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Post-Trump, a younger generation of leaders can return to the party’s established principles
In her money-spinning app, you can collect points for how you dress, writes Philip Delves Broughton
Fitness trackers may not be the magic way to lose weight, writes Philip Delves Broughton
Hipsters like idea that smoking is some kind of ancient ritual, writes Philip Delves Broughton
A tale of a driven youth bucking the system, writes Philip Delves Broughton
His enemies are purveyors of grand theories based on thin evidence, writes Philip Delves Broughton
All that was missing was the sound of a Copland symphony, writes Philip Delves Broughton
What path to victory do his supporters see that the rest of us don’t, writes Philip Delves Broughton
Rather than examine fiscal mistakes, Greeks scapegoat a number cruncher, writes Philip Delves Broughton
Dollar Shave Club used its CEO and a dancing bear to sell razors, writes Philip Delves Broughton
Former mayor helped city regain its connection to the water, writes Philip Delves Broughton
The Wright brothers typified self-motivated ‘civic entrepreneurs’, writes Philip Delves Broughton
Countersignalling turns into a comic race to the thrifty bottom, writes Philip Delves Broughton
An academic approach leads to many making epically poor decisions, writes Philip Delves Broughton
A team effort rather than individual attempt, multiplies your chance of clinching a deal
Fuelling the anger in this election is a sense of social tragedy, writes Philip Delves Broughton
The company remains a blur of services and assets of different values, writes Philip Delves Broughton
To profit from the electric car race, you have to back the winner. Missing out is costlier, writes Philip Delves Broughton
For every Bill Gates you needed a Steve Ballmer to leap around sweating and screaming
Managers are finding they still need to meet face to face, says Philip Delves Broughton
Businesses should practise thinking like activist investors before they are attacked themselves
Companies are getting better at spotting great character
A review of the courses that elite business schools are increasingly giving away online
Techniques have not changed as much as some online evangelists claim
For anything requiring intellectual or emotional sophistication, corporate ‘training’ is easy meat for the eye-rollers
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