Latin America: Where the world’s jobs are

Latin America: Where the world’s jobs are – CSMonitor.com.

So far, 200 entrepreneurs from 30 different countries have traveled to Chile to try to get their ideas off the ground through Start-Up Chile. The program aims to fund 1,000 entrepreneurs by 2014, and not only benefits the grantees – 80 percent of whom are foreigners – but is a boon to Chile, too, says spokeswoman Brenna Loury.

Interesting little article that offers minimal facts to back up the author’s assertion in the title.  How does 200 entrepreneurs equal “where the world’s jobs are”?

A Harrison Barnes – Do What You Want To Do, Not What You Think You Should Do

If you have a job or are pursuing a certain career primarily because you think you should, or because others think you should, you are making a huge mistake. You need to understand that if you keep doing this, you are never going to be truly happy. You need to be living the life and having the career that makes you happy. The voices that you hear inside yourself, which tell you to pursue a certain profession or be a certain thing, are often not your own voice. They are the voices of your parents; they are the voices of your peers in school; they are the voices of the people you associate with at work.

via Job Search Guru | A Harrison Barnes, Career Advice, Job Search, Change In Profession | Harrison Barnes | Try the Career Coaching Club!.

Why do you do what you do?  Easy question but sometimes you may not like the answer.

Tablet and E-Book Reader Ownership Nearly Doubles

The share of adults in the United States who own tablet computers nearly doubled from 10% to 19% between mid-December and early January and the same surge in growth also applied to e-book readers, which also jumped from 10% to 19% over the same time period.

The number of Americans owning at least one of these digital reading devices jumped from 18% in December to 29% in January.

via Tablet and E-book reader Ownership Nearly Double Over the Holiday Gift-Giving Period | Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project.

Faithful followers are aware this author abandoned his Read a Book a Week project sometime in 2011.  Workload got very busy so I ultimately had to trade non-work reading time for revenue.  Not a bad trade-off but I still miss my recreational reading time.

I’ve owned a Kindle for over a year now and received a smart phone this past Christmas.  I can now access my Kindle books on my phone.  We’ll see if this helps me read more books this year.

Click through to the Pew website where you can download a PDF copy of this study.

Pressed and Stressed – The New (AB)Normal

Worker stress reflects not only heavier demands in recent years, but the fears and difficulties of the Great Recession that preceded the recovery as well as ongoing economic uncertainty.  In effect, employees have been under sometimes-severe strain for roughly four years.  Bigger workloads might be easier to shoulder if employees were getting raises, as well.  But by and large they aren’t. In the Workforce Management-Workplace Options survey, just 30 percent of those employees reporting an increase in job duties said they got a pay increase as well.   And government data show that inflation-adjusted average hourly earnings fell 1.6 percent from October 2010 to October 2011.Still, some observers say workers should get used to the present business as usual.  Given doubts about the government’s ability to reduce unemployment rates anytime soon, employers may be able to make always-on “superjobs” the standard rather than the exception. Companies have seen a spurt in productivity, but it may not be a lasting one. Wayne Hochwarter, a management professor at Florida State University in Tallahassee, surveyed more than 700 full-time workers in 2011 and found that employees in a demanding work environment said their job performance had risen.  But their anxiety levels at work and home also rose, while their job satisfaction fell.  Especially when increased demands come with factors like layoff fears and poor communication by the boss and company, heightened worker productivity is likely to be short-lived, Hochwarter says. “The toll on the human system leads to deteriorating performance and effort,” he says. “The person is left with an empty tank.”

via Today’s Workforce—Pressed and Stressed – Featured Article – Workforce.

The hamsters are dying.

DIY investing and the IKEA effect – Abnormal Returns

This idea that more effort equals better outcomes or better quality seems to be inherent in us humans.

via DIY investing and the IKEA effect | Abnormal Returns.

Kind of a spin on the old saying of “work smarter, not harder”.

BTW the “IKEA effect” doesn’t exist in Oklahoma because the closest IKEA is 200 miles away in Dallas.

Seth’s Blog: The chance of a lifetime

The thing is, we still live in a world that’s filled with opportunity. In fact, we have more than an opportunity — we have an obligation. An obligation to spend our time doing great things. To find ideas that matter and to share them. To push ourselves and the people around us to demonstrate gratitude, insight, and inspiration. To take risks and to make the world better by being amazing.

via Seth’s Blog: The chance of a lifetime.

Networking for Survival – HBR

Without the network, you don’t get new ideas into your organization, you don’t see trends and issues that affect you and your customers, you don’t grow and develop your people with new challenges and opportunities, you aren’t attractive for young talent, you don’t learn about new technologies or business models, you don’t create new markets and you risk deluding yourself with your own ideas. You don’t increase your own value and advance your own career. Without the network you stagnate, you become stale. With the network you grow, provide meaningful and valuable solutions to your customers and not just survive, but thrive.

via Networking for Survival – Deborah Mills-Scofield – Harvard Business Review.

Great post and well worth reading.  One comment caught my eye,

When new forms of communication emerge, don’t just look at how to improve what you’re doing already, but at new ways of doing.

I immediately thought of social media as a new way of doing.  My transition from a dumb phone to a smartphone is a new way of doing (for me).  One of my new projects for the New Year is to create a Google+ business page.  Is this an “improvement”?  Not really.  It’s just a new way of doing.

Humankind 2012: The Transformation of Aspiration

Leo Lens.

I stumbled upon the Leo Burnett advertising agency website while researching brands.  Click the link to be taken to a short video and article summary of our challenges and opportunities in the year ahead.  Embers of opportunity abound, little opportunities just waiting for someone to pick them.

Well worth a few minutes of your time.

Over 700,000 Android Devices Activated Daily

Google’s Andy Rubin: Over 700,000 Android devices activated daily – latimes.com.

Android-powered devices are the No.1 target for cyber crooks in the mobile phone arena. Popular bill-paying methods and apps on smartphones are expected to be major targets.

via Smartphones offer easy access to malware purveyors | Herald Sun.

OK. I’ll admit to writing somewhat smugly about not owning or using a smartphone in a post two weeks ago.  I’m glad I didn’t make a comment about never owning or using a smartphone because I am now one of the 700,000 Androids that get activated daily.

Resistance is futile.  But you still have to be smart about how you use your smartphone.  See the second link above.