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FREE weekly newsletter, sharing knowledge briefs from TOP TEN BUSINESS MAGAZINES, as a social service to foster business acumen | Since 2017 |  Week 446 | April 03-09, 2026 | Archive

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Who owns ideas in the AI age?

By Francesca Cassidy | Fortune Magazine | April-May 2026

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Can you ever really own an idea?  The publishers, music producers, and film directors who make up the creative economy would say yes — as would many of the artists and writers they work with. But some in Big Tech are beginning to push back, arguing that ideas—like information—should be free, accessible, and repurposeable for anyone. When it comes to ideas, they argue, even those which spring directly from our own heads are the product of every other idea, environment, and person we’ve come into contact with. As such, they are fair game for training the large language models (LLMs) behind the AI platforms many of us have become reliant upon.
  2. The argument has become increasingly urgent as generative AI companies build powerful models—and attract huge investment—by ingesting vast amounts of online text, images, and video, including books, journalism, and art created by humans.
  3. This is the existential issue facing, among others, the international publishing giant Hachette, publishing since 1826. David Shelley, the company’s U.K. chief who also became U.S. CEO in January 2024, is joining the fight on behalf of creatives everywhere.  The Google lawsuit is just one of many examples of creatives taking on Big Tech.

Full Article

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Topics:  Creative Class, Intellectual Property Rights, AI and Society

The race takes off in the next big arenas of competition

By Kevin Russell et al., | McKinsey & Company | March 26, 2026

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Entering 2026, record-breaking investment in semiconductors, cloud services, and AI software and services is poised to transform how global companies create value. This fast-growing “AI foundation” for business is accelerating the growth of digital ecosystems and enabling new physical-world applications, from space and robotics to drones and other forms of “physical AI” that sense, decide, and act in the real world. At the same time, novel weight-loss therapies are reshaping pharmaceutical pipelines, electrification is advancing steadily, and geopolitics is increasingly influencing how critical industries are built up and protected—particularly through technology sovereignty and supply chain resilience policies.
  2. The McKinsey Global Institute previously identified 18 future arenas of competition—from AI services to space—that are increasingly writing the global growth story. Indeed, over the past three years, these 18 industries have grown roughly four times as fast as other industries in market cap and ten times as fast in revenue. Arenas are, by definition, the fastest-growing and most dynamic industries. As their scale and reach into the broader economy expand, it is fair to say that we are all in these arenas now.
  3. Companies headquartered in the United States and the Greater China region account for 90 percent of arenas’ market value today. US companies lead in 14 of the 18 arenas in market cap and ten in revenues. But China is gaining ground.

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Topics:  18 future arenas of competition

AI is changing how small online sellers decide what to make

By Caiwei Chen | MIT Technology Review | April 6, 2026

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. For small entrepreneurs in the US, deciding what to sell and where to make it has traditionally been a slow, labor-intensive process that can take months. Now that work is increasingly being done by AI tools like Accio, which help connect businesses with manufacturers in countries including China and India. Business owners and e-commerce experts told MIT Technology Review that these AI tools are making sourcing more accessible and significantly shortening the time it takes to go from product idea to launch. 
  2. Launched in 2024, Accio exceeded 10 million monthly active users in March 2026, according to the company. That means about one in five Alibaba users consults with AI about product sourcing.  The system is able to pull from the site’s millions of supplier profiles and is trained on 26 years of proprietary transaction data.  
  3. Accio is strongest when it comes to product ideation, but less helpful on marketing questions such as advertising and social media outreach. To use it well, buyers still need to challenge its recommendations, since some can be generic.

Full Article

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Topics:  Accio, AI and Buying

Negotiating When There Is No Plan B

By Jonathan Hughes and Saptak Ray | Harvard Business Review Magazine | May–June 2026

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. In a perfect world negotiators always have a plan B. In many of the most important and challenging business negotiations, however, there’s no obvious solution other than a deal with a specific party. Because of that, it feels as if there’s no plan B.  Indeed, knowing what to do when there seems to be no plan B is one of the unique strengths of the most experienced and skilled dealmakers. 
  2. In high-stakes negotiations there often are creative work-arounds, unilateral actions you can take to improve your leverage, and partial alternatives that can shift the balance of power.  Some of these suggestions are:  A) Identify options that may not fully replace the deal on the table but can open up new possibilities.  B) Even if your alternatives look bleak, it may still be rational for the other side to make concessions. Dependence in negotiations is rarely one-sided, and feeling vulnerable doesn’t mean you lack leverage.  C)  Seek Temporary Alternatives and Tacit Consent.  D)  Focus on the Players and the Process.  E)  Reframe Threats as Warnings.  And F) When All Else Fails, Try Fairness.
  3. Ideally, you’d be able to identify a viable plan B for all your deals. But when there really isn’t one, adopting an expanded view of power and alternatives can make all the difference.

Full Article

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Topics:  Negotiation Skills, Decision-making, BATNA

Level Up Your Crisis Management Skills

By Rick Aalbers et al., | MIT Sloan Management Review Magazine | Summer 2026 Issue

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Why do some organizations freeze in the face of a crisis while others spring into action and skillfully minimize the damage?
  2. Seven capabilities that any organization must develop to withstand a crisis are:  Prepare for what might happen and define roles upfront so that people know what to do when the crisis hits is critical to survive a crisis.  Transparent and clear communication.  Connect silos before a crisis.  Showing genuine empathy for all who may be affected by the crisis.  Must face the hard truths early.  Maintain order in a crisis.  After a crisis has faded, run postmortems.  And capture lessons that can help build resilience and make the organization better prepared for the next crisis.
  3. Each of the seven core crisis management capabilities can be seen as developing over the following five stages of maturity:  Ad Hoc Response, Basic Planning, Structured Execution, Aligned and Embedded, and Continuous Resilience.  It’s important not to view this simple framework as a checklist. All of the capabilities must be in place to some degree because they reinforce one another and together make a system more resilient. 

Full Article

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Topics:  Crisis Management, Resielence, Trust, Culture, Transperency, Teams, Leadership, Strategy

Dr. Dre On Becoming A Billionaire: “I Don’t Chase Money. I Try To Make The Money Chase Me.”

By Matt Craig | Forbes | April 9, 2025

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Late on a Thursday night in the spring of 2014, actor Tyrese Gibson went live on Facebook with Dr. Dre to celebrate the sale of the company Dre cofounded, Beats electronics, to Apple for $3.2 billion.  
  2. The 61-year-old Dre—born Andre Romelle Young—never forgets how far he’s come from his childhood in Compton, Cali­fornia, where he grew up with a teenage mother and an abusive father during the height of Los Angeles’ gang violence and crack cocaine epi­demics. “I had no problem going to cut grass just to buy shoes when I was younger,” he says of his childhood. “I would do what I had to do just to get what I wanted.” Despite his wealth, he swears that nothing in his career has been motivated by money and instead credits his success to an obsession with creating perfect products, whether it’s music, headphones or his latest venture, a gin brand.
  3. “I don’t chase money—I try to make the money chase me,” says Dre, who ranks No. 20 on Forbes list of the Greatest Self-Made Americans. “I’ve always been able to bet on myself, and whatever I do and wherever I go, I know I have my talent with me.”

Full Article

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Topics:  Beats, Greatest Self-Made Americans

When Effort Equals Reward: Studies Reveal How to Keep Trying Even When Other People Would Quit

By Jeff Haden | Inc | April 10, 2026

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Accroding to the he knows two people who recently tried to start their own businesses. (They kept their full-time jobs, an approach Arnold Schwarzenegger and Richard Branson both recommend.) Despite their best efforts, both of their businesses failed.  One of them immediately launched another startup. The other vowed to never test the startup waters again, a reaction that objectively makes sense.  
  2. Why is one person so willing to start another business after the previous business failed?  That phenomenon is what psychologists call the effort paradox: where effort adds meaning to the completion of a task, and sometimes is the goal itself.
  3. See the effort as the finish line, not the outcome.  That way the effort will be your reward, and will motivate you to keep going, keep improving, and keep working hard. And will help you feel better about yourself; according to a University of Toronto study, finding meaning in effort and not just outcomes leads to feeling a greater sense of purpose, meaning, and overall life satisfaction.  Which in itself is a wonderful outcome, and reward.  Trying, and failing, and trying again to be an entrepreneur? The effort alone is worth a lot to that person. 

Full Article 

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Topics:  Entrepreneurship, Startups, Efforts, Resielence

 I’m a Fund Manager. Here Are 3 Things I Look for Before I Write a Check

By Mike Alves | Edited by Micah Zimmerman | Entrepreneur | April 10, 2026

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Venture capitalists are not chasing safe investments. They always want to chase outsized returns that companies like Google, Uber or Airbnb delivered. However, that only happens when a business builds a real moat and fundamentally disrupts its space.  Often, that means investing in ideas that feel a little uncomfortable at first. It’s hard to wrap your head around a shift as radical as Uber’s before it actually exists.  And when you invest in a thesis, you aren’t just pitching a product; you’re proposing a fundamental change in how people behave and how entire industries operate.
  2. To stay grounded, based on his experience as a fund manager, the author has developed a specific framework to ensure every opportunity actually hits the mark.  Three elements:  The company is a disruptor, not just another competitor.  The company is doing something that has never been done before.  And the innovation dramatically improves scalability and cost efficiency.
  3. If you are looking for the fund manager’s focus, do not focus only on building a good company. Focus on building a company that changes how an industry operates. Because investors are not blind when a business proves they can truly change the rules of the game.

Full Article

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Topics:  Startup funding, Entrepreneurship, Venture Capitalists

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