5 Signs Your Business Is Having a Midlife Crisis | All Business

Midlife crises are fairly easy to recognize in others, but they’re often not so easy to recognize in yourself—and sometimes even more difficult to recognize when it comes to your company.

Business owners have always had to grapple with marketplace changes, but now as a seasoned business owner, you are facing a new wave of trends such as a mobile workforce, social engagement with customers, unexpected competition from startups with slick marketing, disruptive new models of business, and generational shifts in leaders, employees, and customers. In the midst of these struggles, you may find yourself trapped between what you used to be and where you want to go next.

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Soon Your Employer May Be Paying Back Your Student Debt | Bloomberg Business

Imagine a world in which the standard benefit package at work includes health insurance, 401(k) contributions, and a few thousand dollars to pay off your student debt.

More companies than ever are offering that last perk, but it’s still a fringe benefit. Two bills making their way through Congress could change that, by giving companies a tax incentive to help employees repay their student loans.

At the moment, when employees get money to pay off their student debt, it counts as taxable income, like a salary bump, just for debt payments. Unlike money that goes toward a 401(k), both employees and employers have to pay taxes on the benefit. For many businesses, it costs more than it’s worth. “I think the tax treatment now is a detriment to more companies adopting this,” said Rob Lavet, general counsel for SoFi, a nonbank lender, which works with around 400 employers that give employees loan refinancing reductions.

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 Get Your Freak On | CASSANDRA

In recent years, there’s been demand for over-the-top treats that not only satisfy people’s sweet tooth, but also provide them with eye-catching content to post in their social feeds. From cronuts and other hybrid desserts to ice cream that changes colors or is served in rolled form, eateries have gone to extreme lengths to stand out. The latest craze to catch on globally is “freakshakes”—milkshakes with desserts spilling out of them.

The freakshake phenomenon first took off last summer when Pâtissez, a bakery and café in Canberra, Australia, introduced milkshake-filled mason jars, topped high with whipped cream, pretzels, marshmallows, and even whole brownies and pecan pie. The decadent desserts, which the restaurant dubbed “Freakshows,” quickly went viral, drawing hours-long lines. Pâtissez has maintained its reputation as a must-visit dessert destination by introducing new flavors and expanding its selection of elaborate cakes that overflow with toppings, too. Inevitably, its viral popularity has influenced bakeries around the world, who have since added freakshakes to their menus.

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Fixing Mental Health In The Workplace Requires A Lot More Than A Yoga Room | Co.Exist

Many alcoholics avoid talking about their problem, even with close friends. Robert Tyndall came out about it to 20,000 of his coworkers.

Tyndall, a senior vice president at Prudential Financial, was forced to confront his years of daily drinking at a performance review in 2010. After some bad behavior at company functions, his boss warned him never to drink at a work event again. Mortified, Tyndall listened—for a while. But soon he slipped at another gathering. His second conversation with his boss was more blunt: “‘You need to get help, but I’ll have to fire you if you don’t,’” Tyndall recalls she said.

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Ten Good Reasons To Pass Up A Promotion | Forbes

Forty or fifty years ago when you walked into a new corporation or institution, you would look around you in order to understand how the system worked and orient yourself to it.

If there was a career ladder to be climbed in your new organization as there often was back then, you’d try to understand the ladder and learn how to start climbing!

You’d pay attention to the qualities and achievements that got people promoted in your company, and try to showcase those qualities in yourself. Most of us were raised to climb any ladder in our vicinity!

We didn’t stop and ask ourselves, “Is climbing this ladder what I want for myself?” because in those days, corporations did a good job of helping people move up in their careers.

It made all the sense in the world to try and advance as far as you could in whichever organization employed you.

Nowadays things are murkier. Not every job promotion you are offered will be good for your career.

Sometimes your manager will offer you a promotion because there is a critical but unappealing job that no one else is willing to do.

Sometimes the money you are offered for a promotion doesn’t match the responsibilities of the job.

Sometimes the manager you’d be working for in the new position is a bully. Maybe the position itself is badly-designed and impossible to perform while maintaining a personal life.

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Facebook and Twitter Turned Him Down. Now He’s Worth $4 Billion | Inc.com

First off, I love this kind of story.

Let’s go back in time to 2009. Brian Acton was an accomplished programmer who’d checked the box with stints at both Apple and Yahoo.

Now he was looking for work–and he was coming up short. His Twitter feed tells the tale.

Acton had been the 44th employee at Yahoo, but he’d lost millions of his dot-com fortune when the bubble burst in 2000. Despite the bright-sided nature of his Tweets, the 37-year-old didn’t know what was next.

He toyed with a startup idea, but it wasn’t going anywhere. And as Marc Cenedella–founder of The Ladders, and more recently, Knowzen–wrote on Medium a few days ago, Acton…

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Infographic: The Video Sites Millennials Can’t Live Without (and the Ads They Can Live With) | Adweek

Media consumption habits of the younger generation are increasingly relevant to marketers as Gen Zers begin to overtake millennials as the demo du jour. In its annual Acumen Report, Defy Media studies how Gen Z and millennials consume media.

“While last year’s report revealed YouTube’s clear reign over TV and the rising influence of digital stars, this year we expand the view to their full video diet and preferred ad formats,” said Defy Media marketing evp Andy Tu. “The results prove younger audiences’ increasing appetite for video that’s satisfying a diverse set of needs, and the importance of understanding preferences or risk being easily tuned out.”

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7 Reasons Desperation Hiring is a Bad Idea | BusinessTips.com

downloadI have the honor of working with dozens of Colorado’s most creative entrepreneurs and smartest business leaders every day.  One of the hardest things to tackle when you are a small, fast growing company is hiring.  I’m not talking about the mechanics of employment, but rather the timing of each new person so that you maintain the customer services levels and delivery schedules necessary to do good work.  In this highly active labor market it may take you some time to find the right combination of skill, character and experience.  When faced with impending deadlines or an unexpected resignation, many hiring managers feel like their backs are against a wall, and will resort to desperation hiring – making an offer to a less than ideal candidate and hoping they will be a shining star.

Here are 7 of the many reasons why this is a bad idea:

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OMG Mom: The Tech Rules Kids Wish Their Parents Would Follow | Live Science

Children really, really don’t like when their parents share personal details about them on Facebook. And, they wish parents would put down their smartphones and just look at their little darlings once in a while. Oh, and kids also wish their parents would trust them to use technology more independently.

Those are some of the findings from a recent survey of parents and children about their rules and expectations about technology use, and what makes those rules tricky to follow.

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Your Body On Sleep (Infographic) | Lifehack

imagesWe all need to sleep — it’s something every human has in common. From a two-month-old child to an 85-year-old man, sleep is completely necessary.

The one thing that does differ is the amount of sleep a particular person needs. Scientists have argued for years about the “correct” amount of sleep that a single human needs each night.

Many doctors and scientists draw closely towards a solid 8 hours a night for the average adult, but if you asked 10 random people what they think their optimal sleep schedule looked like, you’d likely get widely differing answers.

Some people prefer 5-6 hours a night and can function at their full capacity on this, while others need 9-10 hours to feel normal the next morning.

Regardless of how much sleep each person needs, I think we can all agree that sleep is hugely important, and thanks to MyBedFrames, we can easily understand and digest this importance in the form of an infographic titled Your Body on Sleep.

See infographic