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Messages - Priya

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16
Newspaper / Samsung’s Eid campaign offers free electronics
« on: July 22, 2019, 01:47:34 PM »
Samsung’s Eid campaign offers free electronics



Samsung has launched a “Meet the Eid” campaign marking the upcoming Eid-ul-Azha offering free consumer electronics and cashbacks on purchase of select models of refrigerators, televisions and washing machines till August 11.

Televisions, washing machines and microwave ovens are coming free with purchase of the refrigerators alongside cashbacks of up to Tk 50,000, says a press release.

There are offers for newly introduced side-by-side refrigerator Spacemax while cash backs and exchange offers on upright freezers.

Free soundbars and televisions alongside cashbacks of up to Tk 200,000 are available on purchase of the televisions while vacuum cleaners with the washing machines.

Air conditioner are accompanied by cashbacks of up to Tk 6,000 and washing machines of up to Tk 10,000.

Exchange offers and cashbacks can only be availed separately.

Free gift boxes (until stock lasts) are being provided with refrigerators and microwave ovens while a subscription of iflix and discount vouchers for Akash DTH with televisions.


Source: https://www.thedailystar.net/business/global-business/news/samsungs-eid-campaign-offers-free-electronics-1773685

17
Newspaper / Facing Olympic hotel shortage, Tokyo looks offshore
« on: July 22, 2019, 01:44:52 PM »
Facing Olympic hotel shortage, Tokyo looks offshore





Tokyo is facing a shortage of accommodation when Olympic fans pour into the Japanese capital for next year’s Games so officials are looking offshore -- to moored cruise ships operating as floating hotels.

Despite a construction boom, Tokyo could be short as many as 14,000 rooms given an expected surge of Olympics-related tourism, according to researchers.

Local officials think one solution could be to put people up in giant ships temporarily docked off Tokyo and nearby Yokohama during the Games.

Among those on board with the idea is Japan’s largest travel agency JTB, which has chartered the 1,011-cabin Sun Princess for the Olympic period, complete with everything from jacuzzis to a theatre.

The agency is offering packages that combine rooms with Olympic event tickets, but they don’t come cheap.

Two nights in a room with a balcony combined with tickets to an Olympic football match will run 200,000 yen ($1,850), while two nights in a 50-square-metre suite combined with baseball tickets will go for 724,000 yen ($6,700).

The agency said it was confident about demand, partly because  “we will have a shortage of hotels of a certain standard”, said Minoru Kuge, head of JTB’s Tokyo2020 Project Office.

“Although we can’t disclose the actual numbers, we have received an excellent reaction from our customers”, he told AFP on a tour of the luxury ship.

And Kuge said he expected the package to have a special draw --  “a sense of unity” among customers who will all be cheering on Olympic athletes.

Elsewhere, plans have been negotiated for the 928-cabin Explorer Dream ship to dock in Kawasaki, in western Tokyo bay.

And both Tokyo’s local government and officials in Chiba prefecture, east of the capital, are looking into additional cruise ship possibilities.

Japan’s hotel business law bans rooms without a window, but the health ministry last year issued an ordinance that allows ships with windowless cabins to be used as hotels during major events.

But experts warn that a few cruise ships may not be enough.

“It is unclear if hotels ships in the Tokyo Bay will be able to cover hotel rooms shortage,” warned a report on the issue published in October by Mizuho Research Institute.

Even the number of tourists the capital can expect remains unclear because the increase in Olympic visitors may be balanced out by other tourists opting to stay away until the Games are done.

Regardless, Tokyo officials see the ships as a novel accommodation solution, and are also planning to open a new cruise ship terminal days before the Games began.

Officials and industry experts hope using docked ships for extra hotel space will become common in the country, as a way to cater to visitors during special events, or even help people displaced during disasters.

“If a provincial city wants to host an international convention or other big events but doesn’t have enough accommodation, hotel ships can be a solution,” said Yoshimi Tajima, JTB’s senior official at the corporate business department.


Source: https://www.thedailystar.net/business/global-business/news/facing-olympic-hotel-shortage-tokyo-looks-offshore-1773688

18
Canada is ‘closest transatlantic partner’ of EU, says Tusk



Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau launched the Canada-EU summit Wednesday by praising the  “progress” resulting from CETA, their free trade deal, while European Council president Donald Tusk called Ottawa the bloc’s  “closest transatlantic partner.” Their mutual praise contrasted with the strained ties between Europe and the United States under President Donald Trump and his protectionist administration.

“CETA goes far beyond lowering trade barriers and reaching new markets... With CETA, we’re doing trade differently,” Trudeau said at the start of the 17th summit.

The Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) went into effect in practically its entirety in September 2017 and so far has been ratified by 13 of the 28 European Union member states and Canada.

The pact removes tariffs on nearly all goods and services between Canada and Europe, which the EU says eliminates 590 million euros ($890 million Canadian/$665 million) in customs duties each year.  Since the accord came into effect, EU exports to Canada have risen 15 percent, a European official said.

Canadian exports to the EU rose seven percent in 2018 compared to the previous year to $44.5 billion, according to Canadian government figures.

But the agreement is controversial: some environmentalists, social activists and free trade sceptics argue it gives too much power to corporations and does not give citizens a balancing right to take legal action if companies break the rules.


Source: https://www.thedailystar.net/business/global-business/news/canada-closest-transatlantic-partner-eu-says-tusk-1773694

19
Newspaper / Samsung asks partners to stockpile Japanese components
« on: July 22, 2019, 01:40:10 PM »
Samsung asks partners to stockpile Japanese components



South Korea’s Samsung Electronics has sent letters to local partners urging them to stockpile more Japanese components in case Tokyo expands its export restrictions, a source with knowledge of the matter said on Thursday.

The move comes in the face of Tokyo’s curbs on some exports of high-tech materials to South Korea that threaten to disrupt the global supply of microchips used by technology companies around the world.

The source, who spoke on condition on anonymity, said the letters were recently sent to local suppliers for the smartphone and home appliances businesses.

Earlier on Thursday, Yonhap news agency reported that Samsung had sent the letters and was  “exploring all possible means” to secure more components in preparation for Japan possibly expanding the restrictions.

In letters sent earlier this week, Samsung asked partners to secure components by the end of July, or before Aug. 15 at the latest, the Yonhap report says.

Samsung, the world’s biggest memory chipmaker, declined to comment on the report.

Japan is considering whether to remove South Korea from its  “white list” of countries with minimum trade restrictions, a move South Korean officials have said would cause a  “tremendous amount of problems” and strain ties between Japan, South Korea, and the United States.

Samsung has told its partners it would shoulder the additional costs of stockpiling the components, the report says.


Source: https://www.thedailystar.net/business/global-business/news/samsung-asks-partners-stockpile-japanese-components-1773697

20
Many of the deadliest cancers receive the least amount of research funding



Many of the deadliest or most common cancers get the least amount of nonprofit research funding, according to a new Northwestern Medicine study that examined the distribution of nonprofit research funding in 2015 across cancer types.

Colon, endometrial, liver and bile duct, cervical, ovarian, pancreatic and lung cancers were all poorly funded compared to how common they are and how many deaths they cause, the study found. In contrast, breast cancer, leukemia, lymphoma and pediatric cancers were all well-funded, respective to their impact on society.

The study is the first to compare nonprofit funding distribution in the United States across cancer types. It will be published July 18 in the Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.

"The goal of this study is not to divert funds away from cancers that are well-supported, but rather expand funding for other cancers that aren't getting enough support currently," said corresponding author Dr. Suneel Kamath, who was the chief fellow in the department of hematology and oncology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine when he conducted the study. "These are all deadly and life-altering diseases that deserve our attention and support."

Cancer-related nonprofit organizations play an important role in funding medical research, supporting the education of patients and their families and influencing health policy. Underfunding of these common cancers could negatively impact research, drug development and the number of FDA drug approvals for poorly funded cancers.

"Well-funded patient advocacy organizations should be applauded for their successes," said co-author Dr. Sheetal Kircher, assistant professor of hematology and oncology at Feinberg and a Northwestern Medicine oncologist. "We hope to bring awareness to the organizations with less relative funding so we can collaborate to improve funding and outcomes for all patients with cancer."

The study also explored factors that may influence which cancers receive more public support over others. Cancers that are associated with a stigmatized behavior, such as lung cancer with smoking or liver cancer with drinking, were all poorly funded.

"Shame and discomfort with talking about our bowels and 'private parts' may be reducing funding for diseases like colon or endometrial cancer," Kamath said.

The nationwide study, conducted between October 2017 and February 2018, used IRS tax records to identify all nonprofit organizations that support any type of cancer and made at least $5 million in annual revenue in 2015. The scientists examined 119 organizations with a total of $5.98 billion in annual revenue. Most of this ($4.59 billion) went to general cancer charities with no focus on one disease (e.g. American Cancer Society).

The authors compared the amount of revenue for each cancer type with the number of new cases, number of deaths and number of years of life lost to see if the amount of funding for each cancer is proportional to how common and/or deadly it is.

Dr. Al Benson, professor of hematology and oncology at Feinberg and a Northwestern Medicine oncologist, also is a study author. Benson and Kircher also are members of the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University.

The study was not funded or supported by any government, nonprofit or industry entities.

Sources: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/07/190718164852.htm

21
Scientists stimulate neurons to induce particular perceptions in mice's minds



Hallucinations are spooky and, fortunately, fairly rare. But, a new study suggests, the real question isn't so much why some people occasionally experience them. It's why all of us aren't hallucinating all the time.

In the study, Stanford University School of Medicine neuroscientists stimulated nerve cells in the visual cortex of mice to induce an illusory image in the animals' minds. The scientists needed to stimulate a surprisingly small number of nerve cells, or neurons, in order to generate the perception, which caused the mice to behave in a particular way.

"Back in 2012, we had described the ability to control the activity of individually selected neurons in an awake, alert animal," said Karl Deisseroth, MD, PhD, professor of bioengineering and of psychiatry and behavioral sciences. "Now, for the first time, we've been able to advance this capability to control multiple individually specified cells at once, and make an animal perceive something specific that in fact is not really there -- and behave accordingly."

The study, to be published online July 18 in Science, holds implications for obtaining a better understanding of natural information processing in the brain, as well as psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia, and points to the possibility of designing neural prosthetic devices with single-cell resolution.

Deisseroth is the study's senior author. Lead authorship is shared by staff scientists James Marshel, PhD, and Sean Quirin, PhD; graduate student Yoon Seok Kim; and postdoctoral scholar Timothy Machado, PhD.

Using optogenetics

Deisseroth, who is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator and holds the D. H. Chen Professorship, pioneered optogenetics, a technology enabling researchers to stimulate particular neurons in freely moving animals with pulses of light, and to observe the resulting effects on the animals' brain function and behavior.

In the new study, Deisseroth and his colleagues inserted a combination of two genes into large numbers of neurons in the visual cortex of lab mice. One gene encoded a light-sensitive protein that caused the neuron to fire in response to a pulse of laser light of a narrowly defined color -- in this case, in the infrared spectrum. The other gene encoded a fluorescent protein that glowed green whenever the neuron was active.

The scientists created cranial windows in the mice by removing a portion of the animals' skulls to expose part of the visual cortex, which in both mice and humans is responsible for processing information relayed from the retina. The investigators protected this exposed area with a clear glass covering. They could then use a device they developed for the purpose of the study to project holograms -- three-dimensional configurations of targeted photons -- onto, and into, the visual cortex. These photons would land at precise spots along specific neurons. The researchers could monitor the resulting activity of nearly all individual neurons in two distinct layers of the cerebral cortex spanning about 1 square millimeter and containing on the order of several thousand neurons.

With their heads fixed in a comfortable position, the mice were shown random series of horizontal and vertical bars displayed on a screen. The researchers observed and recorded which neurons in the exposed visual cortex were preferentially activated by one or the other orientation. From these results, the scientists were able to identify dispersed populations of individual neurons that were "tuned" to either horizontal or vertical visual displays.

They were then able to "play back" these recordings in the form of holograms that produced spots of infrared light on just neurons that were responsive to horizontal, or to vertical, bars. The resulting downstream neuronal activity, even at locations relatively far from the stimulated neurons, was quite similar to that observed when the natural stimulus -- a black horizontal or vertical bar on a white background -- was displayed on the screen.

The scientists trained the mice to lick the end of a nearby tube for water when they saw a vertical bar but not when they saw a horizontal one or saw neither. Over the course of several days, as the animals' ability to discriminate between horizontal and vertical bars improved, the scientists gradually reduced the black-white contrast to make the task progressively harder. They found that the mice's performance perked up if the scientists supplemented the visual displays with simultaneous optogenetic stimulation: For example, if an animal's performance deteriorated as a result of a lowered contrast, the investigators could boost its discrimination powers by stimulating neurons previously identified as preferentially disposed to fire in response to a horizontal or vertical bar.

This boost occurred only when the optogenetic stimulation was consistent with the visual stimulation -- for example, a vertical bar display plus stimulation of neurons previously identified as likely to fire in response to vertically oriented bars.

Hallucinating mice

Once the mice had become adept at discriminating between horizontal and vertical bars, the scientists were able to induce tube-licking behavior in the mice simply by projecting the "vertical" holographic program onto the mice's visual cortex. But the mice wouldn't lick the tube if the "horizontal" program was projected instead.

"Not only is the animal doing the same thing, but the brain is, too," Deisseroth said. "So we know we're either recreating the natural perception or creating something a whole lot like it."

In their early experiments, the scientists had identified numerous neurons as being tuned to either a horizontal or a vertical orientation, but they hadn't yet directly stimulated each of those particular neurons optogenetically. Once the mice were trained, optogenetic stimulation of small numbers of these neurons was enough to get mice to respond with appropriate licking or nonlicking behavior.

The researchers were surprised to find that optogenetically stimulating about 20 neurons -- or fewer in some cases -- selected only for being responsive to the right orientation, could produce the same neuronal activity and animal behavior that displaying the vertical or horizontal bar did.

"It's quite remarkable how few neurons you need to specifically stimulate in an animal to generate a perception," Deisseroth said.

"A mouse brain has millions of neurons; a human brain has many billions," he said. "If just 20 or so can create a perception, then why are we not hallucinating all the time, due to spurious random activity? Our study shows that the mammalian cortex is somehow poised to be responsive to an amazingly low number of cells without causing spurious perceptions in response to noise."

Deisseroth is a member of Stanford Bio-X and of the Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute at Stanford.

Stanford's Office of Technology Licensing has filed a patent application for intellectual property associated with the work.

The work was funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, HHMI, the National Institutes of Health (grants R01MH075957 and P50DA042012), the Simons Foundation, the Wiegers Family Fund, the Nancy and James Grosfeld Foundation, the Sam and Betsy Reeves Fund, the H.L. Snyder Foundation, the Burroughs-Wellcome Foundation, the McKnight Foundation, the James S. McDonnell Foundation and the Swartz Foundation.

Source: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/07/190718145358.htm

22
Newspaper / Colors honours women entrepreneurs
« on: July 22, 2019, 01:31:29 PM »
Colors honours women entrepreneurs



Lifestyle magazine Colors has honoured women entrepreneurs in seven categories for their impressive success in the field of business.

The magazine, which is published from Dhaka and New York, organised the Colors Platinum Business Women Awards-2019 with the support from City Alo, the dedicated women banking division of City Bank.

State Minister for ICT Zunaid Ahmed Palak and Indian High Commissioner to Bangladesh Riva Ganguly Das attended the award-giving ceremony at InterContinental Dhaka on Saturday.

The magazine honoured Rumana Chowdhury of Warah with the Platinum Business Woman of the Year award while Sausan Khan Moyeen of Enchanted Events and Prints received the Business Enterprise of the Year award.

Tania Wahab of Karigar secured the SME Enterprise of the Year award and Amena Khatun of Nila and Sons won the Innovative Project of the Year award.

The Start-up of the Year award went to Trina Falguni of Sugar Communications Limited, the Innovative Solution of the Year award in the IT category to Fahmida Islam of La mode while Nabila Nowrin and Nahid Sharmin of Moar got the Rising Star of the Year award. 

The event was also addressed by General Manager of InterContinental Dhaka Marc Reissinger and Additional Managing Director of City Bank Sheikh Mohammad Maroof.

“We took the decision to award the women entrepreneurs as part of an effort to recognise their endeavours of women who have tremendously been contributing to the economy,” Editor and Publisher of Colors Zakaria Masud said at the event.

The Daily Star is one of the media partners of the event for which InterContinental Dhaka was the hospitality partner.


Source: https://www.thedailystar.net/business/global-business/news/colors-honours-women-entrepreneurs-1775026

23
Chinese companies seeking new purchases of US farm products

Some Chinese companies are seeking new purchases of US agricultural products, China’s official Xinhua news agency said on Sunday, citing authorities.

“Some Chinese enterprises have inquired with US exporters about the purchase of agricultural produce and applied for the lifting of tariffs on the products,” Xinhua said.

Source: https://www.thedailystar.net/business/global-business/news/chinese-companies-seeking-new-purchases-us-farm-products-1775020

24
Newspaper / In sluggish Russian economy, halal sees growth
« on: July 22, 2019, 01:27:39 PM »
In sluggish Russian economy, halal sees growth



The manager of a sausage factory near Moscow, Arslan Gizatullin says his halal business has been feeling the pinch -- not so much from Russia’s sluggish economy but competitors vying for a piece of a growing Islamic market.

Ever more producers are catering for the domestic Muslim community, which accounts for around 15 percent of Russia’s population and is set to expand, and in some cases are also setting their sights on export.

“In the last few years in general, halal’s become something of a trend in Russia,” said Gizatullin, who has been at the Halal-Ash plant in the city of Shchyolkovo for seven years.

The factory was among the first of its kind when it opened two decades ago, recreating Soviet-style sausages in accordance with Islamic law, among other products.

“Now I go to shop displays and I see sausage from one, two, three producers... I see that competition is growing,” he adds from the factory, which employs 35 people and puts out up to 1.5 tonnes of produce a day.

The halal economy, worth more than $2.1 trillion globally, is far from limited to meat.

Cosmetics firms and services such as halal hotels have received licenses from the body that oversees Islamic production in Russia, while state-owned Sberbank is looking into creating an Islamic finance entity.

The Centre for Halal Standardisation and Certification, under the authority of the Russian Council of Muftis, has approved more than 200 companies since it opened in 2007.

The centre says that number is growing by five to seven companies a year -- from a standing start at the collapse of the anti-religious Soviet Union.

Rushan Abbyasov, the deputy head of the Council of Muftis, told AFP the Russian agriculture ministry was supporting the centre in its efforts to increase exports to the Arab world and Muslim-majority ex-Soviet republics.

“We’ve looked at international experience in the Arab world, in Malaysia, and we’ve developed our Russian (halal certification) standard following that model,” Abbyasov said in an interview at Moscow’s central mosque.

“We’re doing it in a way that matches international halal standards as well as the laws of the Russian Federation.”

The mufti pointed to an annual exhibition of halal goods and producers in the Muslim-majority Russian republic of Tatarstan, which this year saw its biggest ever turnout, as an example of the sector’s growth.

Tatar officials told Russian media the halal food market accounted for around 7 billion rubles a year ($110 million) -- or just over three percent of the region’s gross agricultural output.

But they said the sector was growing at a rate of between 10 and 15 percent a year.

The certification centre said Russia’s overall halal economy was also growing at a rate of 15 percent every year, but declined to give a breakdown of its figures.

Russia’s overall economy is stagnant, with the government predicting growth of only 1.3 percent this year, after 2.3 percent growth in 2018.

Alif, a Moscow-based cosmetics firm, is a new company at the forefront of the move towards exporting halal goods from Russia.

Manager Halima Hosman told AFP that, a year after launching, Alif’s products were being sold in the Muslim-majority Russian republics of Dagestan and Chechnya, as well as ex-Soviet Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan.

“Our priority targets for export now are France, Turkey, Iran, Saudi Arabia,” she said, adding that the company had non-financial support from the halal certification centre.

The 28-year-old, who was born into an Orthodox Christian family in southern Moldova but converted to Islam as a teen, said promoting halal products was about more than business.

Source: https://www.thedailystar.net/business/global-business/news/sluggish-russian-economy-halal-sees-growth-1775008

25
Newspaper / VAT 5pc, comes into effect today
« on: July 01, 2019, 11:54:53 AM »
VAT 5pc, comes into effect today

The value added tax (VAT) proposed in the budget for 2019-20 on online shopping comes into effect from today, albeit at a reduced rate and under a new calculation.

Amidst the e-commerce industry’s outcry and campaigns, the rate has been reduced to 5 percent from 7.5 percent, the e-Commerce Association of Bangladesh (e-CAB) said in a statement yesterday.

However, the taxes proposed on telecom services has remained unchanged, according to the statement.

The VAT on online shopping will be calculated based on the difference between what a company pays for a product and sells it for, it said. For instance, if a company buys a product for Tk 100 and sells it at Tk 110, the 5 percent will be calculated on the Tk 10 difference, meaning the VAT will be Tk 0.5.

Terming the rate reduction an achievement of theirs, Abdul Wahed Tomal, the e-CAB general secretary, expressed discontent with the calculation process.

He cited an example of most companies selling products below cost prices in an effort to attract customers, asking how the VAT would be calculated then.

“We continue to raise our demand for full withdrawal of the VAT from digital commerce for at least the next five years for the sake of digitalisation of the country’s business process,” Tomal told The Daily Star. The e-CAB will move again with the support of different ministers for the withdrawal, he said. Commerce Minister Tipu Munshi and State Minister for ICT Zunaid Ahmed Palak have already supported the demand.

The government had twice tried to impose the VAT, proposing 4 percent in the 2015-16 budget and 5 percent in 2018-19, but backed down amidst opposition from entrepreneurs.

Industry insiders said this segment of business had just started to grow with annual sales still hovering below Tk 1,000 crore and this growth would come to a halt if the government withdrew its active support.

Finance Minister AHM Mustafa Kamal in his budget speech proposed increasing the supplementary duty on all services availed through mobile phones to 10 percent from 5 percent. This came into effect on the day of the budget announcement.

Mobile operators estimate that customers would end up paying an additional Tk 1,300 crore every year for the duty hike. The budget also proposed raising SIM tax to Tk 200 from Tk 100, which mobile operators say would turn out to be a hindrance to growth.

The increase in minimum tax on overall turnover to 2 percent from existing 0.75 percent for mobile companies was another blow, they added.

Source: https://www.thedailystar.net/business/news/vat-5pc-comes-effect-today-1765018

26
Entrepreneurship / 7 Topics Entrepreneurs Want to Learn About
« on: June 29, 2019, 05:57:56 PM »
7 Topics Entrepreneurs Want to Learn About

Entrepreneurship is not for the faint of heart – especially in these times. Take economic uncertainty, mix in a healthy dose of technology, add a rapidly changing marketplace and you’ll discover the learning curve for entrepreneurs is straight up! 

A survey of small, medium, and micro enterprises (SMME) uncovered the primary topics entrepreneurs would like to learn most. Given that many entrepreneurs enter the field of business as a technician or a master craftsperson of their chosen profession, its easy to see why these topics are at the top of their list – they are the fundamental skills every SMME needs to know to succeed in business.



Topics in order of importance to the entrepreneur include:entrepreneurial learning

1. Marketing their business, which includes developing the ideal client profile, value proposition, branding, market research, marketing plan, marketing budget, and social media plan – all the elements needed to generate leads and acquire clients.

2. Growing their business includes understanding the critical factors and focus needed to move their business forward including establishing reasonable growth goals. (To learn more about the different stages of business growth & development, click here.)

3. Personal growth consists of strengthening self-esteem, building confidence, honing a belief in ones abilities and value, understanding strengths, improving communication skills, creating a compelling and inspiring vision, as well as, learning how to set healthy work and client boundaries.

4. How to succeed embraces a wide-range of topics from time/goal management to organization to getting more done in less time, developing timely products and services, remaining competitive and relevant in an environment that’s continually changing, and gaining a clear understanding of what ‘success’ means to you.

5. Getting the most out of employees takes into account how to create an engaged inspired workforce in addition to knowing where to find the best fit for their company and how to entice them to join your workforce.

6. Financial management takes up such topics as gaining an understanding of cash flow, balance sheets, and profit and loss statements, pricing strategies, accounting and bookkeeping best practices, and budgeting.

7. Dealing with the pressure and stress. Who wouldn’t be frazzled after learning all there is to learn about the previous 6 topics?! Actually, more entrepreneurs are noticing a rise in the day-to-day stress of growing a business. It’s becoming so second-nature that stress seems to go unnoticed. Managing stress and pressure is a BIG topic. Perhaps it should be listed first as studies show that creativity, ingenuity, and innovation is greatly enhanced when people are relaxed and in-the-flow. Mindful meditation, making time for regular exercise, under promising, and learning to say ‘no’ more often are all topics – and skills – to be learned in this category.

Source: https://www.synnovatia.com/business-coaching-blog/bid/141123/7-Topics-Entrepreneurs-Want-to-Learn-About

27
Why Creativity Is a Process, Not an Event



In 1666, one of the most influential scientists in history was strolling through a garden when he was struck with a flash of creative brilliance that would change the world.

While standing under the shade of an apple tree, Sir Isaac Newton saw an apple fall to the ground. “Why should that apple always descend perpendicularly to the ground,” Newton wondered. “Why should it not go sideways, or upwards, but constantly to the earth’s center? Assuredly, the reason is, that the earth draws it. There must be a drawing power in matter.”

And thus, the concept of gravity was born.

The story of the falling apple has become one of the lasting and iconic examples of the creative moment. It is a symbol of the inspired genius that fills your brain during those “light bulb moments” when creative conditions are just right.

What most people forget, however, is that Newton worked on his ideas about gravity for nearly twenty years until, in 1687, he published his groundbreaking book, The Principia: Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy. The falling apple was merely the beginning of a train of thought that continued for decades.

Newton isn’t the only one to wrestle with a great idea for years. Creative thinking is a process for all of us. In this article, I’ll share the science of creative thinking, discuss which conditions drive creativity and which ones hinder it, and offer practical tips for becoming more creative.

Creative thinking: destiny or development?

Creative thinking requires our brains to make connections between seemingly unrelated ideas. Is this a skill that we are born with or one that we develop through practice? Let’s look at the research to uncover an answer.

In the 1960s, a creative performance researcher named George Land conducted a study of 1,600 five-year-olds and 98 percent of the children scored in the “highly creative” range. Dr. Land re-tested each subject during five year increments. When the same children were 10-years-old, only 30 percent scored in the highly creative range. This number dropped to 12 percent by age 15 and just 2 percent by age 25. As the children grew into adults they effectively had the creativity trained out of them. In the words of Dr. Land, “non-creative behavior is learned.”

Similar trends have been discovered by other researchers. For example, one study of 272,599 students found that although IQ scores have risen since 1990, creative thinking scores have decreased.

This is not to say that creativity is 100 percent learned. Genetics do play a role. According to psychology professor Barbara Kerr, “approximately 22 percent of the variance [in creativity] is due to the influence of genes.” This discovery was made by studying the differences in creative thinking between sets of twins.

All of this to say, claiming that “I’m just not the creative type” is a pretty weak excuse for avoiding creative thinking. Certainly, some people are primed to be more creative than others. However, nearly every person is born with some level of creative skill and the majority of our creative thinking abilities are trainable.

Now that we know creativity is a skill that can be improved, let’s talk about why—and how—practice and learning impacts your creative output.

Intelligence and creative thinking

What does it take to unleash your creative potential?

As I mentioned in my article on Threshold Theory, being in the top 1 percent of intelligence has no correlation with being fantastically creative. Instead, you simply have to be smart (not a genius) and then work hard, practice deliberately and put in your reps.

As long as you meet a threshold of intelligence, then brilliant creative work is well within your reach. In the words of researchers from a 2013 study, “we obtained evidence that once the intelligence threshold is met, personality factors become more predictive for creativity.”



Growth mindset

What exactly are these “personality factors” that researchers are referring to when it comes to boosting your creative thinking?

One of the most critical components is how you view your talents internally. More specifically, your creative skills are largely determined by whether you approach the creative process with a fixed mindset or a growth mindset.

The basic idea is that when we use a fixed mindset we approach tasks as if our talents and abilities are fixed and unchanging. In a growth mindset, however, we believe that our abilities can be improved with effort and practice. Interestingly, we can easily nudge ourselves in one direction or another based on how we talk about and praise our efforts.

Here’s a brief summary in Dweck’s words:

“The whole self-esteem movement taught us erroneously that praising intelligence, talent, abilities would foster self-confidence, self-esteem, and everything great would follow. But we’ve found it backfires. People who are praised for talent now worry about doing the next thing, about taking on the hard task, and not looking talented, tarnishing that reputation for brilliance. So instead, they’ll stick to their comfort zone and get really defensive when they hit setbacks.

So what should we praise? The effort, the strategies, the doggedness and persistence, the grit people show, the resilience that they show in the face of obstacles, that bouncing back when things go wrong and knowing what to try next. So I think a huge part of promoting a growth mindset in the workplace is to convey those values of process, to give feedback, to reward people engaging in the process, and not just a successful outcome.”

—Carol Dweck

Embarrassment and creativity

How can we apply the growth mindset to creativity in practical terms? In my experience it comes down to one thing: the willingness to look bad when pursuing an activity.

As Dweck says, the growth mindset is focused more on the process than the outcome. This is easy to accept in theory, but very hard to stick to in practice. Most people don’t want to deal with the accompanying embarrassment or shame that is often required to learn a new skill.

The list of mistakes that you can never recover from is very short. I think most of us realize this on some level. We know that our lives will not be destroyed if that book we write doesn’t sell or if we get turned down by a potential date or if we forget someone’s name when we introduce them. It’s not necessarily what comes after the event that worries us. It’s the possibility of looking stupid, feeling humiliated, or dealing with embarrassment along the way that prevents us from getting started at all.

In order to fully embrace the growth mindset and enhance your creativity, you need to be willing to take action in the face of these feelings which so often deter us.

How to be more creative

Assuming that you are willing to do the hard work of facing your inner fears and working through failure, here are a few practical strategies for becoming more creative.

Constrain yourself. Carefully designed constraints are one of your best tools for sparking creative thinking. Dr. Seuss wrote his most famous book when he limited himself to 50 words. Soccer players develop more elaborate skill sets when they play on a smaller field. Designers can use a 3-inch by 5-inch canvas to create better large scale designs. The more we limit ourselves, the more resourceful we become.

Source: https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/252022

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5 Science-Backed Ways to Boost Your Creativity



How’s this for mad science: Within the next 15 years, people could elect to have their brains “zapped” to boost creativity in the workplace or classroom.

The process -- based on functional MRI studies -- is headed up by Adam Green, director of the Georgetown Laboratory for Relational Cognition and president-elect of the Society for the Neuroscience of Creativity. Green’s team looked at blood flow as a measure of brain cell activity when people were doing creative tasks. The process pointed them to one region of the brain in particular (the frontopolar cortex), so they decided to test whether stimulating the area could make creative thinking easier.

“We zap people’s brains in a targeted way based on these fMRI studies,” Green says. The researchers hope to make creative neuroscience more available to the general public down the line.

If you don’t have a brain-stimulation tool and are looking to think outside the box, good news: We’ve got research-backed tips for upping your creativity outside the lab. Here’s how.

1. Exercise your creativity like a muscle.

One surefire way to boost creative thinking: Try. No, really! “Creativity isn’t made out of a magical fairy part of the brain,” Green says. “It’s essentially using all the same tools that go into doing everything else … but applying those tools in creativity-specific ways.”

Research shows that when people try to think more creatively, they almost always can -- and those effects are both significant and repeatable. Green points to an “age-old adage” in neuroscience that “cells that fire together, wire together.” The idea is that the more you use your brain to do something, the stronger the connections between the cells involved become.But the key to this is dedicating more time in your day to actively thinking, which usually means unplugging from email, social media and more. That's the way to unlock “the digressive, slow, uncertain parts of ourselves that are key to our creativity," said Maggie Jackson, author of Distracted: Reclaiming Our Focus in a World of Lost Attention at The Atlantic's "Humanity + Tech" conference at MIT on Sept. 5, 2018.

Try implementing this idea in your everyday routine by avoiding bringing your phone to bed or to the bathroom. It's also a good idea to turn off notification settings for social media apps and email. Consider dedicating specific time in your day to thinking creatively -- and remind yourself to do so before any brainstorming session.

2. Change up your surroundings -- even minimally.

“The best trick I know isn’t very sexy,” Green says. Data support that creativity “nudges” can come from changes as small as a warmer cup of coffee or different colors in the room. Try switching out some of the items on your desk, orienting yourself differently or doing an overhaul of the bulletin board you sit facing. Know that those “nudges” don’t only pertain to your physical surroundings -- they’re also connected to your social setting.

Take advantage of opportunities to periodically work in different areas of the office, sit with new colleagues or invite people from different departments to lunch. Although you might not have much control over your work environment, making any possible adjustments could translate to a significant creativity boost.

“You want your physical and social surroundings to change,” says Robert Epstein, senior research psychologist at the American Institute for Behavioral Research and Technology. “If it’s the same old stuff on the walls and your desk -- and the same people you’re talking to -- that’s not necessarily good for creativity.”

3. Go out on a limb with what you learn.

When was the last time you learned something about medieval architecture? Ancient Egyptian history? Edible herbs in the wild? Now might be the time to take an in-person course or dive down an internet rabbit hole. Research suggests that broadening your knowledge by way of unfamiliar topics fosters new ideas and divergent thinking.

“New ideas come from interconnections among old ideas,” says Epstein, who uses an exercise called “the experts game” to demonstrate this. In it, a few people in a group with extensive knowledge of an obscure topic give five-minute lectures. Then, after learning about topics such as how shoes are constructed or the history of Rolex watches, everyone comes up with at least three ideas for new products or services.

“It is really mind-boggling what people will come up with, and that’s based on 15 minutes of instruction they just received,” Epstein says. You can DIY this approach by asking friends or colleagues in different industries about what they do -- or signing up for a course on something completely unfamiliar to you via sites such as Khan Academy, Coursera or Massive Open Online Courses (MOOC).

There’s a good chance it won’t be immediately apparent how what you’re learning could be useful in the future, but the pieces of knowledge you’re collecting should come together naturally when you’re faced with a certain challenge or brainstorming ideas later on. “The more interesting and diverse the pieces, the more interesting the interconnections,” Epstein says.

4. Pay attention to -- and record -- new ideas that come to you.

As people age, the number of creative ideas that come to them doesn’t necessarily slow, but they tend to capture fewer of them. When an idea -- or a small component of an idea -- comes to you, start making it a point to preserve it. Jot it down in a smartphone note, write it in a pocket-sized notebook you carry around or sketch it on a napkin. “Capture now, evaluate later,” says Epstein, who says his research has shown over and over again that capturing your new ideas is likely the most valuable aspect of boosting creativity.

5. Challenge yourself in new ways -- especially when it comes to overarching issues in your industry.

If you’ve ever tried an “escape room” -- a physical adventure game where players complete goals by solving puzzles -- your creativity probably spiked. That’s because challenges act as a catalyst for us to think creatively and come up with simultaneous ideas or solutions. For example, if you turn a knob and find out a door is locked, you begin to automatically brainstorm ideas and solutions -- jiggling the knob, pounding on the door, trying your luck with a bobby pin.

You can stimulate yourself similarly at work by setting a time limit for a task or taking on an “ultimate challenge” in your industry, Epstein says. Think about the overarching issues and questions in your field (How do I end world hunger in one week? How can I invent a phone that doesn’t require a charger?) and practice brainstorming open-ended solutions.

Source: https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/311870

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5 Ways to Unlock Your Entrepreneurial Creativity



Creativity is perhaps the most important attribute for successful entrepreneurs to possess and cultivate. After all, creativity powers innovation, establishes new perspectives and solutions to old problems, and empowers business leaders to craft a bold vision for their companies and pursue it vigilantly.

The funny thing about creativity is that the more you use it, the more you have. It’s not a finite resource that you run out of. Rather, it’s more like a muscle you need to exercise. And when you work that muscle regularly, it becomes stronger and more productive. Creativity is all about forming new, unique and useful connections, and the more you use, the more you have.

Yet it’s all too easy to slide into a creativity swamp of sorts, stagnant and sluggish. Creative power, as with any kind of intelligence or energy, will ebb and flow over time. When your creativity has apparently packed up and left on vacation, try the following exercises and approaches to light the fires and bring creative thinking back to your work.

1. Think analog.

Our modern devices can keep us entertained and diverted for hours. That sounds great until you realize that the very act of willingly handing over our undivided attention to those focus-pulling activities hampers creative thinking. Research shows that when we let ourselves engage in rote, routine tasks that require little executive function, the result is that our minds are free to wander and we end up increasing our creative thought processes.

Whenever you can, therefore, it’s a great idea to unplug from the electronics and go analog. Engage in household chores in a mindful manner. For example, doing dishes by hand, ironing, or anything that requires repetitive movements and little intellectual analysis can free your mind to take those flights of fancy that result in heightened creativity.

2. Use your hands.

Creative thinking takes place primarily in the brain. When you practice a skill that requires intense hand-eye coordination, it seems to help your neurological network stretch and re-energize.

Take up a visual art form, even if you think you’re terrible at it. Painting with watercolors, sketching, sculpting, pottery, knitting, even doodling -- anything that uses your hands helps you create new neural connections and triggers more creative leaps will help you regain your own powers of innovation.

3. Appreciate creativity in others.

Fill the creative well by taking in other people’s creative works. Julia Cameron, the well-known creativity expert and author of The Artist’s Way, suggests doing this weekly and calls it the “Artist’s Date.” Go see a movie at an indie arthouse cinema you’d otherwise never see. Take in an exhibit at a museum you’ve never been to. Read a novel if you usually read nonfiction business titles (or vice-versa). Take a sketchbook and pencils to a park and draw what you see.

Another way to put this tip into practice is to make a point to look for other people’s creative decision-making skills. The way someone handles a problematic coworker in the office, for example, or a new business partnership announcement in your local newspaper that you’d never have predicted can give you lots of creative food for thought.

4. Meditate regularly.

Whether you practice formal meditation or simply routinely carve out “executive time” for yourself to brainstorm, think and dream, it’s important for busy entrepreneurs to power down on a consistent basis if you want to keep your powers of creativity in optimal form.

However, it’s also crucial to note that not every type of meditation is necessarily equal when it comes to stoking creative fires. Studies suggest that “open-monitoring” meditation, where you simply sit quietly and observe without judging whatever is going on around and within you, is far more effective in triggering creative thinking.

5. Keep a notebook to increase creativity.

From Leonardo da Vinci to Joan Didion, creative geniuses throughout the centuries have discovered a singular truth: Writing in a journal regularly helps settle your mind and sort through options and ideas for your business, from new service or product lines to outlining your long-term vision for your business.

Maintaining a notebook or journal helps you increase creativity in a few ways. First and foremost, it begins to cement the habit of collecting and preserving your creative ideas. Writing down all your thoughts and ideas can help you preserve them for further rumination and iterative work.

Source: https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/332213

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Innovation & Creativity / Inspiring Creativity in Yourself
« on: June 27, 2019, 12:06:50 PM »
Inspiring Creativity in Yourself

Big Ideas Summary

In our last feature article we talked about the powerful applications of mindfulness, and its role in developing good leadership traits among entrepreneurs. Similarly, mindfulness can be used to inspire and develop your own brand of creativity through self-awareness, understanding, and self-acceptance.

This month we are pleased to present our featured topic on how to inspire creativity in yourself. Here you can find new avenues to invigorate and develop your creative drive through tips and activities found in the following articles, websites, apps, and twitter feeds to use in your everyday life. After all, a healthy state of creativity is the key towards affecting positive social change in an innovative and engaging way!

At some point in everyone’s life they will have to become re-inspired, and reconnect with what truly drives and motivates them. People grow, interests change, and if you are a social innovator, maintaining your creative edge will help to keep your social venture thriving. The ability to be mindful can come in handy when you find yourself lacking inspiration and motivation. Think about these three suggestions the next time you find yourself in need of some creative inspiration:

1. Discover YOU. As your interests and ideas change over time, it is important to always be in a constant state of learning and discovery about who you are and what you want in life. Discover and question your own brand of creativity by trying new activities, contemplating divergent ideas, meeting new people, and making time for yourself every day. When you find yourself in a comfortable rut, sometimes experiencing a little discomfort helps to invigorate and motivate you to take action towards a new and exciting path. Check out the following infographics for some great tips on how to inspire creativity:

Check out this piece fromLifehack to discover 40 different ways to stay creative.

Buzzfeed Life features a series of life-changing diagrams that cover a wide array of interests.

An Ethical Island features this infographic on how to inspire innovation in your life.

2. Take action NOW. As the famous psychoanalyst Carl Jung once said, "You are what you do, not what you say you’ll do". Those who truly seek change, will do whatever it takes. Find out what it takes, and go do it! You don’t have to get it right the first time, or second. You don’t even have to finish right away. What’s important is that you start. Feeling insecure? Talk to like-minded people to gain support or enlist a trusted mentor to help your confidence and get advice. Feeling overwhelmed? Carry a pen and notebook with you to record thoughts anywhere and anytime you feel inspired. Above all, don’t be afraid of where this may take you, as there is always the opportunity to learn something new.

3. Make sure it’s FUN! If you are going to set out to become inspired, it’s definitely going to be more challenging if you don’t plan to have fun along the way. Part of re-discovering what motivates you, is doing the things that you are passionate about. Spending time doing the things you enjoy doesn’t have to be frivolous- hobbies can strengthen skills and create new opportunities for learning and adventure. It’s up to you to take the plunge!

Source: https://topics.tigweb.org/creativity

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