• Skip to main content

Search

Just another WordPress site

Leading democratic polls

Warren Leads an Onslaught of Attacks, Zeroing In on Bloomberg

February 20, 2020 by www.nytimes.com Leave a Comment

LAS VEGAS — The Democratic presidential candidates turned on one another in scorching and personal terms in a debate on Wednesday night, with two of the leading candidates, Senator Bernie Sanders and Michael R. Bloomberg , forced onto the defensive repeatedly throughout the evening.

In his first appearance in a presidential debate, Mr. Bloomberg, the former mayor of New York City, struggled from the start to address his past support for stop-and-frisk policing and the allegations he has faced over the years of crude and disrespectful behavior toward women. Time and again, Mr. Bloomberg had obvious difficulty countering criticism that could threaten him in a Democratic Party that counts women and African-Americans among its most important constituencies.

Two candidates who have shied away from direct conflict in past debates, Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., mounted something of a tag-team onslaught against Mr. Bloomberg, several times leaving him visibly irked and straining to respond.

From the first seconds, when Mr. Sanders used the initial question to attack what he called Mr. Bloomberg’s “outrageous” policing record, it was clear that this debate would be far more heated than any of the previous forums. The unrelenting attacks reflected the urgency of the moment, as Mr. Sanders gains strength and those hoping to slow his candidacy are increasingly crowded out by Mr. Bloomberg and his unprecedented spending spree.

Ms. Warren landed the most stinging blows against Mr. Bloomberg throughout the debate, starting with an opening broadside that likened him to the figure most reviled among Democrats: President Trump.

“I’d like to talk about who we’re running against: a billionaire who calls women fat broads and horse-faced lesbians,” Ms. Warren said. “And no, I’m not talking about Donald Trump. I’m talking about Mayor Bloomberg.”

It was not only Mr. Sanders and Mr. Bloomberg who were subjected to withering criticism: Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and former Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Ind., also engaged in a bitter and lengthy colloquy about foreign policy and their qualifications for the presidency, culminating in a sharp exchange in which Ms. Klobuchar asked Mr. Buttigieg if he was calling her “dumb.”

There was little in the debate to suggest that Mr. Sanders, the national front-runner and the favorite to win Nevada’s caucuses on Saturday, had been knocked off balance, and the pile-on against Mr. Bloomberg had the potential to work in Mr. Sanders’s favor by keeping the focus of hostilities elsewhere.

The Democrats’ Primary Calendar

Upending decades of political tradition, members of the Democratic National Committee have voted to approve a sweeping overhaul of the party’s primary process.

  • Demoting Iowa : Democrats are moving to reorder the primaries by making South Carolina — instead of Iowa — the first nominating state, followed by Nevada and New Hampshire, Georgia and then Michigan.
  • A New Chessboard : President Biden’s push to abandon Iowa for younger, racially diverse states is likely to reward candidates who connect with the party’s most loyal voters .
  • Obstacles to the Plan : Reshuffling the early-state order could run into logistical issues, especially in Georgia and New Hampshire .
  • An Existential Crisis: The push to dethrone Iowa has inspired a rush of wistful memories and soul-searching among Democrats there.

But Mr. Sanders, too, was pressed to address some of the persistent questions about his candidacy, including whether he would release a fuller version of his medical records and why his candidacy appears to inspire uniquely vitriolic behavior by some of his supporters on the internet. Mr. Sanders, Vermont’s junior senator, insisted that nearly all of his online fans were good and decent people, but said he would “disown those people” who behave in deplorable ways.

Nobody acted with more urgency than Ms. Warren, who finished a distant fourth in New Hampshire after doing little to stand out in the debate there. She repeatedly inserted herself into main currents of the conversation. The challenge for her, though, is that her newfound vigor came after tens of thousands of Nevadans had already cast their ballots in early voting.

It was Ms. Warren who initiated the exchange that may have damaged Mr. Bloomberg the most when she repeatedly demanded to know whether he would be willing to release some of the former female employees at his news media organization from the nondisclosure agreements they had signed. He declined to do so, calling the agreements “consensual,” and minimized the underlying complaints by suggesting that the women merely “didn’t like a joke I told.”

After pressing Mr. Bloomberg and leaving him flustered, but unable to coax him into releasing the women she said he had “muzzled,” Ms. Warren then broadened her attack.

“We are not going to beat Donald Trump with a man who has who-knows-how-many nondisclosure agreements and the drip, drip, drip of stories of women saying they have been harassed and discriminated against,” she said.

Before Mr. Bloomberg could even try to defend himself, Mr. Biden, who has seen the former New York mayor claim some of his support, gladly stepped in. “All the mayor has to say is, You are released from the N.D.A., period,” Mr. Biden said, his voice rising.

In what became, for both of them, their most energetic debate in months, Mr. Biden and Ms. Warren teamed up to confront Mr. Bloomberg about his record on policing, challenging his expressions of contrition about his years of strong support for invasive searches that disproportionately targeted black and Hispanic men. The unlikely duo wielded the same combination of indignation and inquisition that framed their argument about sexual harassment.

“It’s not whether he apologized or not, it’s the policy,” Mr. Biden said, accusing Mr. Bloomberg of discounting concerns raised by the Obama administration.

As in most of the tough exchanges of the night, Mr. Bloomberg defended himself only up to a point: He explained that he was focused on protecting New Yorkers’ “right to live,” and in the process embraced a policing strategy he later came to regret. Looking back on his time as mayor, Mr. Bloomberg said, “the one thing I’m really worried about, embarrassed about, was how it turned out with stop and frisk.”

Ms. Warren jumped in to dissect that answer. “This isn’t about how it turned out,” she said. “This is about what it was designed to do, to begin with. It targeted communities of color.”

Mr. Bloomberg has risen in the polls thanks to spending more than $400 million in advertising, nearly all of it on next month’s Super Tuesday contests, but he had largely avoided engaging with voters, let alone his Democratic rivals. His decision to participate in the debate before those March 3 states was a gamble — and one his own campaign all but conceded they didn’t win.

They acknowledged his lackluster performance, at least in the first hour of the two-hour forum, even as they boasted about how all of the attacks on him demonstrated the threat he poses. “It took him just 45 minutes in his first debate in 10 years to get his legs on the stage,” Kevin Sheekey, Mr. Bloomberg’s campaign manager, said in a statement after the debate.

If Mr. Sanders appeared relatively unbruised Wednesday night, it was not clear that he did anything to put to rest the persistent reservations in the party about his prospects in a contest against Mr. Trump. He dismissed a moderator’s question about polling that found Americans deeply wary of socialism as a political label, noting that the same polling found him leading Mr. Trump in a general election.

Mr. Buttigieg and Mr. Bloomberg picked away at Mr. Sanders, with Mr. Bloomberg declaring that he would be a surefire loser in the general election and Mr. Buttigieg warning that it would be dangerous to nominate someone who “wants to burn the house down.”

After intraparty politesse prevailed in the first eight debates, when the harshest remarks onstage were usually reserved for Mr. Trump, the evident contempt some of these six candidates have for one another rang out like a jackpot in a slot machine on Wednesday. At no time was that more clear than when Ms. Klobuchar, who split the support of many moderate voters in New Hampshire with Mr. Buttigieg, was reminded by the former South Bend mayor that in a recent interview she had been unable to name the president of Mexico.

“You’re staking your candidacy on Washington experience,” Mr. Buttigieg said, pointing out that all of the committees she serves on involve Mexico.

“Are you trying to say I’m dumb — are you mocking me, Pete?” Ms. Klobuchar shot back, clearly stung. She then noted she had won all of her campaigns, while he had lost his sole statewide bid “by over 20 points.”

Later, Ms. Klobuchar said Mr. Buttigieg had simply “memorized a bunch of talking points” and had never been “in the arena.”

Both flashed sharp irritation, as Mr. Buttigieg criticized Ms. Klobuchar’s support for certain Trump appointees and Ms. Klobuchar described his political accomplishments as minimal.

“You don’t have to be in Washington to matter,” Mr. Buttigieg said, pointing to his tenure in the struggling city he sought to revive.

At one point, Ms. Klobuchar answered Mr. Buttigieg with blunt sarcasm: “I wish everyone was as perfect as you, Pete,” she said.

Yet the debate underscored the challenge facing candidates like Mr. Buttigieg and Ms. Klobuchar, who are hoping to ride a sense of momentum from Iowa and New Hampshire into stronger finishes elsewhere. But the two rivals spent much of the evening arguing with each other, and both were repeatedly upstaged by clashes involving the candidates better known at the national level.

Both were at risk of emerging from the debate weaker than they entered it, and at the end of the evening they had not clearly strengthened their claims to leadership of moderate forces in the Democratic coalition.

Just as contentious were the exchanges between Mr. Bloomberg, the proud billionaire, and Mr. Sanders, the democratic socialist who has said billionaires should not exist. Mr. Sanders, who had a heart attack in the fall, answered a question about his personal health records by noting that Mr. Bloomberg has “two stents as well,” prompting Mr. Bloomberg to say that his had been inserted two decades ago.

And after Mr. Bloomberg said he made no apologies for his wealth because he had worked hard for his money, Mr. Sanders interjected: “Maybe your workers played some role in that as well.”

Mr. Bloomberg eventually confronted Mr. Sanders, saying it was “ridiculous” to suggest the country would “throw out capitalism.”

Turning even more personal, Mr. Bloomberg said, “What a wonderful country we have — the best known socialist in the country happens to be a millionaire with three houses.”

After listing his residences, Mr. Sanders turned back to Mr. Bloomberg and asked: “Which tax haven do you call home?”

The sparring was hardly unanticipated. The rivalry between Mr. Sanders and Mr. Bloomberg has turned harshly personal this week, as their campaigns escalated a feud that both see as serving their political interests. On the morning of the debate, aides to Mr. Bloomberg and Mr. Sanders were trading slashing criticism about the health of the two men , who are both 78 years old, and transparency about their medical histories.

And in the days leading up to the debate, a number of the candidates denounced the personal attacks that Sanders supporters aimed at the female leaders of the influential union of Las Vegas’s casino employees, the culinary workers’ union, criticism that arose again at Wednesday’s debate.

If the other contenders are not able to slow Mr. Sanders in Nevada, he may gain enough momentum going into the Super Tuesday contests on March 3, when 15 states and territories will vote, to eventually claim the nomination. But if he falters here, it could throw the race open and create an opportunity for one or more of his rivals to assert themselves.

Mr. Sanders’s prominence in the race even drew a broadside from Ms. Warren, who has largely avoided tangling with him since entering the race.

“His campaign relentlessly attacks everyone,” she said, alluding to his supporters’ scorn for those who do not support “Medicare for all.” And then Ms. Warren made a reference to recent comments by Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York , who said that Mr. Sanders might not be able to initially pass single-payer insurance. “His own advisers say, ‘Eh, probably won’t happen, anyways,’” she said.

Mr. Sanders, though, did not return fire. And at the end of the evening, it was clear he had a larger goal in mind: claiming the Democratic nomination, even if he has accrued a plurality, but not a majority of delegates, by the end of the primary season.

“I think that the will of the people should prevail, yes,” he said. “The person who has the most votes should become the nominee.”

Filed Under: U.S. Presidential debates;Democratic debates;2020 debates, Democrats, 2020 Election, Joe Biden, Mike Bloomberg, Pete Buttigieg, Amy Klobuchar, Bernard Sanders;Bernie..., zero day attacks, add leading zeros in sql, zero days attack, zero day attack

Ruling party leads revamped Kazakhstan election, exit poll

March 20, 2023 by www.euronews.com Leave a Comment

Kazakhstan’s ruling party is leading its national election, according to an exit poll.

On Sunday, Kazakhs voted for independent candidates in legislative elections, seen as a timid democratic opening in the authoritarian-inclined Central Asian country.

Turnout was around 54%, according to the Electoral Commission.

The results are expected on Monday.

According to an exit poll broadcast on state television, the ruling Amanat party is leading with 53% of the vote, though some concerns have been raised about the validity of the election.

Five to six parties are expected to enter parliament, compared to three currently.

This election saw people voting for a new system, with 69 deputies – out of the 98 in the Majilis (Parliament) – now elected by proportional representation.

Candidates not affiliated with any party could put themselves forward for the first time since 2004.

The threshold for entering the Majilis was lowered to 5% and a quota for 30% of women, young people and individuals with disabilities was also introduced.

These changes have brought a modicum of democracy into Kazakhstan’s political system, following deadly riots in January 2022 fuelled by rising dissatisfaction with the government and endemic poverty.

238 people were killed in the repression of unrest, according to officials.

  • McDonald’s outlets in Kazakhstan close due to supply issues

However, issues have been flagged about the genuineness of reforms, with several opposition parties and independent candidates banned.

“The electoral system has changed and gives the impression of choice. But in reality, the president and his administration keep the vote count in their hands,” political scientist Dimach Aljanov told AFP.

“In an authoritarian country, elections are made to keep power, not to replace it,” he continued.

Election observers have reportedly been shut out of vote counting, plus videos of ballot box stuffing have surfaced on social media.

Euronews cannot independently verify these claims.

The election is a result of a drive to reform the constitution by the President of Kazakhstan Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, who took over in 2019.

The 69-year-old leader of the resource-rich country has shown a desire to “modernise” his country, a former Soviet Republic straddling Russia and China.

The corruption and yawning inequality – made worse by recent inflation – which fuelled unrest in 2022 has not gone away.

“As independent candidates are admitted, I think the electoral system is changing for the better,” said Irina Rechetnik, a nurse, while Ernest Serikov, an 81-year-old retired professor and supporter of the president, called the elections “experimental”.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Central Asia, Kazakhstan, Kazahstan protests, news_news, how accurate are exit polls, britain exit polls, exit polls 2017, brexit exit polls, exit poll gujarat, exit poll gujarat 2017, exit poll karnataka 2018, exit poll tripura, exit poll 2017, exit poll karnataka

Chris Rock Calls Democrats ‘Stupid’ for Wanting to Arrest Trump: ‘Only Going to Make Him More Popular’

March 20, 2023 by www.breitbart.com Leave a Comment

Comedian Chris Rock reportedly called Democrat politicians “stupid” for wanting to arrest former President Donald Trump, saying it is “only going to make him more popular.”

In an appearance Sunday at the Kennedy Center to honor Adam Sandler with the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor,  Chris Rock appeared to address Democrat lawmakers in the audience, including former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA).

”Are you guys really going to arrest Trump?” Rock said, according to a report from The Daily Mail. “Do you know this is only going to make him more popular? It’s like arresting Tupac.”

Rock added: “He’s just gonna sell more records. Are you stupid?”

The comedian also joked about allegations Trump paid porn star Stormy Daniels hush money.

“That’s romantic,” Rock reportedly said. “We’ve all been cheated on. Don’t you wish that the person that cheated on you paid off somebody so you wouldn’t find out?”

The Daily Mail report noted that several Biden administration officials were in the Kennedy Center crowd, though not President Biden himself.

The Adam Sandler event is set to air on CNN on Sunday.

As Breitbart News reported , conservatives are rallying behind Trump after the former president said he expects to be arrested on Tuesday based on “illegal leaks” from the Manhattan district attorney’s office.

Democrat Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, who is leading the investigation, has been supported by far-left, anti-Trump billionaire George Soros. Many Republican leaders have blasted the investigation as politically motivated given that Trump continues to dominate in primary polls for the 2024 presidential election.

Follow David Ng on Twitter @HeyItsDavidNg . Have a tip? Contact me at [email protected]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Chris Rock, Donald Trump, Kennedy Center, Entertainment, blame game chris rock lyrics, blame game chris rock part, blame game chris rock skit, blame game chris rock youtube, blame game ft chris rock, blame game kanye chris rock, blame game kanye west chris rock, blame game skit chris rock, david moskowitz and chris rock, chris rock tambourine

This Is Not Great News for Donald Trump

March 20, 2023 by www.theatlantic.com Leave a Comment

Prominent Republicans disagree about a lot these days, but on one point they have found consensus: Getting charged with a crime would be great news for Donald Trump.

After the former president predicted that he will be arrested in Manhattan tomorrow—a forecast that seems questionable, though an indictment from Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg does seem to be imminent—conventional wisdom quickly developed on the right that Trump would be the big winner.

“ The prosecutor in New York has done more to help Donald Trump get elected president than any single person in America today,” Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said . “Mr. Bragg, you have helped Donald Trump, amazing.”

At National Review , Rich Lowry announced, “It’s going to be very bad for the country and good politically—at least in the short term and perhaps for the duration—for Donald J. Trump.” (Lowry didn’t bother to offer any basis for this claim .)

The former Trump spokesperson Taylor Budowich, now running a pro-Trump super PAC called MAGA Inc., said in a statement that an indictment “will not only serve to coalesce President Trump’s support, but it will become the single largest in-kind contribution to a federal campaign in political history.”

Other Republican contenders for president didn’t make predictions quite so firm, but they either hastened to criticize Bragg or kept their mouth shut, both indications that they see this as a moment of strength for Trump, rather than a good opening to bury their own daggers in a weakened rival’s back.

The immediate spin, backed by so little actual argument, is a bit dizzying and bit déjà vu. Back in the 2008 presidential campaign, when the GOP nominee, John McCain, forgot how many houses he owned, the pundit Mark Halperin became infamous for a prediction : “My hunch is this is going to end up being one of the worst moments in the entire campaign for one of the candidates, but it’s Barack Obama.”

That became a notoriously bad take, but Halperin is unchastened. “ You are about to increase the odds that Donald Trump will win another four years in the White House ,” he wrote in italics on his Substack . “ You could in fact be increasing his chances of winning dramatically, maybe even decisively. ”

But don’t dismiss Halperin’s prediction because he’s a washed-up source of conventional wisdom who’s been badly wrong in the past. Dismiss it because it makes so little sense in light of what we know now. Politics is contingent and volatile, which means that any prediction about what will happen is worth the pixels it’s printed on. The future here is especially hard to guess because nothing really like it has ever happened. As the Republican pollster Whit Ayres dryly told Politico , “I have never studied the indictment of a former president and leading presidential candidate, … and I’ve never done any polling on the indictment of a former president and leading presidential candidate.”

But the assumption that Trump will profit seems to spring from hubris (among his allies) and self-protective fear (on the part of his critics and rivals). They are operating on a shared, obsolete conclusion that nothing can ever harm the former president. For a long time, this made sense. Despite a series of scandals that would have ended the career, much less the candidacy, of any other politician, Trump won the 2016 presidential election and then embarked on an even more scandal-ridden administration. Yet he seemed to chug away, indifferent to bad press. A narrative of Trumpian invincibility developed as an antidote to callow, wish-casting predictions of walls closing in on Trump .

Caution is understandable, but we know enough now to realize that although Trump is exceptionally resilient, he’s also not invulnerable. In 2018, after he decided to frame the midterm elections as a referendum on him personally, Democrats won big in House and governor elections. In 2020, the House impeached him; when the Senate did not vote to convict, some observers took this as proof that he couldn’t be stopped. But it did damage Trump, and later that year, he lost his reelection bid narrowly but decisively, losing the popular vote for the second time. After his extended attempt to overturn the 2020 election, voters once again punished candidates flying his banner and rallying around his causes in the 2022 midterms.

What charges against Trump are certain to do is inflame his most devoted supporters. They will be furious that anyone would dare try to hold Trump accountable, view it as an act of political persecution, and make a great deal of noise about it. But no one should mistake the vociferousness of this group for size. They’ve always been noisy. They’ve always been a minority: As I wrote in November, we now have multiple demonstrations that an anti-MAGA majority exists among American voters . And now, with the country heading into the 2024 election cycle, Trump alternatives are gaining more traction—most significantly, Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida.

Although Bragg has not announced exactly what charges he might bring against Trump, a consensus has developed among legal analysts that the Manhattan case is the weakest and strangest of the several criminal investigations into Trump . The case involves whether Trump attempted to conceal a $130,000 payoff to Stormy Daniels, an adult-film actor who alleges that Trump had sex with her in 2006. In 2016, the then–Trump fixer Michael Cohen arranged a payment to Daniels in exchange for keeping the story private. Trump then reimbursed Cohen in 2017. Prosecutors will probably seek to prove that Trump and Cohen falsified business records to hide a violation of campaign-finance law. (Trump denies the affair and any wrongdoing.)

A case would appear to hinge on some tenuous legal theories, and Trump might well beat the rap. But any suggestion that he’s delighted by this fight is belied not only by his irate response but by common sense. Trump doesn’t want to discuss the underlying facts of this case—there’s a reason, after all, that Cohen paid Daniels six figures to buy her silence in the first place. Beyond that, several other probes—which look from the outside to be more perilous to Trump—are still on deck, regardless of the outcome in Manhattan.

“Look, at the end, being indicted never helps anybody,” former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, a lonely dissident from the GOP consensus, said on ABC News yesterday . Trump could be the Republican nominee in 2024, or even win the White House back, but if so, it will probably be despite any criminal case against him, not because of it.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Ideas, former Trump spokesperson Taylor Budowich, Donald Trump, former president, Prominent Republicans, Manhattan case, presidential election, ..., recent donald trump news, todays donald trump news, news on donald trump today, donald trump most recent news, latest donald trump news today, today donald trump news, update donald trump news, president donald trump news, breaking donald trump news, president donald trump latest news

How To Ensure Your Business Wins, No Matter What 2023 Throws at It

March 20, 2023 by www.newsweek.com Leave a Comment

With 2023 now well underway, business leaders are feeling uneasy. 2022 was a turbulent ride, beginning with a spike of hope that the pandemic was ending, only to crash into the conflict in Ukraine and its domino effects of skyrocketing fuel prices and supply chain disruption. As the year continued, we faced economic unease and the evolution of the “great resignation” into “quiet quitting,” and now a wave of layoffs that have amplified uncertainty across the business universe.

After so much chaos, it’s hard to predict what the rest of 2023 will bring. The IMF forecasts a recession for approximately a third of the global economy this year, cutting its global GDP prediction to 2.7%. Economists expect that business activity will be dragged down by a number of factors, with 90% pointing at weak demand, 87% at increased borrowing, and over 60% at higher input costs, while others add concerns about talent shortages and regulatory and policy uncertainty.

But strong business leaders know that individual companies can thrive in any environment; what matters is planning ahead , adopting the right attitudes , and closing on a smart strategy.

“The long-term sustainability of a business has never been so dependent on these multidimensional factors,” says Fernando Honorato Barbosa , Chief Economist at Banco Bradesco, adding that “Forging resilience, integration and financial robustness with an eye on the people and nature will be mandatory.”

Here’s what today’s executives need to know about leading a successful business in 2023 and beyond.

Cut Costs Only After Measuring Twice

CFOs are under new pressure to check their numbers and look for ways to cut costs across the organization. But these cuts must be carefully thought-out. In a recession, success depends on bringing down expenses without restricting your business so much that you stifle innovation and hobble your ability to drive revenue.

Gartner analysts highlight the importance of aggressively seeking out cost savings while maintaining — and sometimes accelerating — investments in digital adoption and business development.

Adam Feigenbaum, who served as Chief Customer Officer at iCIMS during the 2008 crisis, observes that “It was our strategic precision on cutting spending intelligently that allowed us not only to manage financial targets, but also to increase certain investments that would eventually establish iCIMS as the market leader in our space.”

Your tech stack is often a good place to begin when trimming expenditures. Lots of companies have a “shadow IT” of duplicate licenses, unapproved SaaS tools, and unnecessary tech soaking up funds. As employees increasingly return to the office, you might discover an expanded cloud toolset that was necessary for a majority-remote workforce, but isn’t needed anymore.

Improve Your Ability to Predict Revenue

Business technology has moved on enormously during the last few years. Tools that use artificial intelligence have mushroomed, and costs are dropping, trends that have effectively democratized revenue ops and optimization initiatives.

Automated processes reduce manual errors and free employees for revenue-driving work, while analytics can reveal hidden money pits, opportunities that are going overlooked, and risks you were about to walk into blind. But with tighter budgets in 2023, CIOs and CROs need to prove the ROI of their choices.

Make sure that all your IT investments have a meaningful business impact, and seek out solutions that drive the business forward. One valuable functionality is predicting revenue more accurately. In a recent DealHub poll, over two-thirds of sales leaders named “improving revenue predictability” as their top priority for 2023.

“Not only does revenue predictability offer business security, but it takes advantage of scalability, meaning that businesses can grow easily with the model in place and expand as needed,” asserts DealHub’s Nicole Epstein.

Tread Carefully with Change Management

In our altered business climate, most businesses genuinely need new tools and different ways of collaborating. You might be bringing employees back from remote work, walking the tightrope of hybrid work patterns, and/or shaking things up with automation to increase efficiency.

But pursue these changes with care, because your employees are exhausted. Managing change fatigue is one of Gartner’s top HR priorities for 2023 , with 45% of HR leaders acknowledging that employees are exhausted, and workers willing to change their behaviors to enable organizational change dropping from 74% in 2016 to 38% in 2022.

HR leaders need to be hyper-aware of the toll of three years of riding change and adapting to new policies.

“HR leaders must help employees to navigate change and mitigate the impact that change may have on their work and, more importantly, their well-being,” says Gartner’s Jordan Turner.

Plan for Growth

Even during a recession, it’s vital to maintain a growth mindset. Ira Kalish, Chief Global Economist at Deloitte, emphasizes this, saying , “In my work, executives and many clients ask how they should prepare for a recession. My answer is that they ought to prepare for recovery.”

“A recession might last nine months,” he continues, “but a recovery could last nine years. Many companies have strong balance sheets and can withstand a recession. Yet, when the recovery ultimately comes, they will need sufficient labour and technology to be competitive.”

Planning for growth might encompass seeking out new markets and product lines. The circumstances that are causing you to face new business challenges are also rippling through society and could make your product relevant to a new audience.

Preparing for recovery is a concept that crosses departments. For example, marketing and sales investment should remain strong to retain customers for the day their budgets rise again and sales pick up. HR leaders should consider personalized employee training to fill the skill gaps of tomorrow. Business development executives should be looking for new opportunities and keeping track of trends that are still on the distant horizon.

Win No Matter What 2023 Brings

There’s no way to ignore the likelihood that 2023 will be a rough year, but business leaders who prepare carefully will be able to succeed — and lay the foundations for even more success in the long term.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Experts, NEF, biz dev, Leadership, Growth, france celebrates fifa win by throwing bra, shaky business how handshakes win negotiations, rolin ensured business, boomerang doesn't matter how you throw me, business roundtable why reading matters, ensuring business continuity, how to win the business strategy game, winning the business strategy game

Copyright © 2023 Search. Power by Wordpress.
Home - About Us - Contact Us - Disclaimers - DMCA - Privacy Policy - Submit your story