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Publicis, a French marketing company, agreed to pay $350 million within the next two months and will not take on any more opioid clients, according to New York Attorney General Letitia James. “For a decade, Publicis helped opioid manufacturers like Purdue Pharma convince doctors to overprescribe opioids, directly fueling the opioid crisis and causing the devastation of communities nationwide,” said James in a statement. For its alleged role in the opioid crisis, McKinsey in 2021 agreed to pay $573 million to states as part of multiple settlements. “The fight against the opioid crisis in the United States requires collaboration across industries, lawmakers, and communities, and we are committed to playing our part. Purdue Pharma first introduced the opioid drug OxyContin in the 1990s and promoted it as non-addictive.
Persons: Letitia James, Phil Weiser, Publicis, , James, ” Publicis, Sackler Organizations: New, New York CNN, Purdue Pharma’s, New York, Colorado, Purdue Pharma, McKinsey, Purdue, Centers for Disease Control, Biden, Sackler Locations: New York, French, United States
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
Through college and Harvard Business School, McLeod had the desire to be an entrepreneur, but "nothing really clicked" for him. The lack of direction led him to accept a consulting job at McKinsey during his second year of business school. "That was kind of the standard job that you got coming out of business school." But his plans quickly changed soon after when he had the idea for a dating website called Hinge. "They finally got word that I had started Hinge and called me up and asked for their money back," he said.
Persons: Justin McLeod, McLeod Organizations: Harvard Business School, McKinsey, CNBC, Match Locations: America
Boeing is back in the headlines for all the wrong reasons again after the Alaska Airlines 737 Max 9 incident. Boeing workers participating in a "Quality Stand Down" at Boeing's 737 Max factory in Renton, Washington on January 25, 2024. One of the first Boeing 737 Max jets on the production line at the company's manufacturing facility in Renton, Washington, U.S., on Monday, Dec. 7, 2015. The airlines around the world that have already bought Boeing planes basically need to keep using those models, whatever the problems. Commercial pilots are certified on specific models and are not able to easily move from single-aisle to widebody versions of Boeing jets, let alone between a Boeing and an Airbus jet.
Persons: I’m, Dave Calhoun, we’ve, , , Calhoun, Max, Jason Redmond, Stan Deal, Ed Pierson, McDonell Douglas, Critics, ” Ron Epstein, McDonnell Douglas, Jim McNerney, Tammy Duckworth, Aaron Schwartz, ‘ We’re, Richard Aboulafia, Joshua Drake, Boeing Calhoun, Bank of America’s Epstein, it’s, Pierson, Max ”, Robert Clifford, people’s, ” Calhoun, David Ryder, Aboulafia, Boeing’s Organizations: New, New York CNN, Boeing, Alaska Airlines, National Safety Transportation Board, Pilots, Max, Alaska Air, Getty, Foundation for Aviation Safety, CNN, “ Boeing, Bank of America, General Electric, Procter, Gamble, McKinsey, Co, GE, Associated, Pentagon, Capitol, FAA, Airbus, Joshua Drake Photography, Blackstone Group, Nielsen, Bank of, Aviation, Bloomberg, Ethiopian Aircraft Accident, US National Transportation Safety Board, Internal Locations: New York, Renton , Washington, AFP, Alaska, Soviet Union, Pacific, Chicago, Seattle, Washington, DC, Mobile , Alabama, Wichita, Oklahoma, Carolina, South Carolina, Calhoun, Indonesia, Ethiopia, Renton , Washington , U.S
The next iteration of quiet luxury? The jazz era.
  + stars: | 2024-01-24 | by ( Priya Raj | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +3 min
A stylist told Business Insider the jazz aesthetic is close to the quiet luxury aesthetic. Jazz-inspired outfits are the original quiet luxury, Eagle saysHailee Steinfeld wearing opera gloves at the 2024 Golden Globes in Beverly Hills, California. Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesEagle told BI the jazz aesthetic lends itself to the quiet luxury aesthetic, which became popular in 2023 and is likely to continue in 2024 too. AdvertisementShe said a way to tap into the jazz trend is to focus on the roaring 20s and "old Hollywood vibe." AdvertisementAnd for fans of the viral bow trend, Eagle said a hair bow would bring the look together.
Persons: , Zs, Erin Eagle, Hailee Steinfeld, Bauer, Griffin, it's, Eagle Organizations: Service, Globes, Axelle, Eagle, McKinsey Locations: Beverly Hills , California
According to a McKinsey report from 2022 based on a decade of data, role transitions are inherent in labor markets. The generative AI platform dubs itself a "tutor for learners" and an "assistant for teachers." Meanwhile, nonprofit organization All Star Code had a scholar visualize themselves progressing in their tech career over the next decade by creating a 30-second video using generative AI platform Runway. There lies the ultimate caveat in AI-enabled career transitions. Panetta feels like the human role in hiring — regardless of the qualifications of candidates — will play a potentially bigger role in career transitions.
Persons: Yee, Lareina Yee, Karen Panetta, That's, Panetta, Sal Khan, Bill Gates, Khan, , Bias, doesn't Organizations: McKinsey, Strategic, Institute of Electrical, Electronics Engineering, Tufts School of Engineering, Khan Academy, OpenAI Locations: America
New study predicts that companies will rapidly adopt AI technology over the next decade. The study also found that over half of all jobs driving the US economy will be significantly impacted by AI, with a small percentage of workers losing their jobs and struggling to find new employment. AdvertisementCompanies will quickly adopt AI technology, impacting jobsThe model first examined how quickly businesses will adopt AI. AI will cause an economic boomThe surge in AI adoption by companies signifies a huge impact on the US economy, the study found. AdvertisementThis is supported by a recent McKinsey study showing that AI is more likely to enhance jobs than replace them.
Persons: , OpenAI, What's, Goldman Sachs, Cognizant Adrian Cooper, Cooper, Sam Altman, FABRICE COFFRINI Organizations: Service, Oxford Economics, McKinsey, Oxford
About a third, 29% want more flexible work hours, according to Monster's 2024 Work Watch Report. Job search site Glassdoor recently released its Best Places to Work report, including a list of the 100 best large companies to work for based on current and previous employee reviews. Glassdoor looked at which came up the most to decipher the best industries to work for as well. Here are their top four industries, including examples of jobs and how much they pay. TechThere were 31 tech companies on the list, crowning the industry as the best one to work for overall.
Persons: Glassdoor, Daniel Zhao, Zhao, Cassandra Happe, Booz Allen Hamilton, Fannie Mae Organizations: Workers, Tech, WalletHub, Companies, NVIDIA, Procore Technologies, VMWare, Bain & Company . Companies, McKinsey & Company, Booz, Huron Consulting Group, Bain & Company, Finance, Fidelity Investments, Mastercard, & $ Locations: Glassdoor
The positive economic developments as well as Fed officials’ forecasts for at least three rate cuts this year had investors eying a March pivot. Meanwhile, Barkin — who will also be voting on Fed policy decisions at meetings this year — isn’t ruling March out entirely. For Barkin, “the breadth of inflation settling” and “the consistency of inflation settling” matter in his evaluation of whether the inflation rate is approaching the Fed’s target. Unlike many Fed officials, Barkin does not have a PhD in economics but has an MBA and a law degree. Investors will be paying close attention to any hints of the timing of rate cuts in the central bank’s latest statement and Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference.
Persons: Tom Barkin, Barkin, eying, Christopher Waller, , Loretta Mester, Barkin —, isn’t, ” Barkin, , ” ‘ There’s, John Williams, Jerome Powell, Williams, “ There’s, Jerome Powell’s Organizations: New, New York CNN, Richmond Federal, CNN, Fed, Cleveland Fed, FactSet, Richmond Fed, McKinsey, ” New York Fed, Raleigh Chamber of Commerce, That’s Locations: New York
The increase in wealth has been seen from stronger retail participation, larger investments into the Indian stock markets, and gold and property purchases. Rising disposable incomes are set to power India's consumption story, further boosting the country's consumer sector that is fast becoming a key driver for economic growth. His comments came on the back of a Goldman Sachs report last week that predicted around 100 million people in India will become "affluent" — earn an annual income exceeding $10,000 — by 2027. Currently, 60 million people in the world's fifth-largest economy earn more than $10,000 — around 4% of India's working age population — according to the report released last week. The country's consumer market is set to become the world's third-largest by 2027, as the number of middle- to high-income households rises.
Persons: Abhishek Malhotra, Goldman Sachs, Malhotra Organizations: McKinsey &, CNBC, BMI Locations: India, Mumbai
AdvertisementThe annual World Economic Forum just wrapped up in Davos, Switzerland, and talk of artificial intelligence was just about everywhere. AdvertisementPlenty of companies touted their AI wares at the World Economic Forum in Davos this year. Related storiesAt Automation Anywhere, which, as its name suggests, works on automating work, the customer-service team shrank when AI was implemented. Others I spoke to agreed: Many businesses have small-scale AI experiments running, often with promising results so far. These AI projects are expensive, and not every company has the financial or human capital to pursue an ambitious AI strategy.
Persons: Matt Turner, , Sam Altman, Rob Goldstein, copilots, Jason Girzadas, he'd, Oliver Wyman, Deb Cupp, Mihir Shukla, Ana Kreacic, Shukla, Becky Frankiewicz, Lareina Yee, WEF, Satish H.C, Mustafa Suleyman, DeepMind, Kapilashram, Azeem Azhar, Dan Vahdat Organizations: Economic, Service, Tech, Infosys, IBM, Builder.ai, Cisco, Qualcomm, Salesforce, BlackRock, Deloitte, Microsoft, Oliver Wyman Group, Standard Chartered, McKinsey, Huma Therapeutics Locations: Davos, Switzerland
At the White House, Jill Biden is leading a new initiative to boost federal government research into women's health. Most menopause care startups, including Midi, sell into enterprises to offer the service as a benefit to employees. US companies lose about $1.8 billion each year from workdays missed due to menopause symptoms, according to a Mayo Clinic estimate. While venture funding to women's health startups fell in 2023, according to CB Insights, startups tackling menopause symptoms surged ahead of the pack. Data shows these startups raised $230 million last year, making up a third of all funding to women's health startups.
Persons: hasn't, Semper, Joanna Strober, Sharon Meers, Goldman Sachs, It's, Drew Barrymore, Jennifer Aniston, tailwinds, Michelle Obama, Jill Biden, Biden, workdays Organizations: Business, Midi, GV, Google Ventures, Felicis, Houston, Hermann Health, CBS, McKinsey, White, Mayo Clinic Locations: Midi
Read previewSince the release of ChatGPT just over a year ago, it's become increasingly clear that the world will have to adapt as the influence of generative AI grows. And that's been borne out at this year's World Economic Forum in Davos, where AI has been a key topic. Business Insider spoke to industry leaders from companies including McKinsey, KPMG, IBM, and Coursera about the skills they believe will be important in the era of generative AI. Know how to optimize data for generative AI. "Being able to look at data, evaluate data, cleanse data, anonymize data — all that — is going to be even more important than historically it's been," Knopp said.
Persons: , it's, Katy George, George, Paul Knopp, Knopp, that's, Jeff Maggioncalda, Maggioncalda, John Granger, Granger Organizations: Service, Business, Economic, McKinsey, KPMG, IBM, KPMG US, IBM Consulting, Employees Locations: Davos, Maggioncalda
Sheryl Sandberg says she's leaving Meta's board
  + stars: | 2024-01-17 | by ( Jonathan Vanian | In | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +4 min
Former Meta operating chief Sheryl Sandberg is leaving the company's board of directors. "With a heart filled with gratitude and a mind filled with memories, I let the Meta board know that I will not stand for reelection this May," Sandberg wrote in a Facebook post on Wednesday. Sandberg, 54, joined Facebook in 2008 as Mark Zuckerberg's top deputy after spending about seven years at Google. Since leaving Meta, Sandberg has dedicated much of her time on her LeanIn.org nonprofit, which focuses on empowering women tin the workplace, and related projects. "Thank you Sheryl for the extraordinary contributions you have made to our company and community over the years," Zuckerberg wrote.
Persons: Sheryl Sandberg, Sandberg, Mark Zuckerberg's, Javier Olivan, We've, Sandberg's, Zuckerberg, Sheryl, Adam Bosworth, Peggy Alford, Marc Andreessen, Drew Houston, Nancy Killefer, Robert M, Tony Xu, Tracey T, Travis, Estée Lauder, Here's, Javi Olivan, Justin Osofsky, Nicola Mendelsohn, Mark Organizations: Meta, Facebook, Google, CNBC, McKinsey & Company, Estée Locations: U.S
Davos Welcomes Global Elites to Solve World’s Problems
  + stars: | 2024-01-14 | by ( Tim Smart | Jan. | At A.M. | ) www.usnews.com   time to read: +4 min
Political, business and other elites will gather once again Monday for the World Economic Forum’s 54th annual meeting in the Alpine hamlet of Davos, Switzerland, to tackle the thorniest of problems, from war to inequality to climate change. The forum is not without its own controversy, having been pegged over the years as a haven for globalists and ruling elites. This year’s conference comes on the heels of a report released Wednesday by think tank The Conference Board detailing findings from a survey of global business leaders, which showed a global economic downturn and inflation are among the top concerns of CEOs worldwide. With Russia’s war in Ukraine and the Israel-Hamas conflict raging on, global political instability also topped the list of things keeping corporate leaders awake at night. Meanwhile, global growth is expected to slow to 2.4% in 2024, according to a report from the World Bank released on Tuesday.
Persons: Bill Clinton, Donald Trump, Nelson Mandela, Jacques Yvez, Tony Blair, Bill Gates, Rupert Murdoch, Bono, Antony Blinken, Li Qiang, Ursula von der Leyen, Emmanuel Macron, Javier Milei, Antonio Guterres, , , Andres Cadena, Elon Musk, Gayle Markovitz, ” Markovitz, Economists Organizations: corporate titans, McKinsey, Republican, White, Trump, World Economic, World Bank Locations: U.S, Israel, Davos, Switzerland, Argentine, China, Ukraine
Patronus AI co-founders Anand Kannappan and Rebecca Qian Patronus AILarge language models, similar to the one at the heart of ChatGPT, frequently fail to answer questions derived from Securities and Exchange Commission filings, researchers from a startup called Patronus AI found. "That type of performance rate is just absolutely unacceptable," Patronus AI co-founder Anand Kannappan said. It feels like just testing by inspection," Patronus AI co-founder Rebecca Qian said. Here's some examples of questions in the dataset, provided by Patronus AI: Has CVS Health paid dividends to common shareholders in Q2 of FY2022? How the AI models did on the test
Persons: Anand Kannappan, Rebecca Qian Patronus, OpenAI's, ChatGPT, they're, Rebecca Qian, FinanceBench, Qian Organizations: Securities, Exchange, CNBC, SEC, Bloomberg, JPMorgan, McKinsey, Microsoft, Facebook, Meta, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Patronus, CVS, AMD, Coca
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
Future Publishing | Future Publishing | Getty ImagesMin Li doesn't go to the mall often. The name of the game for Chinese youth in 2024 is trading down. Anything not in the basement floors is considered to be "in heaven," signaling it's out of reach. Citizens shopping for Mid-Autumn Festival gifts at a shopping mall in Yantai, East China's Shandong province, Sept 25, 2023. (Photo credit should read CFOTO/Future Publishing via Getty Images) Future Publishing | Future Publishing | Getty Images"The name of the game for Chinese youth in 2024 is trading down.
Persons: Min Li doesn't, Gucci, Chanel, Louis Vuitton, She's, Shaun Rein, Rein, Jia Miao, Jia, Chung Chi, Miao Organizations: Future Publishing, Getty, Apple, China Market Research Group, Starbucks, China Market Research, Weibo, Citizens, Publishing, New York University Shanghai, MyCOS Research, NYU Shanghai, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, McKinsey, China's, China News Service Locations: Yantai, East China's Shandong province, Weibo, East China's Shandong, Covid, NYU Shanghai China, Shanghai, Guangzhou
The S&P 500 inclusion curse is now taking aim at Uber
  + stars: | 2023-12-05 | by ( Bob Pisani | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +4 min
Uber Technologies is finally going into the S & P 500, four years after going public and just shy of an all-time high. And there are a lot of them: Roughly $12 trillion is directly or indirectly indexed to the S & P 500. First is the price: Uber went public in May 2019 at $45 and is now close to $60. Will the 'S & P 500 curse' strike again? S & P announced it would add Tesla to the S & P 500 on Nov. 16, 2020.
Persons: Uber, Tesla Organizations: Technologies, Poor's, American Express, Steel, McKinsey
The logo of SoftBank Group Corp is displayed at SoftBank World 2017 conference in Tokyo, Japan, July 20, 2017. The company currently connects more than 17 million vehicles and Napier said Cubic can update the car from the assembly all the way through its lifetime. "We can update the car in the production line, we can update the car on the ship, we can update the car when it arrives anywhere," Napier said. Cubic will become a consolidated subsidiary of SoftBank Corp, and the deal is set to close in the first half of 2024. Jefferies served as lead financial adviser to Cubic on the deal, while PJT Partners acted as lead financial adviser to SoftBank.
Persons: Issei Kato, Junichi Miyakawa, Barry Napier, SoftBank, Napier, Jefferies, Nick Carey, Nick Zieminski Organizations: SoftBank, REUTERS, SoftBank Corp, Cubic Telecom, Japan, Volkswagen, Qualcomm, Consulting, McKinsey, Co, Reuters, Napier, SoftBank Group, Vision Fund, PJT, Thomson Locations: Tokyo, Japan, TOKYO, Dublin, Irish
Many frontline workers are demanding more flexibility in determining their schedules. New data shows the fight among frontline workers for better pay and independence hasn't slowed much. Nearly three-fifths of US workers can't adopt hybrid work due to the in-person nature of their jobs, and on average, these on-site, non-remote-capable workers are less engaged (29%) than fully remote or hybrid workers (38%), according to the Gallup survey. AdvertisementGallup researchers found that frontline workers aren't regretting not having the benefits of remote or hybrid work. According to the survey, frontline workers overall preferred having the ability to select what days to work, alongside more PTO and a four-day workweek.
Persons: hasn't, Organizations: Service, Gallup, Workers, McKinsey
"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
Rite Aid is closing another 30 stores
  + stars: | 2023-11-29 | by ( Jordan Valinsky | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
New York CNN —Rite Aid is closing another roughly 30 locations across the US in addition to the 100 the bankrupt chain announced last month as part of its restructuring efforts. Rite Aid will have about 2,000 stores remaining when both rounds of closures are complete. Rite Aid is in much worse financial shape than its competitors. Over the past six years, Rite Aid has tallied nearly $3 billion in losses and its stock is down more than 90% for the year. That has forced Rite Aid and its rivals to reduce its physical footprint in recent years.
Persons: didn’t, , Kavilanz, Nathaniel Meyerson Organizations: New, New York CNN —, Nevada . Rite, Rite Aid, Amazon, Walmart, Target, Costco, Aid, Solutions, CVS, Walgreens, McKinsey Locations: New York, California, Pennsylvania, Ohio , Virginia, Washington, Michigan , New Jersey , Oregon, Connecticut , Maryland, Nevada
New McKinsey data show U.S. companies are no longer promoting Black professionals at the higher rate of a couple of years ago. Photo: Gary Hershorn/Getty ImagesU.S. companies have lost momentum in promoting Black professionals into management, according to new data from McKinsey & Co.After the May 2020 murder of George Floyd set off a national conversation about race, equity and opportunity, American companies set ambitious goals for advancing Black talent in their ranks. They have made some strides in hiring and promoting more Black professionals, especially at the highest levels of the company; there are now eight Black chief executive officers in the Fortune 500, compared with four in 2020.
Persons: Gary Hershorn, George Floyd Organizations: McKinsey, Getty, McKinsey & Co
KPMG and Deloitte advised workers to use burner phones in Hong Kong, The Financial Times reported. AdvertisementTwo accounting giants have told staff not to use their phones on visits to Hong Kong, the Financial Times reported. KPMG and Deloitte have instructed employees to use burner phones in the Chinese special administrative region, according to the newspaper. AdvertisementIt comes after former president Donald Trump issued an executive order in 2020 declaring that Hong Kong was "no longer sufficiently autonomous" to be differentiated from China. Last year athletes participating in the Winter Olympics were also advised to use burner phones , BBC News reported.
Persons: , Donald Trump Organizations: KPMG, Deloitte, The Financial Times, McKinsey, Beijing's, Service, Financial Times, Reuters, BBC News, BBC Locations: Hong Kong, China
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