While it's far from ideal to learn that the President of the United States has fired you on Twitter, at least ousted Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has managed to come away from his year in Washington in a better financial position than he started
In late January, Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway, and JPMorgan Chase announced plans to create a company that would help their employees in the United States obtain heath care “at a reasonable cost.” While details remain sparse, the potential impact is already known: with a combined global workforce of more than one million people, the partnership could overhaul how health care is organized and delivered in the US and beyond
The call for digital transformation has led many CIOs at large enterprises to assume they can imitate the archetypal startup path to stardom and embrace a model centered on the delivery of products and services via web and mobile applications. This assumption is only half accurate
It's official. As of Sunday evening China time, "Xi Jinping Thought" has been voted into the Chinese Constitution, and Xi himself can stay on as president for as long as he likes
The preliminary U.S. decision to apply 25% tariffs on steel imports and 10% tariffs on aluminum imports has been met with widespread apprehension by proponents of the rules-based multilateral trade system.
One of the most pressing public-health challenges in Africa today is also one of the least reported: cancer, a leading cause of death worldwide. Every year, some 650,000 Africans are diagnosed with cancer, and more than a half-million die from the disease. Within the next five years, there could be more than one million cancer deaths annually in Africa, a surge in mortality that would make cancer one of the continent’s top killers
In our work helping organizations find their team members, we conduct hundreds of interviews every week. And what I’ve observed over the years is that when it comes to the interview, it’s just as important to know what not to ask as it is what to ask