Business Pundit

The Week's Carnival of the Capitalists

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The latest Carnival of the Capitalists is up. With only 9 entries making it this week, it's worth your time to click through and see if something catches your interest.See full article.

Related Entries:

10/30/06 CoTc - 02 November 2006

9/10/07 Carnival of the Capitalists - 10 September 2007

11/26/07 Carnival of the Capitalists - 26 November 2007

The Last Carnival of the Capitalists as We Know It - 07 January 2008

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Which Facebook Users Are Worth the Most?

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Todd and I decided to have another page added to our How Much Am I Worth facebook app. Since it assigns a profile valuation based on social networking activity like number of friends, number of photos, etc., we were curious to break out valuation along demographic lines to see if there were differences.

As you can see from the picture above, women are worth about 19% more than men. Of course, we only have a few thousand installs of our app, so this probably is not a large enough sample to accurately predict the average across all Facebook users. Another finding that is less surprising is the average value by age, which you can see from the image below.

We also broke out the data by country, and by state within the U.S., but I won't post all that here. Go check out the app if you are interested.




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See full article.

Related Entries:

There Must Be a Reason Everyone Is Talking About Facebook - 25 June 2007

Vacationing In Facebook - Travel Maps And Many New Apps - 17 July 2007

Smart Links Organizer for Facebook - 22 October 2007

How Much Is Your Facebook Profile Worth? - 02 November 2007





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12/31/07 CoTC

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The New Year's Eve edition of the Carnival of Capitalists is a bit late, but is finally up here. Be sure to check it out for some great business blog posts.

See full article.

Related Entries:

3/6/06 Carnival of the Capitalists - 06 March 2006

2/5/07 CotC - 05 February 2007

2/26/07 CotC - 26 February 2007

10/22/07 CotC - 22 October 2007





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Beauty and Success

The Economist has an interesting article about beauty and success, and notes that you can still discriminate against ugly people.

Just over a decade ago Dr Hamermesh presided over a series of surveys in the United States and Canada which showed that when all other things are taken into account, ugly people earn less than average incomes, while beautiful people earn more than the average. The ugliness "penalty" for men was -9% while the beauty premium was +5%. For women, perhaps surprisingly considering popular prejudices about the sexes, the effect was less: the ugliness penalty was -6% while the beauty premium was +4%.

Given this information, there could actually be a financial return on plastic surgery.

See full article.

Related Entries:

Success and General Cognitive Ability - 13 January 2004

Manage for Business Success - 20 July 2006

Things you never knew about beauty - 27 June 2007

Building patterns for success - 28 August 2007





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Why The Dunning-Kruger Effect Is Ruining Your Business

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Do you remember the first time you were promoted to a position that required you to determine the compensation of people underneath you? Or even worse, have you ever worked in a company where someone made the social faux pau of discussing their salary and it led to all sorts of comparisons, complaints, and sore egos? One of the things I learned very early in my work career is that most people think they are worth more money than everyone else they work with. People tend to have a very poor sense of where they really rank in the company hierarchy. This happens because of an idea from psychology known as the Dunning-Kruger effect, and it could be doing serious harm in your company.

The essence of the Dunning-Kruger effect is that "ignorance more frequently begets confidence than knowledge." Studies have shown that the most incompetent individuals are the ones that are most convinced of their competence. At work this translates into lots of incompetent people who think they are superstars. And what is worse is that if you have a manager that doesn't closely supervise work, he or she may judge performance based on outward appearances using information like the confidence with which these incompetent blockheads speak.

An important corollary of this effect is that the most competent people often underestimate their competence. This is a result of how you frame knowledge. The more you know, the more you focus on what you don't know. For instance, people who can name 15 of the 50 state capitals tend to think "I know 15." People who know 45 of the 50 state capitals tend to think "I don't know 5." I've experienced the same thing at work. When I worked as an engineer designing electronics for military applications, one of our best problem solvers was constantly overlooked by management. He was one of the go-to guys, the kind that you pull in when you have a problem that no one can figure out, but our organizational structure was such that the people who controlled your promotions were usually not the people you worked for. As a result, we had to basically start an internal campaign to get him promoted when many of his peers made it to the next level while he was overlooked. All the while, a few engineers who could talk better than they could actually perform were promoted ahead of him.

So how do you minimize the Dunning-Kruger effect at your place of work? Here are a few ideas:
1. Use as many measurable standards of performance as possible. Even idiots have a difficult time refuting concrete performance goals.

2. Encourage dissension and debate. This is tough, because if this is not handled properly, it can build a culture of negativity and risk aversion. Your goal shouldn't be to avoid risk, just to expose and understand it.

3. Show confidence in your best employees, even when they don't have confidence in themselves.

If you have your own first hand experiences with this, or ideas about how to prevent it, feel free to leave them in the comments section. Or write your own post and send me a note so I can link to it.

See full article.

Related Entries:

Strategis - Managing for Small Business Success - 01 August 2006

Human Resources Tight: Small Business HR Management in a Tight Hiring Market - 31 March 2007

Interview Questions - 19 November 2007

Hiring a Bookkeeper - 21 November 2007





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Seeds from the blogworld
We search the business blog world looking for posts that illustrate principles, or "Seeds", that if followed, or "planted", will help small businesses grow. We list them here for your convenience. Enjoy.

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