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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
William Reeve is an entrepreneur who's been angel investing for the past 25 years. AdvertisementThis as-told-to essay is based on a transcribed conversation with William Reeve, 52, an angel investor based in North London. I've been a fairly active angel investor for 25 years now. I'd say the sort of people who do angel investing because their accountant suggests doing it for tax breaks aren't going to do very well. AdvertisementDo you want to share your angel investing story?
Persons: William Reeve, who's, , Reed, I've, Gabrielle Wesley, I'd, It's, Alfred Hitchcock, haven't Organizations: Service, Amazon, Fletcher Research, Mars, McKinsey Locations: North London, Dunelm, Mars Wrigley, America
Luxury sales in Japan surged due to a weakened yen and increased tourist spending. Brands like Hermès are thriving there by aligning with Japanese values of subtlety and quality. Rasmus Jurkatam/Getty ImagesBut in Q3, both LVMH and Kering reported a slowdown in luxury spending in Japan. Still, while the tourist spending may have faded somewhat, experts say Japanese consumers are emerging from a frugal era and spending on luxury themselves. But the Japanese aren't just splashing their cash anywhere — a bitter pill for some luxury brands to swallow.
Persons: , Amrita Banta, Kering, Rasmus Jurkatam, Jelena Sokolova, Daniel Langer, Martin Roll, Birkin, Banta, Louis Vuitton, Roll, Langer, " Langer Organizations: Brands, Service, Research, Gucci, Morningstar, Pepperdine University, McKinsey, Prada Locations: Japan, China, India
For example, according to a recent McKinsey study, Black Americans are 10% more likely to be working jobs slated for AI automation. If current trends hold, the new wealth created by GenAI alone will increase the racial wealth gap by $43 billion annually, according to McKinsey. That begins with infrastructure that supports AI enablement for all, including education on AI tools, access to the internet and power to compute. SFI has been working hard to close the digital divide in Black communities, including Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), 82% of which reside in broadband deserts. This work is bridging access gaps and ensuring that underrepresented talent thrives in the rapidly growing and in-demand field of AI.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, GenAI, Robert Solow, SFI Organizations: Istock, McKinsey, Initiative, Black Colleges, Universities, Vista Equity Partners, Morehouse College Locations: U.S, Black
The French fashion house is bucking the trend of the luxury industry as competitors like LVMH stutter. Hermès is succeeding while peers struggle because it follows the law of luxury to a tee, analysts say. AdvertisementIf the luxury slump is an epidemic, Hermès is managing to stay immune. The fashion house is reaping the rewards of a long-term strategy and abiding by the fundamental laws of luxury. AdvertisementIn the luxury fashion world, there's a growing belief that "getting attention is everything," Pedraza said.
Persons: Hermès, , LVMH, Kering, Hermès Birkin, Sarah Jacobs, Carole Dupont, Eric du Halgouët, Pietri, Martin, Roll, Milton Pedraza, Pedraza, Hermés Organizations: Service, New York Loan, Business, Investor Relations, Hermès, Finance, McKinsey, Paris Thomson Reuters, Luxury Institute Locations: Asia, Japan, China, Switzerland, Paris, LVMH
Jensen Huang says AI can enhance jobs — but won't replace humans entirely. AI could perform parts of some jobs up to 1,000 times better but not replace entire roles, he said. AdvertisementNvidia CEO Jensen Huang anticipates AI will do parts of some jobs 1,000 times better — but it will never replace the actual humans doing those roles. "Depending on the jobs we do, it could do 20% of our jobs 1000 times better. He previously said that he wanted Nvidia to be a company with "100 million AI assistants."
Persons: Jensen Huang, , Huang, Kweilin, Goldman Sachs Organizations: Nvidia, Service, McKinsey Locations: Mumbai, India
New York CNN —Listen up, corporate boards: If you’re looking for the biggest trend in leadership this fall, look no further. Corporate America’s hottest CEO pick is a classic model — the Middle Aged White Guy. Just 52 businesses in the 2024 Fortune 500 ranking were run by women, holding flat from the year before. Obviously, White Guy CEO never went out of fashion — women have rarely represented more than 10% of Fortune 500 companies. But a rash of recent leadership shakeups illustrates the enduring power of the White Guy as a kind of capsule wardrobe for corporate leadership.
Persons: CNN Business ’, Guy, White Guy, Karen Lynch, David Joyner, Lynch, Laxman Narasimhan, Brian Niccol, Mellody Hobson, UnderArmour, Stephanie Linnartz, Kevin Plank, Disney’s Bob Iger, Disney, Morgan Stanley, James Gorman, that’s Iger, Gorman, Nathaniel Meyersohn Organizations: CNN Business, New York CNN, Corporate, Fortune, CVS, America, Indian, McKinsey Locations: New York, Niccol
Ken Griffin's market maker, Citadel Securities, is revamping its core trading infrastructure. AdvertisementIn 2023, Citadel Securities COO of technology, Jeff Maurone, was meeting with senior leaders to discuss technology priorities for the year. I almost look at it as the stretching of business," Woods told Business Insider. Building Citadel Securities' trading infrastructure of the futureIn the last few years, Citadel Securities pushed into credit trading, expanded its rates franchise, and introduced an institutional options offering. Maurone's team supports Citadel Securities' technology organization, and he manages a team of 15 people.
Persons: Ken Griffin's, Josh Woods, Jeff Maurone, , Maurone, Woods, Matt Culek, Peng Zhao, Jim Esposito Organizations: Citadel Securities, Service, Securities, McKinsey, Deloitte, COOs, Citadel Securities Each Locations: Asia Pacific, EMEA, COOs —, New York, Jeff's
In 2023, the beauty industry's sales reached $446 billion, according to a recent report by McKinsey. As 2025 approaches, BI asked three beauty founders what trends will be popular in the new year. Now, as the midway point of the 2020s approaches, we're wondering what beauty trends will define this decade for years to come. Instead, they occur at the industry level, changing the way consumers think about their beauty routines, attitudes toward beauty, or even the ways they shop. Here's what three beauty founders are thinking about for the industry in 2025.
Persons: Colleen Rothschild, there'll, Organizations: McKinsey, Service
Benioff said Microsoft Copilot was inaccurate and compared it to "Clippy 2.0." Salesforce recently announced a pivot to Agentforce, its own product that inlcudes custom AI agents. Benioff's post comes over a month after Salesforce announced its own pivot to AI agents through Agentforce. Advertisement"This is the next big transformation," Benioff told Fortune in September, referring to AI agents. In his X post critiquing Microsoft Copilot, the Salesforce CEO said Agentforce, in contrast, was "what AI was meant to be."
Persons: Marc Benioff, Benioff, Microsoft Copilot, Salesforce, , Copilot, Fortune, Agentforce Organizations: Microsoft, it's, Service, Monday, Business, McKinsey, Thomson Reuters
Aetherflux aims to launch a constellation of satellites to transmit solar power to Earth using infrared lasers. Bhatt told BI why he's joining the commercial space race and what Robinhood taught him about capitalism. AdvertisementAetherflux aims to create a constellation of satellites in low Earth orbit (LEO) that will collect solar power and beam it down to receptors on Earth using infrared lasers. Caltech's president, Thomas F. Rosenbaum, said the project had shown them that solar power beamed from space "is still a future prospect" but that it "should be an achievable future." The science has already been demonstrated; it's just going to be an engineering and economic feat to prove it can be done from space, Bhatt said.
Persons: Baiju Bhatt, Bhatt, Robinhood, , Vlad Tenev, Elon, Baiju Bhatt Bhatt, Thomas F, Rosenbaum, it's, he'd, you'll, Spencer Platt, Matthew Weinzierl, Weinzierl, Einstein, Aetherflux Organizations: he's, Service, California Institute of Technology, NASA, Langley Research Center, Stanford, DARPA, Investment, Space Angels, McKinsey, Harvard Business School, SpaceX, Getty, Apex, Forbes Locations: India, Anadolu, Bay
Starting next month, they'll move into public preview, meaning more organizations can start building AI agents of their own. AI agents can act as virtual workers that can carry out a series of tasks without supervision. Microsoft demonstrated how its autonomous AI agents work. Competition is fierceMicrosoft is doubling down on AI agents at a time when competition is intensifying up in the red-hot artificial intelligence space. Microsoft 365 Copilot is a service offered by the tech giant that embeds generative AI into its suite of productivity apps.
Persons: Satya Nadella, Dimas Ardian, they'll, Jared Spataro, Salesforce, Zahra Bahrololoumi, , Bahrololoumi, I'm, Marc Benioff Organizations: Bloomberg, Getty, Microsoft, Copilot, Dynamics, McKinsey, CNBC, Crown Commercial Service Locations: Jakarta, Indonesia, Salesforce, London, U.S, San Francisco, Ireland, Copilot
Employers might not ask if you have a degree, but many still care, a labor market expert told BI. AdvertisementDeming said many employers look upon a worker with a four-year degree as an investment — one that can be molded into what the firm wants. "What people are looking for, because it's the easiest and laziest filter, is a four-year degree from a 'good school,'" he said. "He's been the finalist for five different positions where they said, 'You're actually the best candidate we interviewed, but we require a four-year degree,'" Hyams said. Often, that might mean a four-year degree.
Persons: , Ranji McMillan, that's, McMillan, She's, what's, McMillan David Deming, Deming, Mona Mourshed, Mourshed, Chris Hyams, Hyams, He's, Forsa, Gartner, Jon Lester, Lester, they've Organizations: Service, Ranji, McMillan, Harvard's Kennedy School, Glass, Harvard Business School, Census, McKinsey & Company, Boston Consulting Group, Employers, Workers, US Department of, Georgetown University Center, Education, Savvas Learning Company, IBM, BI, Research, McKinsey Locations: Northridge, Los Angeles, America
Why Uniqlo is thriving right now
  + stars: | 2024-10-18 | by ( Maria Noyen | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +7 min
Uniqlo's parent recently reported record earnings for the third year running, bolstered by strong sales at Uniqlo. Uniqlo consumers are diverse in age and disposable income. Uniqlo thinks of itself as a tech companyTadashi Yanai, CEO of Uniqlo and founder of Fast Retailing, once said, "Uniqlo is not a fashion company — it's a technology company." Cristina Arias/Cover/Getty ImagesThat's why Uniqlo releases new collections seasonally, whereas rivals such as Zara produce about 500 new designs weekly. He thinks Uniqlo comes with "a bit of this myth of the Japanese psyche.
Persons: , Zara, Kate Yuille, Uniqlo.com Amrita Banta, Z, Banta, Martin Roll, Uniqlo, Tadashi Yanai, Toray, Yanai, Cristina Arias, Yuille, that's, Koji Watanabe Organizations: Service, Retailing, M, GU, Research, Strategy, McKinsey Locations: Japan, Zara, Hiroshima, Uniqlo, Uniqlo's
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
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
But opponents ignore both the history of so-called meritocracy, and the fact that DEI programs benefit business, Frazier and Chenault argue. But they said opponents have weaponized select examples of diversity programs that are not practiced widely to oppose DEI entirely. Brandon Bell/Getty ImagesMeanwhile, conservative legal groups are now filing lawsuits targeting companies’ diversity initiatives, and Republican leaders like Florida Gov. Frazier and Chenault said there was a split between companies that rushed to create diversity programs in the wake of George Floyd’s murder in 2020 and companies that have embedded these programs into their business. “For those companies that had integrated DEI into the way they do business, fundamentally, it’s marbled into the meat, so to speak.
Persons: Ken Frazier, Ken Chenault, Ken Chenault’s, John Deere, Davidson, Bud Light’s, Frazier, ” Frazier, America’s “, Elon, Chenault, Roy Vagelos —, — Frazier, Vagelos, weren’t, Merck, , ” Chenault, don’t, George Floyd, Brandon Bell, Ron DeSantis, Arkansas Sen, Tom Cotton, Bud Light, Robby Starbuck, Starbuck, George Floyd’s, They’re, Organizations: New, New York CNN, America, Merck, Black, American Express, Fortune, CNN, Corporate America, Tractor Supply, Boston Consulting Group, DEI, Revelio Labs, White, ” Companies, McKinsey, Republican, Florida Gov, Disney, Nike, Harley Locations: New York, Philadelphia, America, Arkansas
In a McKinsey survey in February, groceries represented the top category that Gen Z and millennial respondents said they planned to splurge on, outpacing restaurants, travel, and fitness; in 2017, Gen Xers were the top spenders on groceries, followed by boomers. In June, Bank of America reported that its Gen Z customers spent more at premium grocery stores than any other generation. The trend picked up steam with Gen Z. Millennials and Gen Zers are driving demand for vegetarian and vegan food. In a recent YouGov survey for Whole Foods, 70% of Gen Z respondents indicated they were willing to pay more for high-quality foods. Related storiesTo be sure, Gen Z isn't the first generation to serve up food as a status symbol.
Persons: Jade Lily, TikToker, smoothies, Kourtney Kardashian, Katy Perry, Lily, Gen Xers, CreditKarma, Zers, Gen Z's, Millennials, Z, Gen, Neeru, Andrea Hernández, We're, Barbara Kafka, Hernández, Erewhon, Hailey Bieber, Bella Hadid, Sofia Richie, Nate Rosen, Mary Kate, Ashley Olsen, McDonald's, Britney Spears, Nina Dobrev, Shawn Mendes, Prebiotic sodas, Camila Cabello, Gen Zers, Poppi, It's, Rosen, Caesar, That's, Paharia Organizations: McKinsey, Bank of America, Inc, Foods, Arizona State University, New York Times, Pepsi, Brands, idc, Associated Press, Good Culture, Fast Company Locations: Angeles, tocos, Los Angeles
Companies like Japan's Saizeriya, Yum China, and Fast Retailing have recently reported strong sales. There are similarities between Japan's "Lost Decade" of economic stagnation in the 1990s, after the country's asset and credit bubbles burst, and China's economic downturn now. The ethos has benefited companies with budget offerings, including Yum China, which operates KFC and Pizza Hut in the country. Intense competitionHowever, China's market is a fast and furious one — even for winners — and the country's economic downturn has created cut-throat competition with aggressive price wars. As China's economic malaise deepened, boba tea went from premium pricing around $3.50 to $5.50 on average to as little as $1 or less over the last few years.
Persons: , Hideharu Matsutani, Matsutani, Saizeriya, MingYii Lai, Lai, Uniqlo, boba, Jason Yu, Kantar, BI's Matthew Low, Allison Malmsten Organizations: Retailing, Service, McKinsey, Tokyo Stock Exchange, Daxue Consulting, Shoppers, Yum, Fast Retailing, Locations: China, Japan, Beijing, Greater China, Yum China
Younger generations spend more on groceries than other categories, a McKinsey report says. The firm asked over 4,000 people, from baby boomers to Gen Zers, about the categories they intend to splurge on this year. Groceries ranked highest for millennials and Gen Zers, outpacing restaurants, bars, travel, beauty and personal care, apparel, and fitness. It's a notable shift from 2018 when older generations like baby boomers and Gen Xers still spent more on groceries than millennials. It surveyed baby boomers to Gen Zers, not baby boomers to Gen Xers.
Persons: Moodys, , Splurging, what's, Gen Zers, It's, Gen Xers, Zer, Peter Pham, Pham, Moody's Organizations: McKinsey, Service, McKinsey & Company, millennials, Forbes
AI models require enormous data centers that threaten goals to reduce carbon emissions. Schmidt said "we are never going to meet" the goals anyway, suggesting we let AI solve the problem. AdvertisementFormer Google CEO Eric Schmidt says it's time for us to fully invest in AI infrastructure because climate goals are too lofty to reach anyway. The AI boom has spurred a wave of spending on data centers, which provide the computational power needed to train and run AI models. But the surge in development comes at a price, as data centers consume huge amounts of natural resources.
Persons: Eric Schmidt, Schmidt, , Biden, Schmidt's, Schmidt —, it's, we're Organizations: Service, McKinsey, Washington DC, National Security, Artificial Intelligence, Stanford University Locations: Washington, Ukraine
Here’s the deal: The East Coast port strike is getting a lot of attention for its potential disruption to the economy — which is precisely the point. No dockworkers means no bananas (or whatever), which means no profits for the companies that produce and ship them. While research shows automation has obvious benefits, like lower operating costs and fewer human-related errors, port automation does not, on its own, significantly improve performance, according to a 2018 McKinsey report. But automation anxiety is rapidly spilling over into office work, where managers are adopting AI in the hopes of replacing human work or amplifying production. As Washington Post columnist Heather Long wrote Tuesday, the strike is “an early battle of well-paid workers against advanced automation.
Persons: CNN Business ’, It’s, , Dennis Daggett, Mark Felix, Sameera Fazili, Biden, it’s, , ” Fazili, Heather Long Organizations: CNN Business, New York CNN, Hollywood, McKinsey, International Longshoremen’s Association, Economic, Getty, National Economic Council, Washington Locations: New York, East Coast, China, Singapore, Europe, Port of New York, New Jersey, Long Beach, Los Angeles, AFP
On a more micro level, many ETF investors can sidestep the fund-level capital gains taxes incurred by many investors who own mutual fund shares, experts said. However, mutual fund managers can also generate capital-gains taxes within a fund itself when they buy and sell securities. Costs are lowThe first ETF was an index fund: the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY ). Index funds, also known as passively managed funds, track a market index like the S&P 500 . Investors have equated ETFs with index funds since their inception, even though there are also index mutual funds, experts said.
Persons: Michael McClary, Bryan Armour, Armour, McClary, Morningstar, Michael Iachini, Charles Schwab, Morningstar's, they're, Michael M Organizations: Getty, Exchange, Morningstar, Valmark Financial, Investors, North America, Trust, Financial, Retail, McKinsey, SEC, Securities, Exchange Commission, Stock, New York Stock Exchange, Santiago
CNBC is now accepting nominations for our second annual Changemakers list. The list recognizes women transforming business and philanthropy, female leaders who have accomplished a meaningful achievement in 2024. Changemakers are taking novel approaches to old business problems and identifying new business opportunities. The list will be announced next year, and our second annual Changemakers Summit is set for next spring. Submit a nomination for the 2025 Changemakers list.
Persons: Dina Powell McCormick, Donald Trump, Marcela Miguel Berland, Tory Burch, Burch, Emma Carrasco, Corporate Affairs Srikant Datar, Harvard Business School Dean Karen Finerman, Ken Frazier, Desiree Gruber, Oscar Munoz, Laurene Powell Jobs, Emerson, Merline Saintil, Sheryl Sandberg, Stacy Smith, Spencer Stuart Organizations: CNBC, Fortune, Global Client Services, U.S . Deputy National, Tory, NBCUniversal, Corporate Affairs, Harvard Business School, Metropolitan Capital, Catalyst's Health, Merck, United Airlines, OptionB.org, Annenberg, LeanIn, McKinsey
How consulting lost its cool
  + stars: | 2024-09-30 | by ( Lakshmi Varanasi | Tim Paradis | Kelsey Vlamis | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +9 min
Consulting firms have faced increased employee turnover after layoffs and delayed start dates. For decades, business students and MBAs looked to consulting because the work was high in pay and prestige. AdvertisementThe lure of other industriesThe declining appeal of the consulting industry is most evident in the number of employees leaving. That's different from when he left in 2022, when there was a pandemic-fueled boom for consulting work. "When I was transitioning out of consulting, consulting was actually still all the rage.
Persons: , MBAs, Jason Saltzman, Lightbank, Ezra Gershanok, Gershanok, Gorick Ng, Ng, Matt Sternberg, Sternberg, he's, who've, Consulting hasn't, Ernst, Young, Irmgard Naudin, Cate, Atli Thorkelsson, Thorkelsson Organizations: Service, Accenture, Technologies, McKinsey, Harvard University, Boston Consulting Group, BI, Big, Consulting, Redpoint Ventures, Business Locations: , London
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