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The 2024 Nobel Prize in Economics Goes To…..
The Nobel in Econ (a/k/a The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel) for 2024 was awarded a few days ago to Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson of MIT and to James Robinson of the University of Chicago. Here at Adam Smith, Esq., we try to... read more +Five Management Styles: Lessons from Silicon Valley
On a cross-country flight this week, I read most of Smarter Faster Better, by Charles Duhigg, currently on the NYT's top 10 hardcover/nonfiction list of best-selling books. It's fair to characterize the reviews it's gotten as "mixed," and the more critical ones find...
Lessons from GE: Depth not Breadth
Though none of us can sanely claim to know what the future holds (I leave that to the fanatics), it's abdicating your responsibility as a leader not to think about it. How do you go about that? In the most general terms: Creatively, deeply, and with a view to watching...
Lateral Partner Recruiting: Still Delusional?
When an especially provocative and ingenious piece is published analyzing a noteworthy aspect of the sea BigLaw swims in, one may feel an obligation to one's readers to weigh in on the conversation. Particularly when the original piece was published under one's own...
Understanding the Lateral Hiring Frenzy
A few years back, as exceptionally studious and faithful readers might conceivably recall, I wrote two pieces on the lateral hiring frenzy, Our Arms' Race and Our Arms'Race (2), which took an almost across-the-board stand against lateral partner hiring. I followed...
How the Mighty Fall: Part V
We now come to our fifth and final installment: Capitulation to Irrelevance or Death. "Irrelevance" is a subtle touch. It's a fair bet that not too many readers of Adam Smith, Esq. see themselves as, or would be content to be, spending their working hours at an...