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Search interest for "Travel Tuesday" rose more than 500% from 2021 to 2023, according to a report published by McKinsey & Company on Thursday. Searches are highest among American and Canadian consumers, but interest is also rising in Australia, the United Kingdom, Netherlands and Spain, according to McKinsey. "European travel companies can anticipate the possibility that Travel Tuesday will become a growing phenomenon in their region," McKinsey's report notes. Searches for "Cyber Monday" are far greater than "Travel Tuesday," but interest in the former is declining, it showed. "But unlike some of the impulse purchases consumers make on Black Friday, travel bookings can require more planning."
Persons: , Kristen Jennings, Ryan Mann, Mann Organizations: McKinsey & Company, McKinsey, Google, Bawah Reserve, McKinsey's, Logistics, Infrastructure Locations: Canadian, Australia, United Kingdom, Netherlands, Spain, North America, Western Europe, Singapore, Asia, Riau
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailGreat CEOs build a star team not a team of stars, says Mckinsey's Vikram MalhotraVikram Malhotra, Mckinsey senior partner, joins 'Power Lunch' to discuss his book on CEO excellence and what makes a good CEO.
Persons: Mckinsey's Vikram Malhotra Vikram Malhotra Organizations: Mckinsey
Anaïs Felt took a "micro-retirement" back in March from her Silicon Valley tech job. The time off on her extended leave healed her burnout and changed her relationship to work, she said. Felt decided to meet with a career coach, who quickly "diagnosed" her with burnout, a syndrome due to "chronic workplace stress." AdvertisementSix months after she left her job, Felt said her mental health has improved, and her burnout is gone. "Maybe I'll work from home and continue on the corporate path, or maybe I'll start my own business," she said.
Persons: Anaïs Felt, Felt, , Emily, Amelia Nagoski, TikTok, Prepping, you’re, ike, ake, rick, hough, ince, ersonal Organizations: Service, Hope College, ust Locations: San Francisco, America, Silicon Valley, Michigan, ife, alance, oman
LeanIn and McKinsey have released their annual Women in the Workplace Report, and while there are clear signs of progress, women also face major headwinds. Companies now offer significantly more work-life benefits than they did even five years ago: In 2024, 92% of companies offered paid maternity leave and 86% offered paid paternity leave, up from 2018, when 78% of companies offered paid maternity leave and 70% offered paid paternity leave. "We're seeing some progress, but it's pretty fragile," says Sheryl Sandberg, the founder and board chair of LeanIn. "People have added women to senior leadership in staff roles, but if you're looking for, 'Where's the CEO pipeline?' While women have reached the C-suite, they disproportionately oversee staff functions, she points out, like legal and HR.
Persons: LeanIn, Sheryl Sandberg Organizations: McKinsey, Fortune, Companies Locations: LeanIn
Read previewAmerica's wild, multi-year shopping spree has come to an end — and retailers who got used to Americans dropping cash on just about everything are in a tough spot. US retail sales came in stronger than expected in July, with Americans spending more overall compared to the prior month, according to Census data. Around 40% of consumers said they planned to pare back spending on accessories, home decor, jewelry, and furniture, per McKinsey's survey. We're now back in an environment where good retailers, strong brands that offer compelling value … will benefit," Siegel said. In the meantime, that could mean more pain for retailers, Siegel said, speculating that many were caught by surprise by the shift in consumer sentiment.
Persons: , Ted Rossman, Rossman, pare, Simeon Siegel, Siegel, We're, SPDR Organizations: Service, Business, McKinsey & Company, Bankrate, Customers, BMO, Challenger, Walmart, Target, San Francisco Fed, Primerica Locations: FactSet
Read previewIn addition to its suite of consumer-facing AI offerings like Meta AI, Facebook's parent company also has its an internal tool for employees. She said she uses the tool "all the time for efficiency gains," — and companies that don't have their own internal AI tool are "already behind the curve." Any sizable company operating without an internal AI tool is already behind the curve. The company's internal AI tool, which is called VaultBot, answers "around 32% of all engineering questions," according to a company announcement from January. Other big tech giants are also developing internal AI tools alongside consumer-facing products.
Persons: , Alex Heath, Mark Zuckerberg's, Heath, Esther Crawford, that’s, Esther Crawford ✨, Crawford, Kaz Nejatian, EY, PwC, Banks, Goldman Sachs Organizations: Service, Business, Elon, Twitter, Meta, KPMG, McKinsey, QuantumBlack, JPMorgan, OpenAI, Bain & Company Locations: Meta
McKinsey & Company published its annual book recommendations list this week. Here's a look at the 9 business and economics books on the management consulting firm's list. Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Management consulting firm McKinsey & Company this week published its annual list of book recommendations. The list includes more than 90 books across 10 genres: biography and memoir; business and economics; fiction; health; history; personal development; politics; sustainability; technology; and workplace culture.
Persons: Organizations: McKinsey, Company, Service, Management, McKinsey & Company
Read previewIssues with charging has nearly half of electric-vehicle owners in the US considering going back to fossil fuels — the latest bad sign for the EV transition. A recent consumer study conducted by McKinsey found that 46% of US EV owners surveyed were likely to switch back to a gas-powered vehicle, compared to a global average of 29% of EV owners who said they would likely switch back to an internal-combustion engine. Respondents said the top reason for ditching their EVs was a lack of charging infrastructure. Though a push from the automotive industry to fund charging infrastructure has led to a boom in public charging stations in the last two years, these have largely been money-losing ventures. The Biden administration has set aside $7.5 billion for charging infrastructure and has said it would add 500,000 EV charging stations by 2030.
Persons: , Tesla, Biden Organizations: Service, McKinsey, EV, Business Locations: Australia
Read previewIssues with charging have nearly half of electric vehicle owners in the US considering going back to fossil fuels – the latest bad sign for the EV transition. The top reason respondents listed for ditching their EV was a lack of charging infrastructure. Charging infrastructure here has long been a hot-potato issue, which has held back efforts to build more chargers. While a push from the automotive industry to fund charging infrastructure has led to a boom in public charging stations in the last two years, these have largely been money-losing ventures. On the government side, the Biden Administration has set aside $7.5 billion for charging infrastructure with a vow to add 500,000 EV charging stations by 2030.
Persons: , Tesla, Biden Organizations: Service, McKinsey & Co, EV, Business, Biden Administration Locations: Australia
Some 900 of PwC's top 1,000 consulting clients are now working with the firm on incorporating AI into their businesses, a spokesperson told Business Insider. Even as some companies focus on how AI might rewrite corporate playbooks, some businesses are asking consultants how to get started. Advertisement"Many CIOs are afraid that they don't have the right skills," he told BI. Where to beginMany companies are still determining how they might use AI and GenAI, according to several consultants. This enables greater seamlessness down the line, and that is where the magic lies," he told BI.
Persons: , Ben Ellencweig, Allison Bailey, Bailey, Greg Sward, They're, Jim Rowan, Rowan, Vlad Lukic, Roy Singh, Joe Atkinson, Atkinson, Deloitte's Rowan, Bain's Singh, PwC's Atkinson, he's, Singh Organizations: Service, Business, McKinsey & Company, Boston Consulting, KPMG US, Deloitte Consulting, Bain & Company, Companies, Carrefour, & $
Generative AI has become the leading conversation topic at the world's premiere consulting firms. "How do we actually inject gen AI and AI thinking into ways of doing business?" The launch of ChatGPT marked an inflection point for McKinsey's work on generative AI. He added that McKinsey has worked on roughly 400 generative AI projects in the last six months. McKinsey's work helps the young startup "build trust" among more organizations, Cohere's founder and CEO Aidan Gomez told Business Insider.
Persons: It's, Ben Ellencweig, Ellencweig, they're, it's, Aidan Gomez Organizations: Service, McKinsey & Company, McKinsey, Business Locations: India, Brazil, United States, Israel
Learning to ask AI the right questions is important for young consultants, McKinsey exec says. The McKinsey exec told one intern to learn to be a great 'prompt engineer.' AdvertisementStanding out in a summer internship these days boils down to one thing — learning to talk to AI. At least, that's the advice McKinsey's chief client officer, Liz Hilton Segel, gave one eager intern at the firm. "My advice to her was to be an outstanding prompt engineer," Hilton Segel told The Wall Street Journal.
Persons: McKinsey, , Liz Hilton Segel, Hilton Segel Organizations: McKinsey, Service, Wall Street Journal
McKinsey & Co. held an internal event to rally partners amid a challenging year, Bloomberg reports. Like many major consulting firms, McKinsey has announced layoffs as demand for its services has fallen. During the event, Bob Sternfels, global managing partner at McKinsey, reportedly admitted that the last 18 months had been challenging but said that 2024 was looking better for the firm. McKinsey global managing partner, Bob Sternfels, makes a statement to the US Senate on the firm's work with Saudi Arabia, February 2024. But McKinsey partners have reportedly been unhappy with how leadership has handled the role reductions, people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg.
Persons: Bob Marley, Eminem, , Bob Sternfels, Sternfels, sprees, they're Organizations: McKinsey, Co, Bloomberg, Service, SPAN McKinsey, Employees, US Department of Justice, Purdue Pharma, Sternfels Locations: British, Copenhagen, Saudi Arabia
The Department of Justice is investigating McKinsey for advising opioid producers on boosting sales. The firm previously paid nearly $1 billion to resolve lawsuits related to its opioid work. The investigation is also looking at potential obstruction of justice by McKinsey and its employees. News of the investigation underscores how McKinsey's opioid work — which the firm said it stopped in 2019 — continues to plague the consultancy. In a 2018 email, for example, a since-fired McKinsey executive wrote to another senior executive about the firm's legal risk.
Persons: , Endo, Martin Elling Organizations: Justice, McKinsey, Service, McKinsey & Company, US Department of Justice, Street, Purdue Pharma, DOJ, of, Purdue Locations: Virginia, Western, of Virginia, of Massachusetts, Seattle
In today's big story, we're looking at how millennials have seen their wealth explode over the past few years. Millennials, the oft-maligned generation , are a lot better off financially than you might realize. A new report found millennials saw their wealth double from the end of 2019 through 2023, writes BI's Juliana Kaplan. Whatever the case, millennials' wealth can keep growing. The Department of Justice is investigating the consultancy for its past work advising opioid companies about how to boost their sales , The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.
Persons: , Iurii Garmash, Tyler Le, millennials, BI's Juliana Kaplan, Harry Potter fanfiction didn't, Millennials, Gen Xers, eyeing, Juliana Kaplan, Gen, Chelsea Jia Feng, Jamie Dimon, Devin Nunes, Mark Zuckerberg, they've, There's, Nathan Congleton, Blackstone, Donald Trump's, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, George Glover Organizations: Service, Business, Studio, Getty, millennials, Slaven, The New York Times, Nvidia, Trump Media, House Republicans, Meta, Green, Getty Images Google, Apollo, KKR, Justice, Street, Wednesday, McKinsey, NFL, US Locations: That's, Chelsea, premarket, NBCU, New York, London
McKinsey is reportedly offering some managers money and career coaching services to leave the firm. Staff would also have access to McKinsey's resources and career coaching services. AdvertisementManagement consulting giant McKinsey is dangling career coaching services and nine months worth of pay to staff keen on leaving the firm, British newspaper The Times reported on Saturday. Besides continuing to receive their salary, managers would also have access to McKinsey's resources and career coaching services, per The Times. According to the outlet, employees who receive such ratings have around three months to improve their performance, or they'll be "counseled to leave" McKinsey.
Persons: , Bloomberg — amping Organizations: McKinsey, Staff, Service, Management, British, The Times, McKinsey's, Times . Staff, Times, Bloomberg, Business Insider
McKinsey sent memos to some staff that the clock is ticking for a promotion, Bloomberg reported. The consulting business is rough right now as business dries up. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Consulting firm Deloitte embarked on a massive overhaul of its global operations to cut costs. "We have always maintained a high bar for performance and for attracting and developing exceptional people," a spokesperson for McKinsey told Business Insider by email.
Persons: Organizations: McKinsey, Bloomberg, Service, Management, McKinsey & Co, Accenture, Deloitte Locations: North America
McKinsey & Company has recently given some 3,000 staffers poor performance ratings, which are internally known as “concerns,” according to Bloomberg . This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. The fraction of employees who received these ratings remains consistent with numbers from previous years, a spokesperson for McKinsey told Bloomberg. New hires at major consulting firms, especially, are worried about how all the idle time will impact their performance reviews. McKinsey did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider but a spokesperson told Bloomberg that the company has "always maintained a high bar for performance."
Persons: they’ve, that's, Organizations: McKinsey & Company, Bloomberg, Employees, Business, McKinsey, New
McKinsey's findings on Black economic mobility in America
  + stars: | 2024-02-01 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailMcKinsey's findings on Black economic mobility in AmericaShelley Stewart, senior partner at McKinsey, discusses the key findings of a new report on the impact Generative AI is and will have on Black communities.
Persons: America Shelley Stewart Organizations: McKinsey Locations: America
Salesforce has moved slowly on AI, RBC Capital Markets managing director Rishi Jaluria told Insider — at least that's what the company's partners and customers told him. One said they were encouraging customers to start first with Einstein, the original AI product Salesforce launched in 2016, before adding new generative-AI services to their bills. The question was the first of many moments during the conference when a Salesforce executive brought up trust and safety when talking about generative AI. Despite that, Salesforce continues to invest in other companies via its venture arm, which includes a $500 million Generative AI fund. Jaluria said that with the exception of Microsoft, he doesn't expect software companies to see meaningful revenue gains from generative AI until at least 2025.
Persons: Salesforce, Rishi Jaluria, , Jaluria, they've, Einstein, Matthew McConaughey, pensively, Patrick Stokes, Salesforce's, Stokes, it's, There's, John Somorjai, McKinsey's, Somorjai, Ellen Thomas Organizations: Company, Business, RBC Capital Markets, World, Salesforce Ventures, Microsoft Locations: New York, ethomas@insider.com
"But there are no signs it should be a strong, V-shaped recovery," said Zipser, who is also a senior partner at McKinsey and author of a new report called "China Consumption: Start of a New Era." China's retail sales have generally remained lackluster since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic in early 2020. The overall economic recovery and the recovery of the property market has not been what people hoped for. "The overall economic recovery and the recovery of the property market has not been what people hoped for," he said. China's retail sales rose by 7.6% in October from a year ago, beating analysts' expectations.
Persons: Daniel Zipser, Zipser, Major Organizations: Future Publishing, Getty, BEIJING, McKinsey, Apple, Starbucks, World Bank . U.S Locations: Lianyungang City, East China's Jiangsu Province, Asia, China, South Korea, India, Indonesia
Analysts generally say that for consumers in China today, daily essentials, rather than discretionary goods, are in. Top picks Both are on Jefferies' top picks list for the China consumer in 2024. In addition to being a staple at business dinners in China, Moutai has tried to branch out with co-branding in chocolate, ice cream and coffee. But the company said it expected the Chinese market to "to return to mid single-digit growth" in coming periods. The firm analyzed 80 publicly-listed consumer companies with a majority of revenue from mainland China.
Persons: China haven't, Jefferies, they'd, Alibaba, Moutai, Gamble, It's, North America —, Andy, McKinsey's Daniel Zipser, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: OC, C, Nestle, PepsiCo, Procter, Foods, China, Pacific Sun Advisors, McKinsey Locations: China, Shanghai, Hong Kong, U.S, Wednesday's, Shenzhen, Friday's, China —, North America, Asia
Three-quarters of Gen Z workers surveyed by Adobe say they're comfortable telling managers what they're doing wrong. AdvertisementAdvertisementTalking about wages and telling managers what they're doing wrong aren't taboo topics for Gen Z workers. For the report, Adobe surveyed 1,011 US Gen Z workers, which they defined as those born between 1997 and 2012. Plus, Gen Z workers are the most likely to switch jobs and land the biggest pay increases when they do, Insider previously reported. AdvertisementAdvertisementTo be sure, managers also told Insider that their Gen Z workers often struggle to focus on work and lack motivation.
Persons: Gen, , Z, Tracy Francis Organizations: Adobe, Service, Barclays Bank, ResumeBuilder.com
The United Auto Workers union is on strike, targeting a select few Detroit 3 car factories. After years of a pandemic-driven supply-and-demand car crunch that jacked up new and used vehicle prices and shrunk dealership supply, car buyers had just started to see a little respite. The used car market has been trickier to generalize, but even used vehicle listing prices finally dropped slightly in July. "Pricing may well go up just because of scarcity, and if that happens, then the consumer that potentially was buying a new car would move to the used car market," Russell Hensley, partner in McKinsey's global automotive and assembly practice, said. "Prices will likely go up in the used car market."
Persons: Pat Ryan, Kelley, Cadillac, Jeep Wrangler, Ryan, Russell Hensley Organizations: United Auto Workers, Detroit, UAW, Service, Ford, GM, GMC, Buick, Chrysler, Chevrolet, Cox Automotive, Honda, Toyota, Kia, Jeep Locations: Wall, Silicon, Detroit, Wayne , Michigan, Wentzville , Missouri, Toledo , Ohio
In fact, some 63% of U.S. adults sleep less than the recommended seven to nine hours a night, according to the National Sleep Foundation's Sleep Health Index. There are a myriad of products in the sleep arena — from mattresses and sleep supplements to sleep apnea devices and tech wearables that track sleep. Treating sleep conditions Health conditions can also impact the ability to get a good night's rest, like insomnia and sleep apnea. Obstructive sleep apnea causes breathing to be interrupted during sleep. About half of those surveyed in its obstructive sleep apnea patient survey in July said they had never heard of Inspire.
Persons: Anna Pione, they'll, Seth Basham, Basham, Tempur Sealy, " Basham, It's, Stefano Natella, Natella, it's, Ollie, Seamus Fernandez, Philip's, Philips, Eli Lilly, Eli Lilly's, Guggenheim's Fernandez, Michael Farrell, we've, Fernandez, Novo, wearables, Gene Munster, Jason Ware, Ware, Pione, Michael Bloom Organizations: McKinsey, International Sleep Products, Sealy International, Mattress, Sealy, Centers for Disease Control, Guggenheim, CDC, Unilever, American, of, Care, American Medical Association, Bank of America Securities, Medical Systems, Bank of America, Inspire, Novo Nordisk, Garmin, Apple, Deepwater Asset Management, Apple Watch, Albion Financial, Munster Locations: U.S, dreamland, Mizuho, Novo
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