadership requires influencing others to accomplish the company’s mission, and a key is to provide employees with adequate tools to be flexible, organized, and purpose-driven. This is according to Ken Thompson of AlignOrg, who believes that experienced leaders curate great and well-equipped teams through strategic planning, organizational design, and change management.

“Organizations today don’t have the luxury of stability since there’s an ever-increasing change in markets, customers, and technology,” Thompson noted. “Organizations who are ready for this change, who are organized enough to respond to these changes and who can operate as a tight cohesive unit will not only better survive seismic shifts in the market, but also actually thrive in the face of such profound competition and other evolution.”

Leaders are Activists

In our brave new world of rapid change and complexity, there is no single person who can really direct an intricate business. An individual can only encourage those involved to think differently, which is a key argument as to why leaders can be considered activists. This is particularly true for those who promote change and coordinate the efforts of others to help them achieve goals without actually “controlling” them.

Chris Stewart, CEO of brightbeam, is a deep-rooted leader, activist, and 20-year supporter of charitable and education-related causes. As a parent, Stewart leads brightbeam’s network of education activists under a single mission: to demand better education and a brighter future for every child.

When asked how he gained such a powerful voice fighting for the educational opportunities of all children, Stewart remarked, “It’s because 29 years ago, when I had my first child, I became a parent with a problem. I didn’t have a great education myself and I didn’t have many resources. But, I had a kid that I loved and I was determined to give him a better life than what I had.”

Today, Stewart fights to provide millions of families with the tools, knowledge, skills, and confidence to fight for their children’s ability to receive a quality education. As far as Stewart is concerned, the future of education in this country shouldn’t be grounded in empowering parents, but rather by putting them in power.

Stewart upholds that same premise when it comes to leading his organization, which he does through a distributive leadership model. “If leadership provides direction, it should come from many where the collective wisdom prevails, rather than just one dictatorial voice,” Stewart said. This mind-set led Stewart to establish a chief leadership team at brightbeam. “Operationally, of course, it was important to have a group of smart, influential individuals leading the work of the organization, but it was also important for external stakeholders to recognize the power of a strong bench,” Stewart noted. “I am attempting to change the world. That’s a big mission and I can only achieve it by building relationships with top-notch people.”

To lead today, in a world where there is an abundance of passionate, talented people who want to make a difference, Stewart knows he doesn’t have to be the smartest person in the room just because he holds the title of CEO.

A Leader’s Key to Success

Andrew Wyatt, head coach at Andrew Wyatt Leadership, LLC, acknowledges that the modern business landscape has clearly shifted but notes that, as the saying goes, “the more things change, the more they remain the same.” That is why he feels it’s vital for a leader to avoid focusing on trends or sentiment that are ever-changing but on principles, which largely remain constant. This, he asserts, is the foundation of winning leadership.

According to Wyatt, winning leadership requires a ruthless application of one key leadership principle in particular: that effective leaders guide from the inside-out. Meaning, before any leader can successfully lead others, one must lead themselves. Wyatt offers these three ways to accomplish this: 1.) establish your credibility; 2.) build your following; 3) lead with impact. The order of execution is apparently vital.

Here’s Wyatt’s advice:

Like building a skyscraper, leadership first requires excavation before elevation. This is how one establishes credibility. It starts with an inward look. The leader must know the truth before taking the next step to build a following. People follow truth, and most have a natural ability to discern it.

Building a following requires the leader to look outward to draw followers inward. This is the principle of servant leadership through which a leader must “engage” their followers in order to build a genuine and certainly impassioned following.

Finally, to lead with impact, the leader will need to be not only engaged but also current and relevant, and willing to adapt to the changing landscape without compromising the truth. Winning leadership understands and employs this cyclical process.

Customer Speed

Hari Abburi is a transformative thinker and leader who believes in centering leadership “at the speed of the customer.” This is a non-ego-driven approach that directly concentrates on what a customer is thinking and experiencing in the present. “When leaders stay focused on anticipating customer needs and keeping their teams’ customer-centric, a better product or service is produced,” he said.

In this chase to understand how customers transfer their experiences from an unrelated situation on to a company, Abburi narrows leadership down to a few critical elements, including curiosity, visual thinking, and the ability to articulate a clear purpose.

“I have worked and lived in several countries and with responsibilities for over 50 countries and have seen patterns emerge,” Abburi said. “Curiosity and imagination are two universal key elements shared by leaders across cultures, ethnicities, and industries. Curiosity is the best attribute a leader can have, as it drives the kind of imagination that solves problems and spurs innovation.”

Pursuing New Markets

Great leaders throughout history are known for not shying away from new processes, technologies and, most important, new markets. Instead, they have an inherent ability to “see” emerging trends that others miss. Not only that, they take action to collaborate with key creative partners to realize early-stage success in these newly emerging sectors.

Orna Azulay did just that. As founder and president of Abington Speech Pathology Services, Inc. and the RemoteSpeech.com teletherapy platform, she significantly expanded the reach of her company—now a global powerhouse—by approaching an existing therapy protocol in a new and more effective way.

An experienced business development professional, when Orna opened the business 20 years ago, she saw a business opportunity in a big HMO provider who was looking to have relationships with satellite clinics. Although speech teletherapy was still a new idea in the market compared to traditional therapy, Azulay knew the potential and convinced more clients to share her vision and come on board.

Filling in gaps is how great leaders realize great businesses. Thinking outside the box, trying new things (even amid naysayers), and trying to fulfill that empty niche in sustainable and scalable ways can catapult one’s company to incredible heights.

It’s a Marathon, Not a Sprint

Great leadership is an art that requires a combination of several skills and qualities to be successful. Castle Negotiations CEO Ruth Shlossman urges the importance of thinking long-term as a leader. “Developing a ten-year plan to withstand any expected or unexpected circumstances is how great leaders stay afloat,” Shlossman said. “Keeping the bigger picture in mind will help create a culture that believes, plans, and aptly executes.”

Now that we are entrenched in a fresh new decade, it’s a great time to recalibrate your leadership approach into one that’s more aware, sensitive, and adaptive to those inevitable threats, weaknesses, trials, and tribulations. Being an agile, opportunistic, customer-centric, and activist-oriented leader with planning prowess makes the difference between realizing success versus true greatness.

 




As the executive editor and producer of “The Luxe List,” Merilee Kern, MBA, is an internationally-regarded brand analyst, strategist, and futurist. As a prolific branding and marketplace trends pundit, Merilee spotlights noteworthy industry innovators, change makers, movers, and shakers. This includes field experts and thought leaders, brands, products, services, destinations, and events across all categories.

Connect with her at www.TheLuxeList.com / Instagram www.Instagram.com/LuxeListReports / Twitter www.Twitter.com/LuxeListReports / Facebook www.Facebook.com/LuxeListReports / LinkedIN www.LinkedIn.com/in/MerileeKern



from Black Enterprise https://ift.tt/3bizBra
via

Does Facebook Need an ‘Understand’ Button?

Mark Zuckerberg has decided it's not important to be liked, only to be understood. What the hell does that even mean?

from Wired https://ift.tt/2S2gABu
via

12 Best Laptop Backpacks for Work (2020): Tom Binh, Incase, and More

Whether you're commuting on your bike or schlepping around a camera, these 12 professional backpacks do the job right.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2oqqgpI
via

'1917' Might Beat the Blockbusters for the VFX Oscar

Usually, the special effects award gives flashy genre flicks their time to shine. This year, a World War I thriller could steal the spotlight.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2H1ANRO
via

Former Xerox CEO Ursula Burns Donates $1 Million to Preserve an Oral Archive of Black History

black history

In honor of the preservation and legacy of black excellence, Ursula Burns, the first black woman to serve as CEO of a Fortune 500 company, donated $1 million to The HistoryMakers, a video oral history archive that collects the stories of extraordinary African Americans.

Housed in the Library of Congress, The HistoryMakers is the largest collection of African American stories told on video in the nation. According to a press release sent to BLACK ENTERPRISE, Burns’ generous gift will allow the project to significantly expand. It will specifically be allocated toward the production of 180 interviews of leading African American women in a variety of disciplines—including the arts, business, civic engagement, education, entertainment, law, medicine, STEM, the military, and religion—who will be added to The HistoryMakers collection. As of now, there are 800 more men featured in the collection than women.

Burns presented the donation on Friday during a luncheon in New York City that convened more than 100 distinguished African American female leaders, including former senior White House advisor Valerie Jarrett; philanthropist Loida Lewis; investment banker Carla Harris; and former Essence magazine Editor-in-Chief Susan L. Taylor.

“The HistoryMakers has been at the forefront of recording the history of African Americans for many years. We must continue to support their efforts and help provide the resources to ensure that the legacy of black women is preserved and presented with truth, honor, and integrity,” said Burns, who retired as the CEO of Xerox in 2017. She currently serves as CEO of VEON, a multinational telecommunication services company based in Amsterdam. Burns added that the gift was made in honor of her late husband, Lloyd F. Bean, a retired Xerox scientist and inventor.

“African American history and culture is at a critical crossroads. We are at risk of losing 20th-century documentation within 10 to 15 years. Burns’ million-dollar gift has made it possible for us to move forward with the selection process to secure many significant interviews with black women,” said The HistoryMakers founder and president Julieanna L. Richardson.

The HistoryMakers

Julieanna Richardson, Founder and President of The HistoryMakers

The luncheon celebrated the launch of The WomanMakers Initiative and Advisory Board, which Burns chairs along with its Honorary Chair Johnnetta Betsch Cole, the president of the National Council of Negro Women. The committee, which is still in formation, will also include lawyer and professor Anita Hill; former president of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences Cheryl Boone Isaacs; and Grammy Award-winning singer Dionne Warwick. BLACK ENTERPRISE’s very own Caroline Clarke, the chief brand officer of the Women of Power Summit, will serve as a consultant of the WomanMakers Initiative.

“Often, African American women and their lives, careers, and stories have not been well documented in society,” said Richardson at the event. “In recent years, this problem has been highlighted with the popularity of historical works like Hidden Figures and The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. Both have unearthed little-known contributions of African American women in the areas of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. But they, and increasingly more stories like them, prompt people to wonder: What other African American female accomplishments are missing from the historical lexicon?”

Founded in 2000, 2020 marks the 20th anniversary of The HistoryMakers. To date, the Chicago-based nonprofit has interviewed over 3,300 African Americans, including former American Express CEO Ken Chenault, BLACK ENTERPRISE founder and publisher Earl G. Graves, and Eartha Kitt.



from Black Enterprise https://ift.tt/2UtQQQj
via

DJI Mavic Mini Review: The Best Drone for Most People

DJI's latest small drone is lightweight, small enough to fit in your pocket, and tons of fun to fly.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2vdcbCI
via

Coronavirus Fears Will Leave Empty Seats at a Top AI Conference

The event, organized by the American Association for Artificial Intelligence, will be missing hundreds of leading Chinese researchers who are hampered by travel restrictions.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2unWokD
via

Tesla Is Finally Cruising, and Investors Are Going for a Joyride

The electric automaker is valued more highly than Volkswagen, which makes roughly 20 times as many cars. Tesla's stock is also up 71 percent this year alone.

from Wired https://ift.tt/2UtfFvx
via

A Code-Obsessed Novelist Builds a Writing Bot. Plot Thickens

Vikram Chandra, the author of Sacred Games, created Granthika to keep track of complex narratives. It could change the future of storytelling.

from Wired https://ift.tt/31w71hn
via

Travel Bans and Quarantines Won't Stop Coronavirus

The US announced travel restrictions on Friday. But some public health experts worry that a ban won't work—and could create new problems.

from Wired https://ift.tt/39dA9g1
via

Uefa outlines plans to help women's football in Cameroon

Former Netherlands international Hesterine De Reus explains what needs to be done to develop women's football in Cameroon and how Uefa is helping.

from BBC News - Africa https://ift.tt/2UrzmE9
via

Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai on Maps, AI, Ads, and Ambient Navigation

On Google Maps' 15th anniversary, the CEO underscores the importance of machine learning, while downplaying Google's dominance in advertising.

from Wired https://ift.tt/3blzATt
via

Google Maps's Jen Fitzpatrick Says the Future of Maps Goes Beyond Driving

In a WIRED Q&A, the mapping chief celebrates her team's decade and a half of work, and plots a course for the next phase.

from Wired https://ift.tt/31xlCJi
via

Mali musician Ballake Sissoko claims US customs broke instrument

Ballake Sissoko says his kora, a traditional harp-like instrument, arrived in Paris in pieces.

from BBC News - Africa https://ift.tt/2HbwOlT
via

Wednesday, February 5, 2020

The complex effects of colonial rule in Indonesia

The areas of Indonesia where Dutch colonial rulers built a huge sugar-producing industry in the 1800s remain more economically productive today than other parts of the country, according to a study co-authored by an MIT economist.

The research, focused on the Indonesian island of Java, introduces new data into the study of the economic effects of colonialism. The finding shows that around villages where the Dutch built sugar-processing factories from the 1830 through the 1870s, there is today greater economic activity, more extensive manufacturing, and even more schools, along with higher local education levels.

“The places where the Dutch established [sugar factories] persisted as manufacturing centers,” says Benjamin Olken, a professor of economics at MIT and co-author of a paper detailing the results, which appears in the January issue of the Review of Economic Studies.

The historical link between this “Dutch Cultivation System” and economic activity today has likely been transmitted “through a couple of forces,” Olken suggests. One of them, he says, is the building of “complementary infrastructure” such as railroads and roads, which remain in place in contemporary Indonesia.

The other mechanism, Olken says, is that “industries grew up around the sugar [industry], and those industries persisted. And once you have this manufacturing environment, that can lead to other changes: More infrastructure and more schools have persisted in these areas as well.”

To be sure, Olken says, the empirical conclusions of the study do not represent validation of Dutch colonial rule, which lasted from the early 1600s until 1949 and significantly restricted the rights and self-constructed political institutions of Indonesians. Dutch rule had long-lasting effects in many areas of civic life, and the Dutch Cultivation System used forced labor, for one thing.

“This paper is not trying to argue that the [Dutch] colonial enterprise was a net good for the people of the time,” Olken emphasizes. “I want to be very clear on that. That’s not what we’re saying.”

Instead, the study was designed to evaluate the empirical effects of the Dutch Cultivation System, and the outcome of the research was not necessarily what Olken would have anticipated.

“The results are striking,” Olken says. “They just jump out at you.”

The paper, “The Development Effects of the Extractive Colonial Economy: The Dutch Cultivation System in Java,” is co-authored by Olken and Melissa Dell PhD ’12, a professor of economics at Harvard University.

On the ground

Historically in Java, the biggest of Indonesia’s many islands, the main crop had been rice. Starting in the 1830s, the Dutch instituted a sugar-growing system in some areas, building 94 sugar-processing factories, as well as roads and railroads to transport materials and products.

Generally the Dutch would export high-quality sugar from Indonesia while keeping lower-quality sugar in the country. Overall, the system became massive; at one point in the mid-19th century, sugar production in Java accounted for one-third of the Dutch government’s revenues and 4 percent of Dutch GDP. By one estimate, a quarter of the population was involved in the industry.

In developing their research, Olken and Dell used 19th century data from government archives in the Netherlands, as well as modern data from Indonesia. The Dutch built the processing plants next to rivers in places with enough flat land to sustain extensive sugar crops; to conduct the study, the researchers looked at economic activity near sugar-processing factories and compared it with economic activity in similar areas that lacked factories.

“In the 1850s, the Dutch spent four years on the ground collecting detailed information for the over 10,000 villages that contributed land and labor to the Cultivation System,” Dell notes. The researchers digitized those records and, as she states, “painstakingly merged them” with economic and demograhic records from the same locations today

As the results show, places close to factories are 25-30 percentage points less agricultural in economic composition than those away from factories, and they have more manufacturing, by 6-7 percentage points. They also have 9 percent more employment in retail.

Areas within 1 kilometer of a sugar factory have a railroad density twice that of similar places 5 to 20 kilometers from factories; by 1980, they were also 45 percent more likely to have electricity and 4 percent more likely to have a high school. They also have local populations with a full year more of education, on average, than areas not situated near old sugar factories.

The study shows there is also about 10 to 15 percent more public-land use in villages that were part of the Dutch Cultivation System, a data point that holds steady in both 1980 and 2003.

“The key thing that underlies this paper, in multiple respects, is the linking of the historical data and the modern data,” Olken says. The researchers also observed that the disparity between industrialized places and their more rural counterparts has not arisen since 1980, further suggesting how much Java’s deep economic roots matter.

Net Effects?

The paper blends the expertise of Olken, who has spent years conducting antipoverty studies in Indonesia, and Dell, whose work at times examines the effects of political history on current-day economic outcomes.

“I had never really done a historical project before,” Olken says. “But the opportunity to collaborate with Melissa on this was really exciting.”

One of Dell’s best-known papers, published in 2010 while she was still a PhD student at MIT, shows that in areas of Peru where colonial Spanish rulers instituted a system of forced mining labor from the 1500s to the 1800s, there are significant and negative economic effects that persist today.

However, somewhat to their surprise, the researchers did not observe similarly promounced effects from the Dutch Cultivation System.

“One might have thought that could have had negative consequences on local social capital and local development in other respects,” says Olken, adding that he “wasn’t sure what to expect” before looking at the data.

“The differences between the long-run effects of forced labor in Peru and Java suggest that for understanding persistent impacts on economic activity, we need to know more than just whether there was forced labor in a location,” Dell says. “We need to understand how the historical institutions influenced economic incentives and activities initially, and how these initial effects may or may not have persisted moving forward.”

Olken adds that the study “can’t measure every possible thing,” and that “it’s possible there are other effects we didn’t see.”

Moreover, Olken notes, the paper cannot determine the net effect of the Dutch Cultivation System on Indonesian economic growth. That is, in the absence of Dutch rule, Indonesia’s economy would have certainly grown on it own — but it is impossible to say whether it would have expanded at a rate faster, slower, or equivalent to the trajectory it had under the Dutch.

“We can’t say what would have happened if the Dutch had never showed up in Indonesia,” Olken says. “And of course the Dutch [colonizing] Indonesia had all kinds of effects well beyond the scope of this paper, many of them negative for the contemporaneous population.”



from MIT News https://ift.tt/383D22L
via

My Money: A wedding, a pay rise and some healthy eating

As part of a new BBC blog series, Somi from Nigeria shares what she spent her money on this week.

from BBC News - Africa https://ift.tt/2S5j42l
via

The women who make argan oil want better pay

Argan is the latest culinary and cosmetic must-have, but the women workers want more of the money.

from BBC News - Africa https://ift.tt/2UEwofN
via

Whoopi Goldberg and Meghan McCain get into heated debate about Rush Limbaugh’s ‘Medal of Freedom’

Tuesday evening President Donald Trump awarded the Medal of Freedom to Rush Limbaugh and the next morning “The View” co-host Whoopi Goldberg wanted answers!

“You know, I am very sorry that Rush is ill, because you never want to wish bad stuff on people,” Goldberg said of the conservative broadcaster, who announced this week that he’s battling advanced lung cancer. “He has Stage IV cancer. But I’m sorry, I thought that the Medal of Freedom was supposed to go to people who actually did stuff.”

READ MORE: Whoopi Goldberg shuts down Meghan McCain on live TV: ‘Girl, stop talking

Co-host Joy Behar chimed in to note that previously the medal had been awarded to major humanitarians like Mother Teresa and Rosa Parks, prompting guest host Alex Baldwin to joke that if he ran for president he’d tarnish the award’s meaning like Trump, by giving the award to comedian Louis C.K. Although the joke didn’t land, many do believe that Limbaugh is just as undeserving as the polarizing funny man.

“I didn’t understand,” Goldberg continued. “You’ve got a Tuskegee airman sitting there. How about, if you’re going to give the Medal of Freedom to someone who actually has made difference in the country and done all kind of stuff, how about giving it to Elijah Cummings’ wife as a thank you for all of his service.”

This is when republican co-host Meghan McCain chimed in to defend both the GOP and the president’s decision.

“He’s playing to his base and Rush Limbaugh — I used to work in radio and I actually worked underneath, I was behind Sean Hannity on the radio show I hosted,” McCain explained. “Rush was first. He has 30 million listeners a day. To put it in perspective, this show averages around 3 (million). The amount of influence he has, especially with conservatives.”

When Goldberg asked her to explain why having a popular show was enough reason to receive one of the highest civilian awards in the U.S., McCain responded, “He changed the paradigm of radio.”

At this point, Goldberg and the other hosts seemingly bristled in irritation, as Behar called out just a handful of the notoriously racist remarks Limbaugh has made on that same show against people of color.

READ MORE: Whoopi Goldberg reportedly ‘at her breaking point’ trying to contain Meghan McCain’s meltdowns

“Rush Limbaugh spent a lot of Obama’s tenure singing — what did he call it? — ‘Barack the Magic Negro,’” Behar said. “He’s been so racist and misogynistic over the years, to give him — who’s next? Roger Stone? How about giving it to him or Steve Bannon.”

Co-host Sunny Hostin also joined the debate to explain why Limbaugh’s award felt like a slight against Black Americans.

“I don’t think it was lost on the Black community that he gave that honor to Rush Limbaugh during Black History Month, sitting next to a Tuskegee airman, on Rosa Parks Day,” Hostin noted. “Rush Limbaugh was a longtime birther during the Obama administration.”

“And Melania, the other birther, put the (medal) on him,” co-signed Behar.

READ MORE: Must be nice: Meghan McCain is the ‘angry Black woman’ actual Black women don’t get to be

The post Whoopi Goldberg and Meghan McCain get into heated debate about Rush Limbaugh’s ‘Medal of Freedom’ appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/3boLrA6
via

Elon Musk Says A High School Diploma is Not Needed to Work at Tesla

Tesla

This should have some people lining up for a job! Tesla’s Elon Musk is looking to recruit talent but, unlike most companies, a college degree isn’t required in order to gain employment with him, according to CNBC.

Musk took to Twitter to announce that he is looking for people who work in artificial intelligence (A.I.). “At Tesla, using AI to solve self-driving isn’t just icing on the cake, it the cake” –@lexfridman Join AI at Tesla! It reports directly to me & we meet/email/text almost every day. My actions, not just words, show how critically I view (benign) AI.”

Musk makes it clear that a deep understanding of artificial intelligence takes precedence over actual degrees and formal training to work at Tesla. He mentions they are recruiting for people to work in the San Francisco Bay area in California or Austin, Texas, but “potentially any Tesla Gigafactory” would be okay, Musk tweeted Sunday.

“A PhD is definitely not required,” said the Tesla boss on Twitter on Feb. 2. I “don’t care if you even graduated high school.”

In fact, back in 2014 Musk stated as much back then. “There’s no need even to have a college degree at all or even high school.” Instead, he looks for “evidence of exceptional ability. And if there is a track record of exceptional achievement, then it is likely that that will continue into the future.”

“If somebody graduated from a great university, that may be an indication that they will be capable of great things, but it’s not necessarily the case. If you look at, say, people like Bill Gates or Larry Ellison, Steve Jobs, these guys didn’t graduate from college, but if you had a chance to hire them, of course, that would be a good idea,” Musk said.

Tesla Gigafactories are the places where electric motors and battery packs are assembled. There are Tesla gigafactories in Sparks, Nevada; Buffalo, New York; and Shanghai, China. It was announced in November, that there is a fourth factory that will be built in Berlin, Germany. Tesla vehicles are built with the hardware necessary to offer some current autopilot features and “full self-driving capabilities” in the future.

 



from Black Enterprise https://ift.tt/3bd62Hs
via

Gervonta Davis charged with simple domestic violence battery for altercation with ex-girlfriend

Gervonta “Tank” Davis, the WBA lightweight champion, turned himself into Coral Gables, Florida police on Tuesday and was charged with simple battery domestic violence for grabbing his ex-girlfriend by the neck and forcing her from a basketball game in Miami.

READ MORE: Video emerges of boxing champion Gervonta Davis in physical altercation with woman

The assault was captured on a cell phone video that has been seen more than seven million times on Twitter. After Davis, 25, grabbed the mother of his daughter from her seat, he escorted her out of the gymnasium and they appeared to be arguing, according to ESPN.

“As a result of an ongoing investigation after being notified through social media and the victim, on February 1, 2020, (Davis) was observed battering his former girlfriend (with) whom have a child together,” Coral Gables police released in a statement. “(Davis) surrendered himself to Coral Gables police detectives assigned to the case.”

Once the video went viral, Davis took to Instagram to try and defend himself. “I never once hit her, yea I was aggressive and told her come on… that’s the mother of my child I would never hurt her other than that happy New Years.. January was trash,” Davis said in the post, which was later deleted, according to ESPN. He has since wiped clean all posts on his Instagram.

Leonard Ellerbe of Mayweather Promotions, who is Davis’ promoter, did not respond to ESPN’s messages seeking comment. Tim Smith, a spokesman for Premier Boxing Champions, who manages Davis, declined to comment.

“It looks like it’s a legal matter. We don’t comment on legal matters,” Smith reportedly told ESPN.

READ MORE: ‘I knew I was spiraling’: Fabolous finally speaks out after 2018 domestic violence incident

Davis of Baltimore is undefeated. He has collected three world titles in two weight classes. His next fight, a likely bout with Leo Santa Cruz, the junior lightweight titlist, is expected to be on pay-per-view later this year.

The post Gervonta Davis charged with simple domestic violence battery for altercation with ex-girlfriend appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/31q1s4a
via