This week’s highlights: Fleece Vests, Uber’s IPO, and Scooter Economics
Fifteen on Friday – Issue 331
Happy Friday,
David
Food for Thought:
Top Read(s) of the Week: NewYorker – Goldman Sachs, Patagonia, and the Mysteries of “Business Casual”
Why It Matters: Patagonia’s shot across the bow to limit access to their famed fleece vests at financial institutions has ruffled all kinds of feathers. The New Yorker takes a more retrospective look at the fleece vest as a modern-day take on the waistcoat of the three piece suit. With that context, a humble vest ascends to a level of status / class signalling not immediately apparent.
Consider as well:
- FS – Decoding Difficult Conversations: Interview with Negotiation Expert, Sheila Heen Phenomenal interview from Shane Parish of Farnam Street – Two time NY Times best selling author and lecturer at Harvard Law School, Sheila Heen makes the tough talks easier by breaking down the three layers that make up every difficult conversation.
- HuffPo – I Can’t Answer These Texas Standardized Test Questions About My Own Poems
- NYT – As Mainstays Depart, Charleston Asks Where Its Restaurant Scene Is Headed Hominy Grill has closed. Sean Brock is gone. Tourism and prices are booming. What does all that portend for this influential food city?
- PoF – The 10 Percent Rule: Limiting Lifestyle Creep. Feel free to disagree with the precise percentages, but this seems like a reasonable conceptual framework to manage the sometimes ill-effects of creeping prosperity.
Business/Economics:
Top Read of the Week: Bloomberg – The Uber IPO Day Is Finally Here
Why It Matters: Uber’s IPO today raises many interesting questions, and Bloomberg’s Matt Levine calls out several in this piece. The short answer is that there are many people who bought shares in the company from 2015 to today that would have out-performed by owning the S&P 500.
Consider as well:
- NYT – It’s Time to Break Up Facebook – So says one of the company’s original founders in this NY Times op-ed.
- Bloomberg – Harvard Piles Into Hedge Funds as New Chief Overhauls Endowment
- TheAtlantic – Stock Picks From Space Investors are using real-time satellite images to predict retailers’ sales. Is that cheating?
- Economist – Why companies are so bad at hiring For one thing, they recruit too many employees from outside their ranks
Culture/Tech/Science:
Top Read of the Week: LATimes – Can Bird build a better scooter before it runs out of cash?
Why It Matters: Bird, Lime, and the other scooter start-ups are facing serious challenges. This piece looks at the simple reality that much of the scooter equipment deployed on the streets does not last anywhere near long enough to cover costs much less generate an economic return.
Consider as well:
- NYT – Rihanna, Breaking New Ground, Joins With LVMH for Fashion Brand There are so many firsts in the creation of Fenty, a new luxury house based in Paris, that it’s hard to keep track.
- VM – AirPods Are a Tragedy Apple claims that AirPods are building a “wireless future.” Many people think they’re a symbol of disposable wealth. The truth is bleaker.
- NYT – Book the Table, Then Buy the Plane Tickets For some travelers, trips are built around reservations at restaurants with Michelin stars or a place on the annual 50 Best Restaurants list.
- Vox – The productivity pit: how Slack is ruining work Job software like Teams, Slack, and Workplace were supposed to make us more productive. They haven’t.