Executive Style

Education

How to be happy at a rotten job

Happy and sad.

Amanda Berlin, Forbes.com In an ideal world, we'd all have full control of our professional destinies and be able to choose the work life we wanted.

Expat life losing perks

Hong Kong

For most financial market professionals in Hong Kong and other hubs across Asia, the days of extravagant expatriate life have ended. For now at least.

The next billionaire boom

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Duncan Greenberg and Tatiana Serafin, Forbes.com When the recession ends, a new crop of billionaires will be unleashed.

Boring bosses not a bad thing

Boss

David Brooks Good CEOs are often not the most exciting people to be around. But is that a bad thing?

Creep? Probably a manager

Adele Horin Men who are sympathetic, kind, co-operative and warm are unlikely to end up as bosses.

Let innovators through

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Christopher Joyce Productivity in Australia is being smothered.

The best of left and right

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Tim Colebatch If we want a system that is world's best, we need to learn from the world's best- like Denmark.

What workers want

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Joan-Maree Hargreaves A shortage of talent means employees can make more demands of employers.

Social networking sites of the wealthy

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Nicola Ruiz, Forbes.com Execs and other affluent types now have their own space.

What's in store...

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Karl Quinn Bernie Brookes has bet his life savings that he can fix Myer...but is it too late for this Melbourne icon?

The thirst for revenge

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After a forced exit from your job, well-channelled anger could be your greatest asset, writes Jim Bright.

Toastmasters leads the way

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Yvonne Nicolas Bernard Marmion is one of 235,000 Toastmasters members from 11,700 clubs in 92 countries.

The world's richest dropouts

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Andrew Farrell, Forbes.com For these billionaires, the road to wealth didn't include finishing school.

Expat Tales

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Paul Edwards Samantha Honey has introduced feng shui to Qatar.

Better late than never

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Melinda Ham You can learn to return to the workforce in style.

Executives cycle for sick kids

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Catherine Chisholm Swapping business suits for cycling lycra is one way some executives are helping sick children.

The Wunderkind

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Kevin Rudd's new chief of staff wields more power and influence than much older politicians.

The billionaire universities

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Andrew Farrell, Forbes.com Some schools make more money makers than others. These make the most.

Heeding Keynes' real message

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Josep E. Stiglitz Keynes may be back but his doctrine is open to abuse, writes Joseph E. Stiglitz.

Faking it

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Klaus Kneale, Forbes.com Faking experience to get the job is more common than you might think.