Informed i’s Weekly Business Insights

Informed i's WBI - Logo - 2025

FREE weekly newsletter | Sharing knowledge briefs from TOP TEN BUSINESS MAGAZINES, to keep you ‘relevant’… | Since 2017 | Week 452 | May 8-14, 2026 | Archive

Listen to this week’s edition

Quantum’s bold promise: What business leaders need to know

By Henning Soller | McKinsey & Company | May 8, 2026

Extractive Summary of the Article | Listen

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. For years, business leaders and corporate boards have viewed quantum computing (QC) as a threat—and for good reason: It has the potential to break today’s strongest encryptions. That moment, commonly known as Q-Day, will occur when quantum computers succeed in factoring exceptionally large numbers, undermining the math that public-key cryptography depends on.  Though business leaders are keeping Q-Day top of mind, they are viewing QC through a new lens—less a threat and more an opportunity. 
  2. The potential benefits for early adopters are considerable. McKinsey research suggests that QC could create multibillions of dollars in enterprise value in the coming decade—and that’s just for the industries the authors analyzed that are most likely to benefit.
  3. CEOs don’t need to understand the intricacies of quantum computing to derive value from it. But they do need to know enough about the technology to understand where QC is headed and how it could affect their P&L. They also need to develop a clear view of the use cases that are relevant for their companies and partner with technology teams to map QC rollouts to measurable business results, such as cost savings or productivity gains.

Full Article

(Copyright lies with the publisher)

Topics:  Quantum Computing, Q-Day, Leadership

AI is wiping out entry-level jobs. Here’s how colleges can fill the gap

By Michael Hansen | Fortune | May 15, 2026

Extractive Summary of the Article | Listen

2 key takeaways from the article

  1. At its core, the goal of education is to prepare individuals for employment and advancement. But as AI alters the nature of entry-level work, institutions can no longer assume students will gain practical experience after graduation. Increasingly, workforce readiness must be embedded directly into the educational experience itself.  Here’s 3 suggestions how institutions can best accomplish this:  Embed experience directly into the curriculum.  Build deeper partnerships with employers.  And redefine how outcomes are measured.
  2. AI is forcing a fundamental rethink of how workers gain experience, build confidence and transition into professional life. If entry-level work no longer functions as the training ground it once was, higher education has a critical role to play in helping fill the gap — but it cannot solve this challenge in isolation.  Preparing the next generation of workers must be a shared effort across educators, employers, and policymakers.

Full Article

(Copyright lies with the publisher)

Topics:  AI and Eduction, Entry Level Jobs, Internships, Employment, Industry-Academia

Three things in AI to watch, according to a Nobel-winning economist

By James O’Donnell | MIT Technology Review | May 11, 2026

Extractive Summary of the Article | Listen

2 key takeaways from the article

  1. A few months before he was awarded the Nobel Prize in economics in 2024, Daron Acemoglu published a paper that earned him few fans in Silicon Valley. Contrary to what Big Tech CEOs had been promising—an overhaul of all white-collar work—Acemoglu estimated that AI would give only a small boost to US productivity and would not obviate the need for human work. It’s okay at automating certain tasks, he wrote, but some jobs will be perfectly fine.
  2. The author spoke with him to understand if any of the latest developments in AI have changed his thesis, and to find out what does worry him these days if not imminent AGI. He offered three insights:   A) AI agents – Whether or not agents will supercharge AI’s impact on jobs will come down to whether they can eventually handle the orchestration between tasks that humans do naturally.  B) The new hiring spree.  AI companies are all building in-house economics teams.  That tension hangs over the emerging field of “AI economics”; it’s concerning that some of the most influential research about AI’s impact on work may increasingly come from the companies with the most to gain from favorable conclusions.  And C)  AI apps.  We have not seen the development of apps based on AI that have the same usability like software that kicked off earlier tech transformations, like PowerPoint for slide decks and Word for documents.  But he acknowledges that for a while, we’re going to see all sorts of conflicting evidence about AI.

Full Article

(Copyright lies with the publisher)

Topics:  Technology & Society, AGI, AI

Should You Appoint an Interim CEO?

By Nicolas T. Deuschel et al., | Harvard Business Review Magazine | May–June 2026

Extractive Summary of the Article | Listen

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Your CEO just resigned. Or was fired. Or died.  What now? Tomorrow you’re going to need someone in charge. If you don’t have a successor ready, you’ll probably decide to appoint an interim CEO—someone who can steer the ship until you find a permanent replacement.  That’s an understandable decision, especially if a sudden departure has forced your hand. But it can be costly. Boards often think of interim appointments as safe, limited, and temporary, but investors and analysts aren’t fond of them.
  2. Yet even though interim appointments often drain value and cut profitability, they can also serve as powerful tools for stabilization or transformation. The questions we need to understand is when are they most useful? And what separates success from failure?  The type of interim CEO that companies need varies with the situations they’re in. Research reveals four main types:  The fixer.   The steward. The stabilizer.  And the caretaker.
  3.  Whether planned or unexpected, interim CEO appointments carry real risks of disruption. Strong succession planning helps prevent unnecessary interim appointments. But if an interim appointment is unavoidable, boards should use the opportunity strategically. You need to carefully consider four key questions.  What will be the interim CEO’s mandate?  Where will the interim CEO come from?  How long should the interim CEO stay?  And should an interim appointment be a tryout for the permanent job?

Full Article

(Copyright lies with the publisher)

Topics:  Leadership, CEO Succession, Board of Directors

How Leaders Can Move Past Personal Obstacles

By Katherine W. Isaacs and Richard C. Schwartz | MIT Sloan Management Review Summer 2026 Magazine

Extractive Summary of the Article | Listen

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. The poet Walt Whitman famously wrote, “Do I contradict myself? / Very well then I contradict myself, / (I am large, I contain multitudes.).” He recognized that our minds are not monolithic but composed of multiple, interdependent parts that operate in a dynamic relationship. Just as our bodies function as complex living systems with many organs playing a role in keeping us healthy and adaptive, our minds are composed of conscious and unconscious parts that function in a dynamic relationship with one another.    The Internal Family Systems Methodology is one of the many tools to help students and executives bring unconscious patterns and habits into conscious awareness, where they can take charge of their present behaviors and future development as leaders.
  2. Much of the value of IFS can be gained by employing its three core principles: recognizing that we have many parts operating inside us, that there are no bad parts, and that we can readily gain access to the wise self at the center of our psyche. 
  3. To put these principles into practice, IFS practitioners guide individuals through a process to identify the parts of themselves that are active in each situation, approach them with curiosity and compassion, and help shift them into healthier roles.

Full Article

(Copyright lies with the publisher)

Topics:  The Internal Family Systems Methodology, Inner Core, Curiosity, Compasion

How To Give Advice That’s Valued

By Chip Bell | Forbes | May 15, 2026

Extractive Summary of the Article | Listen

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. Conveying wise words in a manner that they are heard, internalized, and put into practice is a challenge for all mentors. Mentors provide feedback, give encouragement, ask great questions, and engage in thought-provoking discussions. And sometimes they attempt the most anxiety-inducing activity: advice-giving.
  2. Psychologists remind us that we all have authority hang-ups of varying severity. The protégé’s built-in resistance to advice can create a challenge in teaching lessons that increase competence and/or improve performance. And for advice-giving to work, you must be ready for your protégé to choose not to take it. It is what makes advice-giving different than simply giving a directive. Four steps can help” Start with the “Why” of Advice Giving.  Get Agreement on the Focus.  Ask Permission to Give Advice (like I have some ideas on how you might improve if that would be helpful to you).  And State Advice in First Person Singular.
  3. Effective mentors recognize the challenge of “teaching to create change” and meet that challenge by coupling wisdom with encouraging sensitivity. They keep the ball in play as long as they can by the judicious application of pushes and pulls, nudges and bumps, increasing the ultimate score — their protégé’s

Full Article

(Copyright lies with the publisher)

Topics:  Leadership, Mentorship, Personal Development

How Successful Founders Stay Grounded Through the Emotional Whiplash of Entrepreneurship

By Jake Karls | Edited by Maria Bailey | Entrepreneur | May 15, 2026

Extractive Summary of the Article | Listen

2 key takeaways from the article

  1. Entrepreneurship doesn’t feel linear.  From the outside, business growth can look like a steady upward line. From the inside, it rarely feels that way. You are operating in an environment where many variables are constantly shifting. Market conditions change. Timelines move. Feedback evolves. What works one week may not work the next. As a result, your experience as a founder is not emotionally flat. There are moments where things feel aligned and clear. And moments where they don’t.  That fluctuation is not necessarily a sign that something is wrong. It is often a reflection of the uncertainty that comes with building something in real time.
  2. While every situation is different, a few approaches can help create more stability: Avoid making major decisions based on a single day’s outcome. Give yourself time to assess situations with more context.  Maintain consistent routines. Even when business conditions fluctuate, your habits can stay steady.  Focus on controllable actions. Effort, preparation, and decision-making are always within your control, even when outcomes are not.  Document progress over time. Keeping track of key developments can provide a more accurate view than relying on memory alone.  And expect variability. Fluctuations are not exceptions. They are part of the process.

Full Article

(Copyright lies with the publisher)

Topics:  Entrepreneurship, Startups, Uncertainty, Decision-making

Want to Start an AI Company? Here’s What VCs Are Looking For Now

By Minda Zetlin | Inc | May 15, 2026

Extractive Summary of the Article | Listen

3 key takeaways from the article

  1. How can you get in on the AI startup boom? At the Web Summit conference in Vancouver, two seasoned VCs, Salil Deshpande, general partner at Uncorrelated, and David Cohen, co-founder of Techstars, attempted to answer that question.  
  2. Is the AI boom winding down? Not at all, the investors said. “It’s pretty early,” Cohen said. “What is it, 1 percent of the world that’s actually using these tools? That’s going to be much more mainstream.”  The way we use AI will change too, he said. “We’re going to shift from a chat-based understanding of AI to the actual implementation of intelligence more broadly. I think it changes everything over a very long road.”  That long road ahead makes it hard to guess which startups will succeed and which will fail, the VCs said. But there are some areas that seem ripe for growth where these heavy hitters are currently investing.
  3. A few of the insights offered by these VCs are:  The lower you go in the software stack, the better.  In today’s world data is much more valuable than code. AI is going to be a very good customer of infrastructure for the next 20 to 30 years so anything AI needs is going to be a good investment.  And entrepreneurs willing to bootstrap or otherwise bypass the VC ecosystem have a huge opportunity to build successful companies on a smaller scale using existing AI. 

Full Article

(Copyright lies with the publisher)

Topics:  AI Startsups, Entrepreneurship

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply