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Fast Company Dec 2013/Jan 2014 David Zax |
Now Playing: It's Not the Movies When we started our fine-art programming with a show on Leonardo da Vinci, in 2011, we were completely unsure if the big screen could replicate walking around a gallery. But audiences not only wanted to see fine art -- they wanted more. |
Fast Company Dec 2013/Jan 2014 Skylar Bergl |
Sit Back and Really Relax At iPic theaters, a few dollars more gets viewers reclining leather seats, in-theater food-and-drink service, and reserved seating. It has nine locations in seven states, with six more coming soon. |
Fast Company Dec 2013/Jan 2014 Ari Karpel |
New Films for New Audiences Most blockbusters target a homogenous audience. Denson-Randolph, a vet of Starbucks and Magic Johnson Entertainment, selects smaller movies to draw diverse crowds into the nation's second-largest movie-theater chain. |
Fast Company Dec 2013/Jan 2014 Robert Safian |
How to Make Your Own Luck There is so much information available, we can get sucked into the morass. It is more and more difficult to know which activity is meaningful. Working hard is one thing; working smart is something else. |
CIO November 18, 2013 Minda Zetlin |
CIOs and CMOs: Feuding in the C-Suite Survey finds that CIOs and marketing chiefs don't see eye-to-eye on much at all. |
HBS Working Knowledge November 18, 2013 Michael Blanding |
Pulpit Bullies: Why Dominating Leaders Kill Teams Power interrupts, and absolute power interrupts absolutely. Francesca Gino and colleagues discover that a high-powered boss can lead a team into poor performance. |
CRM November 8, 2013 Sara Carter |
Delivering Extraordinary Customer Service No one can successfully compete on a product, service, or on price alone. Customer service is the driver for loyalty. Here are four rules for upgrading the customer experience. |
AskMen.com Joel Balsam |
How Would You Rank Your Coworkers? According to AllThingsD, Yahoo is firing employees based on performance assessments from their colleagues. Back in the 1980s, General Electric CEO Jack Welch implemented bell-curve rankings to weed out the underachievers. |
HBS Working Knowledge November 11, 2013 Dina Gerdeman |
A Smarter Way to Reduce Customer Defections Companies can't afford to lose hard-won customers, but in truth some are more important to keep than others. Recent research by Sunil Gupta and Aurelie Lemmens explains how to find them. |
Pharmaceutical Executive November 1, 2013 |
Roundtable on Market Access Market Access is a window on what matters in the real world of soaring patient expectations and crimped payer budgets for innovation. |
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