• I’m a tech CEO who moved from California to Nevada after my home was burglarized. I feel safer in Las Vegas, which has nearly everything San Francisco had and more.

    Side by side photos of Teddy Liaw posing.
    Teddy Liaw left California for Nevada in January 2021.

    • Teddy Liaw is a tech CEO who left San Francisco for a Las Vegas suburb in 2021.
    • Liaw had grown frustrated with The Bay Area's crime and wanted a family-friendly and lively city.
    • Since moving, Liaw said it's his mission to introduce others to everything Vegas has to offer. 

    This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Teddy Liaw, the 45-year-old CEO of contact center solutions company NexRep, who moved from San Francisco to Summerlin, Nevada, a Las Vegas suburb, in 2021 after he grew frustrated by crime in the Bay Area. Liaw founded the Vegas Tech Summit, a multi-day tech conference promoting Vegas as a burgeoning tech center.

    The following has been edited for length and clarity.

    I absolutely loved the Bay Area. I loved the culture, the food, the people, the intellect, and the gorgeous views of the water surrounding an amazing city.

    But COVID-19 absolutely wrecked the city. It's not the same San Francisco as before. It's still rebounding, and it's not all the way back yet.

    I had been living in San Francisco for about 15 years before I moved. I owned a condo that had a gorgeous bay view on the top of the hill.

    The Bay Area had so much to offer, including a thriving entrepreneurial and tech ecosystem that made very smart people smarter.

    But during the pandemic, there was rampant crime. I don't appreciate it when people turn it into a homelessness issue because San Francisco has had homeless people before and found ways to provide services. That was the narrative during COVID. But it's not a homelessness issue. It was a safety issue.

    At the end of 2020, my house was burglarized. My experience with law enforcement was not positive. That was the last straw.

    I've got two young kids, and I asked myself: Is this the type of environment that will be safe for my family? The answer, unfortunately, was no.

    Everywhere was on the table

    I was considering Los Angeles, Washington State, and Texas.

    In January 2021, right in the middle of COVID, I decided to do a scouting trip to Vegas. It opened my eyes to what Vegas had to offer, including new houses, clean living, and ample playgrounds for children.

    There was amazing food of all ethnicities, cuisines, and cultures. Vegas has entertainment, family life, and suburbia life, just 20 minutes away from all the socializing you would ever want.

    It became a very easy decision.

    An aerial view of Summerlin, Nevada
    Summerlin is a suburb about 20 minutes outside Las Vegas.

    Summerlin is a master-planned community about 20 minutes from all the action. You can't go more than half a mile without running into a park. We're in a desert, but there's a lot of greenery.

    Summerlin is designed for families. It has an amazing list of school options from preschool through high school, including some of the top private schools in the state.

    Plus, I like to play golf, and there are so many golf options.

    I got close to 7,000 square feet and two swimming pools here for the same price as I got my four-bedroom condo in the Bay Area. I needed a house that my friends wanted to visit.

    As soon as I moved, I started inviting friends to come and visit. Many of them ended up being overwhelmed by what Vegas had to offer. I convinced a bunch of my friends to move. There is a whole wave of people I "imported" from California.

    Everyone is always concerned about the 110-degree heat, but in just 35 minutes, you can be at Mount Charleston and it's only 85 degrees there. Yes, we're in a desert, but we can drive 35 minutes and find sledding in the wintertime.

    Quite frankly, Vegas has over-delivered on quality of life.

    Vegas is well on its way to being a thriving tech ecosystem

    There's nothing as good for work as the Bay Area. It offered serendipitous opportunities. Back in the day, you could get in a shared Uber, sit with the VP of some tech company, and have a great 20-minute conversation. Or you could be at a restaurant and overhear an executive's conversation next to you. That was the spirit of San Francisco.

    That magic of the Bay Area hasn't fully made its way over to Vegas, but it's going to happen.

    When I came to Vegas, I started meeting with public officials and was appointed to the previous governor's startup and venture council.

    I later founded a nonprofit called Vegas Tech Summit. It's already attracted successful entrepreneurs and tech folks from all over the country who come and see what Vegas offers.

    My goal is to make people see that Vegas has the potential to be a thriving tech ecosystem, and we're well on our way to achieving that. I see a lot of VCs and entrepreneurs who have already moved here.

    The last thing I'm missing here is an existing group of friends. You can't replace decades of friendship. But I've realized that there are so many new people moving here, and everybody's eager to find good people and build community.

    That's the spirit of Vegas.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • A CEO explains the simple way he deters his employees from ‘quiet vacationing’

    David Barkoe at the beach with greenery behind him
    Carve Communications CEO David Barkoe said he trusts his employees to get their work done from anywhere.

    • Quiet vacationing, where employees take time off without telling their bosses, is on the rise.
    • CEO David Barkoe said his employees don't feel the need to sneak away to take time off.
    • He advocates for trusting employees to get their work done wherever and whenever works for them.

    Quiet vacationing — or taking time off or working from across the world without telling your boss — is growing in popularity.

    Millennials, in particular, seem to be especially fond of the trend. A recent Harris Poll found that nearly four out of 10 millennial respondents admitted to taking time off without informing higher-ups.

    So what's a boss to do if he wants to stop employees from sneaking out of the office behind his back?

    David Barkoe, the CEO and founder of Florida-based PR firm Carve Communications, said it all comes down to creating a culture of trust with your employees.

    "Go live your life, but get the job done," Barkoe told Business Insider while describing his approach. "I'm going to trust you from minute one, from the moment I hire you, to just get the job done, however you feel best to do it."

    In practice, that culture takes a lot of forms. Sometimes, it's an employee working a couple hours early in the morning so they can sign off early to make their kid's swim meet. Other times, it's an employee taking a three-week trip to Europe where the first week is PTO, and the next two, they simply work from another time zone.

    Barkoe said the open and flexible culture, which is actively encouraged and practiced by higher-ups, makes it so employees do not feel like they need to sneak away just to get a break.

    "It's absolutely culture-driven," he said.

    Barkoe believes a reason people are taking quiet vacations is because they feel like their employer is not giving them trust and respect, so they just take the vacation they want anyway.

    As for bosses who are worried having such a flexible culture would result in less work getting done, Barkoe has found the opposite to be true. When Carve went fully remote in 2020, Barkoe said he realized very quickly they were never going back to the office.

    "It was just working. People were more motivated," he said.

    Although it may be different at a company with thousands of employees, Barkoe said, "As a small organization, if you're not doing your job, it's pretty hard to hide." He added that if someone does take advantage, then they're probably not the right person for your team, regardless.

    Ashton Mathai, the associate director of content at Barkoe's firm, told BI she fully takes advantage of Carve's unlimited PTO policy and work-from-anywhere culture.

    A man in a cap sits on a folding chair with a view of the lake and pine trees and works.
    A recent survey found millennials were more likely than other generations to take time off without telling their bosses.

    Last year, Mathai traveled to Europe for two months. She took 10 days of PTO to start the trip and then spent the remainder of the time working from places like Scotland, Amsterdam, Portugal, and Italy. Because she was in a different time zone, she'd often work 1 p.m. to 8 p.m. local time and spend the morning doing a tour or going to the beach.

    "I would live my life in the morning and then in the afternoon, night I would do my work," she said.

    Mathai said before she went, her bosses told her they had total confidence in her that she would get her work done while she was gone.

    "It wasn't a threat. It was truly total confidence," she said. "So I kind of went there knowing like I want to make them proud. I want to make myself proud and do my work."

    In addition to working from abroad, she said she also takes plenty of full-fledged PTO. Earlier this year, she traveled to India for two weeks with family and didn't work.

    "There's a lot of encouragement from leadership, from David himself, to take time off," Mathai said of Barkoe.

    Barkoe said a lot of companies have unlimited PTO in theory but that there's a difference between saying it and doing it. He tries to actively encourage and call people out, in a good way, when they take advantage of Carve's flexible culture.

    "You just got to have the mindset and the willingness to say personal life is part of the work culture," he said. "Not the other way around, where work culture is part of the personal life."

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • A box labeled ‘broken porcelain’ stored for decades in an attic turned out to be Chinese antiques worth $200,000

    A small pink and white Chinese ceramic bowl that has been broken and glued back together, that sold at auction in June 2024 for $6,300.
    This small broken bowl sold for $6,300.

    • A box of old crockery stored in an attic turned out to be Chinese porcelain worth $200,000.
    • Owner Gill Stewart found the box while searching for holiday decorations last year.
    • Even the auctioneer was surprised when the items sold for such a high price.

    A box of tableware stored in an attic for decades with the label "broken porcelain" sold at auction for more than $200,000 last week.

    The owner, Gill Stewart, had been looking for Christmas decorations during the holiday season last year when she stumbled across the box, which she had inherited from her grandfather, according to the BBC.

    She said she almost threw it away.

    "Every time I went up to get the Christmas decorations, I thought 'I must do something with that box,'" she told the outlet.

    However, she eventually took it to an auctioneer in Louth, a town in England.

    The auctioneer, James Laverack of John Taylors Auctioneers, told the BBC the items looked "quite unassuming" — the sort of thing people might find in yard sales and thrift stores.

    A pair of white porcelain Chinese tea bowls, each delicately decorated with a green and white nature design, part of a collection of 16 which in June 2024 sold at auction for $75,000.
    Chinese porcelain tea cups, part of a set that sold for $75,000 at auction.

    He initially divided the collection into lots, giving an initial total valuation of a couple of thousand dollars.

    'We expected the Chinese ceramics to sell well — however, they achieved prices way beyond our dreams," Laverack told Business Insider.

    Interest picked up quickly after the items were listed, and at the sale last week, the lots sold for a total of $204,000, including fees.

    According to the BBC, when Laverack called Stewart to tell her, he first asked her: "Are you sitting down?"

    A set of five Chinese ceramic saucers, three white with a delicate multicolored depiction of a group of people in a countryside scene, and two white with a bold red pattern and dragons design. The set sold for nearly $45,000 in June 2024.
    Originally valued at around $100, these saucers sold for almost $45,000.

    One lot — a set of five Chinese saucers that had been valued at under $100 — ended up going for nearly $45,000.

    Another set of 16 teacups, valued at no more than $100, sold for $75,000.

    Even a broken bowl went for $6,300.

    Stewart was "flabbergasted" by the news, Laverack told BI.

    Stewart told the BBC that her grandfather had picked up the items in China, where he had been stationed before World War I.

    Many of them date back hundreds of years, and her grandfather had kept detailed notes on their provenance, she said. He also kept a note of who was responsible for breaking some of the pieces — which was often her grandmother, she said.

    "She had broken the most valuable ones!" Stewart told the BBC.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • A timeline of ‘Perfect Match’ contestant Harry Jowsey’s relationship history

    Harry Jowsey in "The Perfect Match" season two.
    Harry Jowsey in "The Perfect Match" season two.

    • "Perfect Match" season two star Harry Jowsey is one of Netflix's biggest bachelors.
    • Jowsey has appeared on multiple dating series, but has been unlucky in love.
    • Here's what to know about Harry's previous relationships and if he is dating someone now.

    Harry Jowsey is single again after appearing on his second Netflix dating show.

    Harry became one of the most popular "Perfect Match" season two contestants last month, after finding fame on the first series of Netflix's "Too Hot To Handle." The streamer's growing reality show empire has created an ecosystem for cast members like Jowsey to become minor celebrities.

    After appearing on "Too Hot To Handle" in 2020, Harry used his newfound fame to launch a podcast and get cast on other reality series.

    Naturally, fans are hungry for details about the reality star's life, leading to speculation about who he has dated. Rumors have swirled about various influencers, reality stars, and models.

    Harry told Entertainment Tonight last month that he is single. But if fans are wondering which rumors are true, here are all of the reality star's confirmed relationships so far.

    Francesca Farago
    Harry Jowsey Francesca Farago "Too Hot To Handle"
    Harry Jowsey dated Francesca Farago during the filming of "Too Hot To Handle."

    Harry first met Francesca Farago on "Too Hot To Handle" in 2019, which aired in 2020.

    The show challenges contestants not to be physically intimate so they can win a cash prize. The prize reduces every time they break this rule, and Harry and Francesca break it multiple times. At one point, Harry lied about kissing Francesca, letting her take the fall, but they still ended the series together.

    During the reunion episode, conducted over Zoom, Harry said they split after dating for a bit when filming wrapped because a long-distance relationship was too difficult. Harry is from Australia, while Francesca is from Canada.

    Harry said they got together eight months later after he drunk called her. Harry proposed to Francesca during the reunion episode with a ring pop.

    Francesca said yes but told Variety in 2020 that Harry would have to propose in person for it to be official. A month after the series' release, the pair announced they had broken up again due to their geographical distance.

    The couple did rekindle their romance a few times but broke up for good in 2021.

    Madison Wyborny
    An image of Madison Wyborny covered in body paint in "Too Hot To Handle" season one.
    Madison Wyborny was another contestant on "Too Hot To Handle" season one.

    In May 2020, Daily Mail Australia reported, citing an unnamed source, that Harry dated Madison Wyborny, another "Too Hot To Handle" costar, during a break from Francesca in 2019.

    The source claimed Harry messaged Madison weeks after the show wrapped, and they began dating in December 2019 after Harry moved to LA from Australia. The source claimed Harry broke up with Madison in February 2020 to get back with Francesca.

    Harry denied the story on the "Watch With US" podcast in May 2020, saying that they were never in a proper relationship and the reports were rumors spread by Madison's friends.

    "We hooked up a couple of times, and then things ended with that quite quickly because she was, like, testing me," he said. "I wouldn't text her for a couple of days, and then she's like, 'Oh, you almost failed that test.'"

    Harry said he had tried to contact Madison after getting back with Francesca.

    "I texted her the other day to reach out and make sure everything was good, but she feels like I was being very disrespectful once we ended things or whatever," he said.

    A few days later, Madison told Elite Daily that they were in a real relationship and claimed Harry's relationship with Francesca was a PR stunt.

    Madison said they hooked up in October and November, but she claimed Harry wanted a serious relationship.

    "He was like, 'Look, if you're going to be coming over here and spending the night at my house and cuddling with me, I don't want to get my feelings hurt. I just want you to know that you're the only girl that I'm seeing. Are we going to start seeing each other so that we can get serious, or not?'" Madison said.

    Madison said she was still dating Harry in February 2020 when he got back with Francesca, adding that she found out through a friend's Instagram story that they were hanging out again.

    "He could have told me, 'Hey, I'm not really feeling this anymore. I'm going to get back with Francesca,'" Madison said. "It just hurts so bad to know someone you were basically in a full-on relationship with could say such hurtful things about you, just for publicity."

    Julia Rose
    An image of Julia Rose in a white suit at a boxing match.
    Julia Rose and Harry Jowsey have conflicting stories on how long their relationship lasted.

    Between another break-up with Francesca in 2020, Harry briefly dated Julia Rose, an Instagram model and podcaster.

    Harry told Barstool Sports' "BFFs" podcast in April 2021 that they dated for a month in October 2020 before Julia cheated on him with Jake Paul, a YouTuber.

    Julia told the "Impaulsive" podcast in November 2020, which was hosted by Jake's brother Logan Paul, that she ended things with Harry before dating Jake because she felt he was dating her for the wrong reasons.

    "He always would bring up like, 'My ex when we first started dating made me block you. I wasn't allowed to follow you.' And it was almost like a flex," Julia said, adding that they only dated for a week before she cut it off.

    Georgia Hassarati
    Georgia Hassarati on season 1 episode 8 of "Perfect Match"
    Harry Jowsey dated Georgia Hassarati after she filmed "Perfect Match" season one.

    Harry started dating "Too Hot To Handle" season three and "Perfect Match" season one contestant Georgia Hassarati at some point in 2022.

    The pair went public in June 2022 when Georgia appeared on Harry's podcast in an episode titled "Georgia Hassarati and Harry Jowsey fell in love."

    Over the next year, they dated on and off, breaking up for good in April 2023. Later that year, they accused each other of cheating.

    Jessica Vestal
    Jessica Vestal and Harry Jowsey competing in a "Perfect Match" couples challenge.
    Jessica Vestal and Harry Jowsey competing in a "Perfect Match" couples challenge.

    Harry's last public relationship was with "Perfect Match" star Jessica Vestal.

    The pair met while filming season two last year and dated for half the show. However, during filming, Harry kissed another contestant behind Jessica's back and lied to her and the other contestants.

    After the contestant, Melinda Berry, came forward, Jessica was unsure who to believe but decided to split from Harry.

    It is unclear whether Harry ever told Jessica the truth, but he admitted to the kiss on June 25's episode of "Boyfriend Material."

    He also said he spent another week in Tulum, Mexico with Jessica and went on holiday to Cancún, Mexico after filming finished to work on their relationship, but it didn't work out.

    The series finale's credits said the pair broke up a month after filming.

    Secret relationship
    Rylee Arnold and Harry Jowsey dancing.
    Jowsey dressed as 2000s-era Justin Timberlake when he and Arnold danced to a *Nsync song on music video night.

    In April, Harry mentioned on his podcast, "Boyfriend Material with Harry Jowsey," that he secretly dated someone else in the fall of 2023 but didn't share the woman's name.

    "I was madly in love with this girl," Harry said.

    He said they broke up because of reports that he was dating Rylee Arnold, his dancing partner on "Dancing With The Stars" season 32.

    "It ended up ending, and it fizzled out because it's so difficult to see your boyfriend or girlfriend on 'Dancing with the Stars' being that close with someone else," Harry added.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Stolen campaign poster? Hidden AirTags are the new defense.

    A hand holding an Apple AirTag
    Over thirty plaintiffs have joined a class action lawsuit that Apple AirTags helped facilitate stalking.

    • People are hiding AirTags in campaign posters to stop thieves, The Wall Street Journal reports.
    • The tracking devices are helping recover signs and charge those who took them.
    • In some cases, those charged included political opponents, WSJ said.

    It's a political tale as old as time: put up a campaign poster in your yard, and thieves come to snatch it.

    But according to The Wall Street Journal, those fed up with front lawn looting are embracing a modern solution.

    Apple's geo-tracking AirTag devices are helping owners find their signs — and sometimes, even the people who stole them.

    The practice has already led to charges. In one example cited by the outlet, Florida politician John Dittmore decided to hide the coin-sized gadget on one of his posters after waking up to a number of thefts in May.

    When this sign was taken overnight, the Brevard County Commission candidate tracked the AirTag's pings to a pickup truck eight miles away. Police questioned two teens, and they were charged with criminal mischief and the theft of nine signs.

    Including the poster stands that were also taken, the stolen property had a total value of over $1,100, WSJ said.

    In other cited cases, stolen signs don't end up with teens, but in the homes of electoral opponents.

    After Chris Torre became the victim of poster snatching, AirTags led him to the residence of Renee Rountree, the Journal said. Both were running for a seat on the Isle of Wight County Board of Supervisors in Virginia.

    Her son-in-law was charged with a misdemeanor for stealing the property, while Rountree faced a misdemeanor for receiving stolen goods. In a December trial, she noted plans to return the signs. Rountree has since been ordered to 250 hours of community service.

    "I would like to think that this will have a huge deterrent effect," the trial's judge said in the court's transcript, quoted by WSJ.

    Though the judge was speaking of Rountree, the point outlines another big appeal of AirTags: if thieves know to suspect that a device might be planted on a poster, they might be less inclined to take it.

    "It's a lot like when cops mark themselves on Waze," New Jersey deputy mayor Vinny Panico, who tracked a lost poster to a local committeeman's house, told the outlet: "If that slows people down, that slows people down."

    Still, AirTags don't solve everything. Lawn posters are still exposed to destruction, with some vandals going as far as to drive over signs they don't like.

    But the technology's capabilities have recouped more than just lawn signs. These devices keep track of lost wallets and airline baggage — sometimes when the airline itself can't find it — or let parents keep tabs on their kids.

    But criticism has also mounted against the $29 geo-trackers, over fears that they provide a cheap tool for stalkers or abusers. A lawsuit against Apple was filed in 2022 — and in March, a judge denied the firm's motion to dismiss the case.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Noplace is the hottest new app on the charts. Its founder spills on how it went viral and plans to skirt becoming a ‘fad.’

    Noplace phone screens with custom homepage profiles
    Noplace is a buzzy new app that is topping the Apple App Store charts.

    • Noplace, a new social media app, tops Apple App Store charts this week.
    • The app, created by Tiffany "TZ" Zhong, offers a text-based feed for Gen Z users.
    • Business Insider spoke with Zhong about building a viral app and the fear of becoming a "fad."

    There's a new app in town.

    Noplace, a text-based feed that's like if MySpace and Twitter had a Gen Z baby, is dominating the Apple App Store charts this week.

    The social media app is the brainchild of 27-year-old serial founder and investor Tiffany "TZ" Zhong, whose tech career took off in her late-teens.

    Instead of stressing over carefully curated posts, the app encourages users to share their stream-of-consciousness thoughts directly to the feed. People can also build a customizable color-block profile to display what they're listening to, watching, eating, doing, and feeling.

    The app lets you connect with other users based on your common interests — or "stars," as the app calls them. Once you've added your new connections, you can pin your top 10 friends to your profile, and make use of the friends-only feed.

    According to its App Store description, it aims to harken back to the social media era before "algos and ads" took over.

    It's not Noplace's first time in the spotlight, either. Earlier this year, the app racked up 500,000 people to its pre-release waiting list after building up hype through viral TikToks.

    As users grow weary of incumbent social-media giants like Instagram, Snapchat, and TikTok, new social media platforms have entered the arena, vying for a shot at becoming the new 'it' platform.

    In 2020, it was Clubhouse; in 2022, it was BeReal (which was recently sold for 500 million euros); and in 2023, there was a flood of apps from Lapse to ByteDance's Lemon8 that each had their moments in the sun.

    "We're all just competing for people's attention, especially Gen Z's attention and time," Zhong told Business Insider.

    Noplace founder Tiffany Zhong excited about getting to the top of the app store
    Noplace's founder, Tiffany "TZ" Zhong is celebrating her app's debut at the top of charts.

    How to build a viral app

    While Noplace had nearly half a million users on its waitlist just last month, the app has been testing for much longer and it even had a different name.

    Zhong started testing the app, then called Nospace, in late-2023 with a smaller number of users who would need to wait and receive invite codes to access the app.

    "When we started doing wait lists, it was really a way for people to reserve your username," Zhong said. "I wanted people to feel excited and early."

    She and her small team of seven continued to test the app in a closed setting, which allowed them to iterate fast, remove unnecessary features, navigate trust and safety, and "double down on the things that are working," Zhong added.

    Just as the app was gaining popularity, in April, Zhong was sent a cease and desist letter from another company. Zhong declined to name the company, but one can speculate.

    So, Nospace changed its name. It also capitalized on the drama and turned to TikTok to hype up the renaming process. Zhong said they received thousands of submissions until a user of the app suggested Noplace. Users of the app then voted to approve it.

    "It was kind of a really fun marketing moment for us and it felt very collaborative," Zhong said. "The vibe is just like … 'no place like home, no place like here.'"

    Users can boost and react with emojis on Noplace
    Noplace is a text-based feed.

    Avoiding being a 'fad' and learning from Big Tech's trials and triumphs

    As Zhong built and continues to build Noplace, many of the decisions come directly from user feedback.

    "I spend a lot of time talking to them, understanding how they feel about certain features, how they feel about the product, what gets them to spend more time in the app, what they're getting from the app," Zhong said.

    She particularly follows the behavior of Noplace's "power users," some of whom even spend between eight and 10 hours on the app, Zhong said.

    Her goal from the get-go was "fostering a place where people can express themselves" and find community. And at a time when social media platforms are prioritizing entertainment over social interactions, Noplace feels timely.

    Zhong compared her app to incumbents like Twitter, TikTok, and even Reddit: "A lot of it is not oriented toward community and it's more so just consuming content and media. Reddit, for example … it's really good for information. I use it for information, not for connecting with people."

    Reddit is an important source of inspiration for Zhong's app as well, since one of Reddit's founders, Alexis Ohanian, has advised Zhong on her app and his firm 776 invested in her previous company, Islands XYZ.

    "He's seen how this company has changed over time, but this is also very aligned with his experience at Reddit, and it's been very helpful," Zhong said. Like Reddit, pseudonyms are very common and part of the experience on Noplace.

    As Zhong looks ahead, however, she's wary of following in the footsteps of social media giants when it comes to scaling the app and adding more features.

    "I want to be very thoughtful about not bloating the app too much," she said. "That's kind of the downfall for a lot of social apps."

    Still, Noplace plans to expand its group chat features with AI tools that can help bolster conversations.

    And staying relevant, Zhong knows, will be the next test for Noplace.

    "The biggest risk being a fad," she said. "It's hard, social apps are an art more than a science. There's not really a clear cut playbook."

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • A CEO went viral with a list of things he’s ‘sick’ of hearing from his employees — and he has a point

    Happy employees fist bumping
    A CEO said he's tired of hearing his employees telling him they'll be late or need to take a day off because he trusts them to do their jobs (stock image.)

    • A CEO's post on workplace trust sparked debate on X.
    • He advocated for employee trust and autonomy over micromanagement.
    • Skillsoft's Koma Gandy emphasizes the importance of trust and empathy in modern workplaces.

    A CEO caused a stir on X with a post about the workplace culture he promotes.

    Rob Dance, who is the founder of Rock, one of the UK's largest IT consultancies, wrote a list on a whiteboard of things he was "sick of hearing" from his employees.

    It included, "Can I leave early today?" "My child is sick, can I rush off?" and "I'll be late in the morning."

    Some people responded to the thread, thinking Dance was suggesting he expected his employees to always be at their desks. But that's because they didn't click through to read all his thoughts.

    Rather, he was encouraging two-way trust.

    "I don't care," Dance wrote. "I hired you for a job and I fully TRUST you to get it done. I don't need you to account for every single hour."

    He advised other CEOs to allow their staff autonomy because people "are sick of being treated like children."

    Once they read the whole thread, the majority of people who responded agreed with Dance, though others pointed out that his methods may not be applicable to all.

    Dance's initial post amassed 14 million views and 52,000 likes.

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    The 'trust bucket'

    Koma Gandy, the VP of business and leadership at Skillsoft, the corporate training platform, says Dance made some good points.

    Workplaces are now multi-generational, with Zoomers, millennials, Gen Xers, and boomers, so soft skills such as empathy and transparent communication are more important than ever.

    Trust and flexibility are a huge part of building an effective workplace, Gandy said.

    In more traditional workplaces, it may be expected that employees are visible, attend all meetings, and work online for a certain number of hours. But according to Gandy, this can perpetuate a toxic cycle of people being "performative" and "bragging" about how busy they are.

    "Being busy and effective or not necessarily the same thing," Gandy said. "Your role is not dependent on jiggling a mouse every 10 to 15 minutes because some software is trying to track how busy you are."

    Gandy said giving employees the time and space to do their jobs effectively without being micromanaged is like "putting coins in the trust bucket."

    "If you're not an empathetic leader, and you're not putting coins in that trust bucket, when the time comes that you're going to need to withdraw, there's going to be nothing in it," she said.

    If somebody is struggling or being dishonest about their time, it's likely to become clear in different ways anyway, in their quality of work and performance, she added.

    The dangers of undermanaging

    Not every employee benefits from having such freedom. Junior staff, in particular, may prefer more structure and guidance on how to manage their time and workload.

    There's also a fine line between giving employees more freedom and "undermanaging" their performance.

    Kevin Legg, the founder of Sage, a company developing training for workplaces told CNBC in an interview last year that bosses can sometimes fall into that trap of undermanging, which can be just as damaging as micromanaging.

    "In the medium term, there is resentment at annual reviews when folks are passed over for promotions because they never lived up to a standard they were never shown," Legg said.

    For the most part, however, research seems to back Dance's style of management as being the most effective, as long as employees still have support.

    Gartner research from April 2025 found that when employers go big on flexibility — and don't limit it to when and where people work — the share of employees who are "high performers" jumps by 40%.

    A mindset shift

    Employees will also have to become comfortable with a more trusting dynamic.

    Gandy said if someone is used to being micromanaged and overexplaining every hour of the day, they have to "get comfortable" with having downtime in their calendar rather than being in meetings all day, every day.

    "You're going to have folks who default to, I'm so busy, I have meetings from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and that means I'm extremely valuable," Gandy said.

    "Well, I would also say that means you're extremely stressed, and you're going to burn out," she added. "It's more important to show up and be impactful in specific places than to show up everywhere."

    The signs of burnout can start subtly, such as sleeping in too much on the weekend, having a few too many drinks at happy hour, or developing unhealthy eating patterns.

    "You don't want somebody who has cardiovascular issues or can't sleep or has an eating problem because of something you could have missed with just a little bit of investment in trust and leadership and empathy to find out what was going on with that person," Gandy said. "Rather than driving to the point where they start adopting destructive behaviors that affect themselves or affect the company."

    The benefit of a trusting workplace is a healthier environment with happier, more enthusiastic people, Gandy said.

    "Healthier leaders, healthier managers, and healthier organizations," she said. "Why wouldn't we want all that?"

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • I loved my first visit to Switzerland — but my trip would’ve been better if I hadn’t made these 5 mistakes

    smiling woman in brown shirt sitting inside a train
    I rode trains to visit three towns in Switzerland, and there are only a few things I would do differently.

    • On a trip to Switzerland, I made a few mistakes that would be easy to avoid next time.
    • I visited Zurich, the country's largest city, and two towns in the Swiss Alps: Sion and St. Moritz.
    • Restaurant reservations and bus stops caught me off guard, along with a few other surprises.

    I went to Switzerland for the first time last year, riding trains out of Zurich and through the Swiss Alps.

    Though I have lots of experience traveling in Europe, some norms in the country caught me off guard during the nine-day trip.

    As I made my way first to Zurich, then Sion, and finally to St. Moritz, I made a few traveling blunders that I'll be sure to avoid next time.

    Trying to walk into restaurants without a reservation

    inside a restaurant with tables full under a midieval wood beam ceiling
    Without a reservation, there was a long wait at Restaurant Zeughauskeller.

    Multiple people told me to eat at Restaurant Zeughauskeller, the most famous classic Swiss restaurant in Zurich, so on my second night there, I strolled over.

    Even though it was a Wednesday, the former medieval armory was packed. I joined a huddle of about a dozen other reservation-less people waiting outside.

    When I peeked into the huge dining room with high wood-beamed ceilings, where each long table was filled with people eating and drinking, a server told me over the din of voices that the wait could be over an hour.

    When I arrived in Sion, a small town in the mountains, I thought I'd be fine without any restaurant reservations. But each high-rated Sion eatery I went to turned me away, saying they were full.

    brick-paved pedestrian-only street lined with lamposts and four-story pastel-colored buildings with mountains swiss alps in the distance
    I wandered the streets of Sion for a bit before I found a restaurant with an open table.

    By the time I got to St. Moritz, I'd learned my lesson and called ahead to make reservations. I had no issues getting into those restaurants.

    Not realizing water costs extra

    I made another gaffe inside the Swiss restaurants. Coming from the US, I assumed water was free with any meal.

    Later, when I looked at my receipts, I realized flat or sparkling water at almost every restaurant cost an extra 3 to 5 Swiss francs.

    According to the restaurant directory swissrest.ch, only one of the country's 26 cantons (similar to states in the US) has a law requiring restaurants to provide free water. The directory asks customers to consider tap water a "hospitality service."

    Using Airbnb instead of a hotel

    wide river lined with old zurich buildings with yellow lights on in the windows on a cloudy evening
    On the plus side, there was a gorgeous view on the bridge near the Airbnb I didn't like.

    When I was booking my trip, I checked Airbnb first because it was much cheaper than hotels when I recently visited France.

    I didn't have many options, but I snagged an Airbnb in Zurich that ended up being the worst place I stayed during the entire trip.

    The tiny studio apartment featured an uncomfortable bed with scratchy sheets, a small table with chairs, a kitchen sink, and a bathroom.

    I either had to leave the windows open and expose myself to direct sunlight and noise from the busy road below or close them and let the room get stuffy.

    Thankfully, I only stayed there for two nights. I think I would've been better off in a cheap hotel room, which likely would've had a better bed and no kitchen area, which I didn't need.

    The city has a lot of Airbnb options, though, so I probably could've gotten a nicer studio if I'd spent more money or booked further in advance.

    Plus, there may be even more options in the future. In its Q4 2023 earnings report, Airbnb said it was expanding its "playbook" in a few European countries like Switzerland, continuing its efforts at "investing in under-penetrated international markets."

    In Sion and St. Moritz, I had booked rooms in boutique hotels instead and they were lovely.

    Using Google Maps to locate bus stops

    view from the side of a street beneath a building with a ramp leading out to the sunny street above
    This sneaky bus stop was in an underground pass beneath a building.

    Switzerland lived up to its reputation for efficient, on-time trains with clear signage, but I can't say the same for the buses.

    In Zurich, I struggled to find bus stops. I would walk to the exact spot where Google Maps said the bus stop was and see no signs or benches. I'd wander around looking for the bus stop while watching several buses drive past me without stopping.

    Each time, I had to ask a local or two where the bus stop was. It was usually at least a block away from the location I saw in the app.

    Plus, the buses didn't arrive nearly as often as they were said to on Google Maps.

    Next time, I wouldn't rely solely on Google Maps to get around. I'll probably use the SBB website or mobile app to find bus stops and public transit routes.

    Buying a one-device outlet adapter at the airport

    I forgot to pack an adapter to plug my American devices into Swiss outlets, so I had to buy one once I landed at the Zurich airport.

    Unfortunately, it only charged one device at a time.

    Since I was carrying a phone, a portable phone battery, AirPods, two laptops, an electric toothbrush, and a camera, I would've preferred some extra charging capacity.

    Every moment I was in a hotel room or café, I was plugging something in. Several nights, I brushed my teeth manually with my dead electric toothbrush.

    I could've saved a lot of hassle and about $15 by ordering an adapter with multiple USB ports on Amazon ahead of my trip.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • It’s cool to be a finance bro — for now

    Wall Street sign on the subway
    The Wall Street subway stop

    Happy Independence Day! I'm Jordan Parker Erb, filling in for Dan DeFrancesco.

    Former President Donald Trump seems to think President Joe Biden's campaign is over, and he can barely contain his excitement, per a leaked video. But Biden vowed again on Wednesday that he is not dropping out of the race. It comes amid reports that White House staffers are being told to go heads down and "execute, execute, execute."

    In observance of the US holiday, we have a shorter edition of the newsletter. We'll be back in full force tomorrow.

    In today's big story, we're looking at why it's such a good time to be a finance bro.


    If this was forwarded to you, sign up here.


    The big story

    ISO: A man in finance

    man in suit, Wall Street background with hearts

    It's cool to be a finance bro — for now.

    Thanks to a song in a viral TikTok video, finance bros have entered a period of resurgence. If you're even remotely online, you'll recognize the lyrics: "I'm looking for a man in finance. Trust fund. 6'5. Blue eyes."

    The video, posted by user Megan Boni, has raked in around 54 million views since being uploaded. It's become a cultural touchstone for the summer, seemingly telling viewers it's officially acceptable to be a man in finance — and if you can date one, that's even better. (Though some women say it's not all it's cracked up to be, writes Business Insider's Maria Noyen.)

    But that wasn't always the case for Wall Streeters.

    Before moving to New York City, I was impervious to bankers and their various quirks. But it didn't take long to discover that finance bros were often the butt of the joke. I quickly learned to knowingly roll my eyes at the swarms of Patagonia vests in downtown Manhattan.

    The finance-bro revival has benefited, at least in part, from America's short-term memory. Following the 2008 financial crisis, working on the Street wasn't viewed with such high esteem. Plenty of Americans felt resentment toward financial workers, blaming them for the economy's meltdown.

    In the years since, attention has shifted to a new cohort: tech bros. They're easy to poke fun at for their meme-worthy antics (I'm looking at you, Mark Zuckerberg's sunscreen).

    And they can also be easy to hate when employing dubious or flat-out criminal business practices. (Elizabeth Holmes' Theranos and Sam Bankman-Fried's FTX are recent examples.)

    So finance bros may be enjoying a moment in the cultural sunshine — but it likely won't last forever.


    In other news


    What's happening today

    • The UK general election will be held. The Conservatives led by Rishi Sunak — who called the election amid a downpour in May — face an uphill battle to defend their seats.
    • Nathan's Fourth of July Hot Dog Eating Contest will go on without its longtime star, Joey Chestnut. Chestnut was barred from competing due to a sponsor conflict.

    The Insider Today team: Dan DeFrancesco, deputy editor and anchor, in New York. Jordan Parker Erb, editor, in New York. Hallam Bullock, senior editor, in London. Amanda Yen, fellow, in New York.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • A stolen painting found in a plastic bag at a London bus stop just sold for $22 million.

    A curator in a white shirt and white gloves against a black background holds the edge of a heavy golden picture frame around one of Titian's masterpieces, "Rest on the Flight into Egypt," which shows Mary and Joseph in colorful clothing resting in a landscape with baby Jesus.
    A Christie's curator holds Titian's "Rest on the Flight into Egypt."

    • "Rest on the Flight into Egypt" and other works were stolen from an English country house in 1995.
    • The painting, by a Venetian Old Master, was found at a bus stop in 2002 after a tip-off.
    • The auction house Christie's said the £17.5 million sale price set a record for a work by Titian.

    An early painting by one of Europe's most famous painters was auctioned for a record high price years after it was recovered in a shopping bag at a bus stop.

    "The Rest on the Flight into Egypt," an early work by the famed 16th-century Italian painter Titian, was sold for over £17.5 million ($22.3 million) on July 2, according to Christie's. It was the highest-priced work to be sold that evening and set a record for any work by Titian, the auction house said.

    The painting's longtime owners, the family of a British nobles, held onto the painting after it was previously sold by Christie's in 1878. In 1995, however, the work was stolen from the walls of the family's country house, Longleat, along with two other paintings that are still reportedly missing.

    In 2002, the painting was recovered by Charles Hill, an ex-Scotland Yard detective who died in 2021. He had announced a £100,000 reward for information leading to the painting's recovery.

    He told The Telegraph in 2002 that he was contacted by a tipster who had Hill drive him around until they reached a bus stop in west London where an old man was standing beside a red, white and blue shopping bag that contained the painting.

    "The problem with stealing a famous painting is that there is no way you can sell it," Hill told The Telegraph. "But if a reasonable reward is offered, the painting can turn up."

    News reports around the time of the painting's recovery put its value at £5 million. Ahead of the recent sale, Christie's had estimated that the painting would go for £15 million to £25 million.

    The Titian wasn't the only stolen artwork to be recovered in a state that might shock a curator. In 2003, a New York City woman found a $1 million painting that had been stolen about 16 years earlier in a pile of trash bags. And in September 2023, a Vincent van Gogh painting that was stolen in 2020 was found in an Ikea bag outside an art detective's apartment.

    Read the original article on Business Insider