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Another big boost to your workplace happiness may be how well you get along with your colleagues. Having great co-workers was a common theme among the top three companies with the happiest employees, according to the latest ranking from Comparably, an employee reviews site. 3 Uber, one employee writes that "what make me happiest at work is the people." Notably missing from the company list are many tech giants including Google, Meta and Microsoft, which continued their descent from previous years and fell off the top 100 happiest companies list in 2023. Smaller organizations that top Comparably's happiest companies, meanwhile, are "able to get and act on feedback very quickly and be more adaptable to what their employees are saying," Herring adds.
Persons: Chad Herring, Herring, that's, Warren Buffett Organizations: Employees, Boston Consulting, Google, Meta, Microsoft Locations: California
Fraser is under mounting pressure to fix Citigroup, a global bank so difficult to manage that its challenges consumed three predecessors dating back to 2007. Stock Chart Icon Stock chart icon Citigroup's stock has been mired in a slump under CEO Jane Fraser. While competitors have been cutting jobs this year, Citigroup's staff levels remained at 240,000. That leaves Citigroup with the biggest workforce of any American bank except the larger and far more profitable JPMorgan. Executives will see cuts beyond 10% because of Fraser's push to eliminate regional managers, co-heads and others with overlapping responsibilities, they said.
Persons: Citigroup Jane Fraser, Alex Wong, Jane Fraser, Fraser, JPMorgan Chase, James Shanahan, Edward Jones, Mike Corbat, they'll, Mike Mayo, Titi Cole, Citigroup's, Cole, Wells, I'm, Dana Neibert Organizations: Citigroup, Financial Services, Rayburn House, JPMorgan, Citi, Bank of America, Boston Consulting, Bank, Getty, Operations Locations: Washington , DC, U.S, Wells Fargo, Tahiti, Polynesia
The logo for Citibank is seen on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., August 3, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsNov 6 (Reuters) - Citigroup's (C.N) managers and consultants working on CEO Jane Fraser's reorganization have discussed job cuts of at least 10% in several major businesses, CNBC reported on Monday, citing people with knowledge of the process. The bank has warned of job cuts as part of a sweeping overhaul it unveiled in September, but has said it will estimate the scale of layoffs and cost savings in the current quarter. Fraser's push to eliminate regional managers, co-heads and others with overlapping roles will translate into job cuts beyond 10% for executives, the report said. Since taking charge of the banking giant in 2021, Fraser has tried to improve profits, streamline the bank and fix regulatory problems.
Persons: Andrew Kelly, Jane Fraser's, Fraser, we've, We've, Niket, Jaiveer Singh Shekhawat, Tatiana Bautzer, Arun Koyyur Organizations: Citibank, New York Stock Exchange, REUTERS, CNBC, Boston Consulting Group, Citi, Boston Consulting, Thomson Locations: Manhattan , New York City, U.S, Bengaluru, New York
Mainstream investment giants such as BlackRock (BLK.N) and Fidelity, as well as crypto-focused firms like Grayscale, have filed applications for spot bitcoin ETFs. U.S. crypto firm NYDIG estimates demand for a spot bitcoin ETF at around $30 billion. Their calculation compares the sizes of the gold and bitcoin ETFs - $210 billion versus $28.8 billion, respectively - and adjusts them for their relative volatility. BlackRock declined to comment on its pending spot bitcoin ETF, other than to confirm that it is still awaiting final SEC approval. His forecast is based on how demand evolved in smaller markets where spot bitcoin ETFs already exist, such as Canada.
Persons: Dado, Dave Mazza, George Gagliardi, cryptocurrencies, bitcoin, Todd Sohn, Steven McClurg, Crypto, Matthew Sigel, Matthew Hougan, Steve Sosnick, Suzanne McGee, Ira Iosebashvili, Michelle Price Organizations: REUTERS, Roundhill Investments, Fidelity, U.S . Securities, Exchange, Coromandel Wealth Management, Strategas Securities, Boston Consulting, BlackRock, SEC, Bitwise Investments, Interactive, Thomson, Reuters Locations: U.S, BlackRock, Lexington , Massachusetts, Canada
Intel is playing catch-up in the AI race
  + stars: | 2023-10-26 | by ( Hasan Chowdhury | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +2 min
Chip maker Intel is in catch-up mode on AI. In May, it revealed a new AI chip called "Falcon Shores" that will be packed with the memory and computing power needed for the intensive workloads of AI tools such as ChatGPT. The productivity and efficiency benefits of generative AI tools like ChatGPT have led several CEOs to talk openly about their intent to deploy AI within their workforce, creating an opportunity for tech companies to offer them customized solutions. AdvertisementAdvertisementIntel's efforts to make headway in AI come amid pressure on other key parts of its business. Intel did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Insider, made outside regular working hours.
Persons: , Intel's Organizations: Intel, Service, Nvidia, Boston Consulting Group, Bloomberg
It’s not that simple, though, and some researchers argue that the labor savings of electric vehicles have been greatly overstated. These were among several research reports that found little total difference in the labor hour requirements of EV manufacturing compared to gas-powered cars. Boston Consulting estimates that making battery cells takes up about 8% of the total labor to produce an entire automobile. That’s slightly higher than the percentage of labor needed to produce a gasoline engine, he said. Ford also expects to train 5,000 people to work at a joint-venture battery manufacturing facility currently under construction in Kentucky.
Persons: That’s, Turner Cotterman, Cotterman, , Erica Fuchs, Nathan Niese, Gerald Johnson, , Fuchs, “ You’ve, ” Ford, Ford, that’s, Niese, They’ve Organizations: CNN, United Auto Workers, Carnegie Mellon University, McKinsey, Company, Carnegie Mellon, Boston Consulting, EV, General Motors, Battery, Toyota, BMW, Hyundai, UAW Locations: United States, Marshall , Michigan, Kentucky, Ohio, Boston
Big consulting companies are racing to add to their offerings around artificial intelligence. That's the bet consulting companies have been making as they rush to build out their generative AI offerings. To help companies figure out how to use AI, the consulting giants are racing to scoop up companies that specialize in the technology. Consulting firms' push to bulk up on AI comes as many workers are worried that AI bots will snatch their jobs . That same month, Deloitte introduced a set of services called Quartz AI to help clients use technology like GenAI.
Persons: , they're, OpenAI's ChatGPT, They're, Sawhney, ChatGPT, Steve Chase, he's, Chase, EY EY, EY, PwC PwC, PwC, Shannon Schuyler, Bain, BCG Organizations: Service, Accenture, McKinsey, PriceWaterhouseCoopers, Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management, Deloitte, LinkedIn, Fortune, KPMG, Microsoft, KPMG US, Bain Bain & Company, Boston Consulting, OpenAI, Deloitte Deloitte, Nvidia, QuantumBlack, QuantumBlack Labs Locations: Mexico
Workers using OpenAI's ChatGPT may actually perform more poorly than those who don't, new BCG research finds. AdvertisementAdvertisementIf you're using ChatGPT as a shortcut at work, you may want to be extra careful. For tasks "inside the frontier," consultants using AI were "significantly more productive" and "produced significantly higher quality results" than those who weren't using the chatbot. BCG's findings demonstrate a cautionary tale for workers thinking about using ChatGPT to help do their jobs. AI-generated errors may only get worse: In a recent paper, AI researchers found that generative AI models could soon be trained on AI-generated content — a phenomenon they call "model collapse."
Persons: , it's, Wharton, Saren Rajendran, ChatGPT, NewsGuard, Bard, James Webb Organizations: Service, Boston Consulting, Harvard, MIT, CNET, James Webb Space Telescope
Tim Robberts | Digitalvision | Getty ImagesWhen it comes to money, women tend to think of themselves as savers rather than investors. "The biggest risk to women's portfolios is that we don't take enough risk," said Nancy Tengler, CEO and chief investment officer of Laffler Tengler Investments in Scottsdale, Arizona. "Women make better investors than men," Tengler said, and are often less benchmark driven, willing to do more research and are open to changing their minds. Women investors tend to achieve positive returns and outperform men by 40 basis points, according to research from Fidelity Investments, based on an analysis of annual performance for 5.2 million accounts. There are reasons why women should stay actively involved in the management of their household finances, according to Tengler.
Persons: Tim Robberts, Nancy Tengler, Tengler, Edward Jones, Lena Haas Organizations: Digitalvision, Investments, Fidelity Investments, Boston Consulting Group, Microsoft, Apple Locations: Scottsdale , Arizona
"Zombie offices" have proliferated in the US as employees opt for fully remote or hybrid work. But he had no idea that "hybrid work" would become ubiquitous nearly 10 years later and make InnerSpace a helpful tool for understanding new trends in shared workspaces. Zombie offices have popped up around the country because there aren't offices filled with people five days a week anymore. Zombie offices and the shift to hybrid work have pushed companies to figure out the next best move to maximize office space using real-time data, not guesswork. VergeSense's optical sensors are attached to the ceiling in a work space.
Persons: , James Wu, Wu couldn't, Jessica Blaine Smith, Wu, Sharad Rastogi, isn't, Rastogi, it's, JLL, Zombie, that's, they've, VergeSense, They're, Jack Weber, Gresham Smith, Weber, Gresham Smith Weber, Ragosti, InnerSpace's Organizations: Service, Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Met, Work Dynamics Technology, San, Aldi, Rapid Transit, Boston Consulting Group, Companies Locations: JLL
That's why I was fascinated to see the results of a study that gave hundreds of consultants access to AI. They completed more tasks, completed their tasks more quickly, and the work was of a higher quality. They completed more tasks, completed their tasks more quickly, and the work was of a higher quality. Everyone using AI tools in the right places benefited, but it was the lower performers who did so most, allowing them to close the gap to their higher-performing peers. The study supports earlier research that's found AI increases productivity overall while elevating the less experienced and lower performers most.
Persons: There's Organizations: Boston Consulting Group, Service Locations: Wall, Silicon
The OECD recently predicted that the UK will experience the highest inflation among all advanced economies this year. U.K. inflation surprised with a dip to 6.7% in August, below expectations and sparking increased bets on a pause in interest rate hikes from the Bank of England on Thursday. The goods rate rose slightly from 6.1% to 6.3% but was more than offset by the services rate slowing significantly from 7.4% to 6.8%. Caroline Simmons, U.K. chief investment officer at UBS, told CNBC that the central bank will still most likely hike on Thursday. "We do believe that's going to be their last hike, however, because we do have these downward forces on inflation," she added.
Persons: Raoul Ruparel, Ruparel, Caroline Simmons Organizations: OECD, Bank of England, Reuters, National Statistics, Boston Consulting Groups, for Growth, of England, UBS, CNBC Locations: Sheffield, London
Consultants using AI completed tasks faster and produced higher-quality results than those without, according to a new study. The greatest gains were seen by below-average performers using AI, per the study's authors. AdvertisementAdvertisementThey were then assigned a series of practical consulting tasks for a fictional shoe company and had their performance graded by human and AI raters. The greatest gains were seen by below-average performers using AI, whose average performance improved by 43%. Their above-average counterparts only saw an average performance increase of 17% from using AI.
Persons: ChatGPT, Ethan Mollick, Organizations: Service, Boston Consulting Group, Harvard, MIT, University of Warwick, University of Pennsylvania, Fortune Locations: Wall, Silicon, Wharton
Criteo is eyeing a $42 billion slice of the retail media market. A glut of retail media networks could reduce that $42 billion retail media opportunity by 20%. Criteo said that this type of "fragmentation" could cause retail media revenues to drop 20%. He said brands will often buy across three or four individual retail media networks, which means smaller retail media networks can struggle to attract advertising dollars. The Trade Desk's CEO Jeff Green has previously announced his ambition to control "most" of the retail media market and it has aggressively sought partnerships to prove that retail ads drive sales, to inspire more advertisers to buy retail media.
Persons: Criteo, Let's, Brian Gleason, Megan Clarken, You've, Andrew Lipsman, Lipsman, Jeff Green Organizations: Boston Consulting, Amazon, New York City, Intelligence, Trade Locations: China —, New York
India’s fintech partygoers nurse a needed hangover
  + stars: | 2023-09-11 | by ( Shritama Bose | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
MUMBAI, Sept 11 (Reuters Breakingviews) - India’s financial technology industry is suffering from overindulgence. And it was on full display at a sombre Global Fintech Festival in Mumbai last week. The South Asian country is the world’s third-largest fintech market by number of unicorns. Poster child Byju’s is squabbling with lenders as investors walk away and financial reports get delayed. Follow @ShritamaBose on XCONTEXT NEWSThe Global Fintech Fest organised by the National Payments Corporation of India and industry association Payments Council of India was held between Sept. 5 and 7 in Mumbai.
Persons: securitisation, , hesitatingly, Vishwas Patel, they’re, fintechs, Mukesh Ambani’s, Antony Currie, Katrina Hamlin, Thomas Shum Organizations: Reuters, Founders, Boston Consulting Group, Venture, Reserve Bank, One97 Communications, FSN, Commerce Ventures, Innoven Triple Blue Capital, XV Partners, Financial, National Payments Corporation of India, Thomson Locations: MUMBAI, Mumbai, India, fintech, Sequoia Capital’s India, Southeast Asia, Rwanda, Japan, Germany, Peru
[1/2] AI (Artificial Intelligence) letters are placed on computer motherboard in this illustration taken June 23, 2023. Some have expressed concern that students might similarly rely on AI to produce work and effectively cheat - especially as AI content gets better with time. Passing off GenAI as original work could also raise copyright issues, prompting questions over whether AI should be banned in academia. It has provided that tool free to more than 10,000 education institutions globally, although it plans to charge a fee from January. So far, the AI detection tool has found that only 3% of students used AI for more than 80% of their submissions and that 78% did not use AI at all, Turnitin data shows.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, OpenAI, ChatGPT, Bard, Leif Kari, Rachel Forsyth, Sophie Constant, Stefania Giannini, Kirsten Rulf, Deepa Babington Organizations: REUTERS, Lund, University of Western, University of Hong, Microsoft, Royal Institute of Technology, United Nations Educational, Cultural Organization, UNESCO, Strategic, Lund University, England's University of Oxford, Reuters, European Union, EU, Boston Consulting Group, Thomson Locations: STOCKHOLM, University of Western Australia, Perth, University of Hong Kong, Stockholm, Sweden, Britain, Singapore
Demand for carbon credits is on track to fall in 2023, according to two of the top data providers. Nestle, which has also not disclosed its spending on offsets, said it would stop using carbon offsets and was seeking other routes to net zero. Until this year, the voluntary carbon market had grown as more companies came under shareholder pressure to adopt net zero policies. SECOND THOUGHTSFor the carbon markets, another issue is that regulators and carbon market advisory bodies are limiting the scope of their use by companies. "You need to reduce emissions and that's how you will be judged in the market when you're disclosing your carbon emissions."
Persons: Elizabeth Frantz, Gucci, Renat Heuberger, Stephen Donofrio, certifier Verra, EasyJet, Jane Ashton, Ashton, Naomi Swickard, Verra, Zimbabwe's, Steve Wentzel, Wentzel, Kristian Rönn, Rob Hayward, Susanna Twidale, Sarah McFarlane, Barbara Lewis Organizations: New England Forestry Foundation, REUTERS, Nestle, Reuters, Marketplace, Shell, Boston Consulting, Offset, GEO, Verra, Carbon, Investments, United Nations, Voluntary, Initiative, EU, KLM, Companies, Thomson Locations: Hersey, New Hampton , New Hampshire, U.S, Kenya, Pole, Stockholm, Ghana
The boost to formal ties could bring billions of dollars of new private investment and some public funds to Vietnam's semiconductor industry. But industry officials, analysts and investors said that the small pool of trained experts will be a crucial hurdle for the rapid development of the chip industry. There's also a risk of inadequate supply of trained chips software engineers, said Hung Nguyen, senior program manager on supply chains at RMIT University Vietnam. The White House has not specified which segments of the chips industry in Vietnam will be prioritised, but U.S. industry executives have indicated that the back-end is a key growth sector. More private investment could come, especially if a significant share of the $500 million available under the U.S. CHIPS Act for global semiconductor supply chains ends up in Vietnam.
Persons: Joe Biden, Kevin Lamarque, Biden, Thanh, There's, Hung Nguyen, CHINA'S, Amkor, Janet Yellen, Hung, Francesco Guarascio, Steve Holland, Trevor Hunnicutt, Khanh Vu, Phuong, Muralikumar Organizations: U.S . Army, White, REUTERS, Companies, ASEAN Business Council, RMIT University Vietnam, Boston Consulting Group, Reuters, Intel, U.S . Treasury, Marvell, Thomson Locations: Vietnam, Washington , U.S, Hanoi, Washington, Vietnam Vietnam, HANOI, U.S, China, United States, Taiwan, Beijing, The U.S, Malaysia, India, Europe, Phuong Nguyen
A Dongfeng truck with autonomous driving system developed by Inceptio is showcased at Shanghai Centre in Shanghai, China August 29, 2023. REUTERS/Zoey Zhang Acquire Licensing RightsSHANGHAI, Aug 29 (Reuters) - Chinese startup Inceptio expects the number of trucks in China using its driver-assist technology will quadruple by mid-2024 from around 600 currently, and also plans to begin sales overseas next year. "This is a new 'blue ocean' market," he said, using a phrase that describes an underdeveloped market with few competitors. Over the next three to five years, Inceptio is looking at offering services to help manage truck fleets, Ma said. Inceptio eventually hopes that trucks will be eventually allowed to go fully autonomous, enabling it to build a robotruck fleet.
Persons: Zoey Zhang, Inceptio, Julian Ma, China's, Ma, Zhang Yan, Brenda Goh, Edwina Gibbs Organizations: Inceptio, Shanghai, REUTERS, Rights, Dongfeng Automobile, Nestle, Budweiser, Deppon Express, Reuters, East, Boston Consulting, Thomson Locations: Shanghai, China, U.S, CATL, Sequoia China, East Asia, East, Japan, Inceptio
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBCG's Rich Lesser: There is a focus on resilience and productivity right now for companiesRich Lesser, Boston Consulting Group global chair, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the mindset of corporate leaders, including on the economy, markets, labor market, climate and more.
Persons: Lesser, Rich Lesser Organizations: Boston Consulting Group
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWatch CNBC's full interview with Boston Consulting Group's Rich LesserRich Lesser, Boston Consulting Group global chair, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the mindset of corporate leaders, including on the economy, markets, labor market, climate and more.
Persons: Boston Consulting Group's Rich, Boston Consulting Group's Rich Lesser Rich Organizations: Boston Consulting Group's, Boston Consulting Group's Rich Lesser, Boston Consulting Group's Rich Lesser Rich Lesser, Boston Consulting Group
New hires at some top consulting firms don't have enough work, The Wall Street Journal reported. MBA grads recruited into top consulting firms often earn sizable six figure salaries. Get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in business, from Wall Street to Silicon Valley — delivered daily. Those hired into consulting firms out of business school generally take home hefty six figure salaries. The impasse that new hires face comes as consulting firms have laid off swaths of their workforces over the past year.
Persons: grads, , they're, Bain, Lakshmi Organizations: Street Journal, Service, Bain, Boston Consulting Group, McKinsey, Wall Street, Yale, Dartmouth, University of Virginia, — Bain Locations: Wall, Silicon, United States, Lakshmi Varanasi, lvaranasi
On Monday, the central government announced 20 measures to support tourism, as well as spur consumption of electric cars and so-called smart appliances. The support measures announced included an entire section on spurring rural consumption. Specifics included subsidizing trade-ins for purchase of smart household appliances, improving delivery services and promoting rural tourism. Median disposable income for rural households rose by 6.1% in the first half of the year from a year ago, official data showed. But at 8,920 yuan ($1,245) in disposable income, rural households only had about 40% of what urban households had to spend.
Persons: Yang Bo, Xu Hongcai, Li Chunlin, Li, Nomura, Xu, Wang Jun Organizations: China News Service, Getty, China Association of Policy, National Development, Reform Commission, CNBC, Boston Consulting Group, U.S . Authorities, Huatai Asset Management Locations: Nanjing, China, BEIJING, Beijing, Hong Kong
Sixth Street, Blackstone, and Ares have backed providers of treatments like laser hair removal. Laser hair removal, body contouring, filler injections — it's not just TikTok and Instagram where people are talking about their latest treatments. The space is another consumer-focused vertical, like dentistry and dermatology, that private equity firms, big and small, are aggressively pushing into. Christian Karavolas, who owns laser hair removal specialist Romeo & Juliette in New York City, said he's turned away offers by private equity investors. Laser hair removal, for instance, isn't considered a medical procedure in every state.
Persons: Ares, It's, Levine, Leonard Green, Blackstone, Levine Leichtman, Christian Karavolas, Juliette, he's, Karavolas, Alex Thiersch, Thiersch, Chanel, Dior, David Yurman, Louis Vuitton, isn't, Sevana Petrosian, Eva Longoria Bastón, SEV, Andrew Schwartz, Schwartz, Heravi Organizations: Sixth, Blackstone, Levine Leichtman Capital Partners, Leonard Green & Partners, Boston Consulting, Industry, KKR, SkinSpirit, Walmart, ORIX Venture Finance, TPG, General Atlantic, Wax Center, Med Spa Association, Getty, Consumers Locations: Blackstone, Milan, LaserAway, California, New York City, H.I.G, Manhattan, Burbank , California
The WatchCharts market index and has slumped 32% from an all-time high in March last year. When the 'everything rally' was in full swing during the pandemic period, luxury watches were no exception. Preowned watch sales reached $22 billion in 2021 – nearly a third of the $75 billion luxury watch market, according to a report from Boston Consulting Group. The Rolex index is up by more than 55% from five years ago. "Luxury watches have performed well, especially over the long term, in comparison with traditional investment categories.
Persons: Patek Philippe, Audemars, Philippe, Audemars Piguet, Patek Philippes, Piguets, Organizations: Service, Wall, Rolex, Fed, Boston Consulting Locations: Wall, Silicon
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