home.social

#succeed — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #succeed, aggregated by home.social.

  1. European defense companies must collaborate to succeed

    misryoum.com/us/europe-news/eu

    European defense companies must take a stronger lead on collaborating to help the continent become independent of the U.S. security umbrella, Leonardo's CEO told US News Hub MISRYOUM.Speaking with US News Hub MISRYOUM's "Squawk Box Europe" on Wednesday after Leonardo's...

    #European #defense #companies #must #collaborate #succeed #US_News_Hub #misryoum_com

  2. Empathy is a critical skill leaders need to have to succeed with building and sustaining relationships with clients/customers and employees. It isn't a nice to have but a must have. #empathy #relationships #skill #critical #succeed

  3. Empathy is a critical skill leaders need to have to succeed with building and sustaining relationships with clients/customers and employees. It isn't a nice to have but a must have. #empathy #relationships #skill #critical #succeed

  4. Empathy is a critical skill leaders need to have to succeed with building and sustaining relationships with clients/customers and employees. It isn't a nice to have but a must have. #empathy #relationships #skill #critical #succeed

  5. What economic experts think about Trump’s choice of Kevin Warsh for Fed chair – PBS News

    USA-FED / Former U.S. Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh speaks during a monetary policy conference at Stanford University…

    By — Hannah Grabenstein

    Detailed view of the US Federal Reserve System seal on currency with yellow digital numbers. WP.

    What economic experts think about Trump’s choice of Kevin Warsh for Fed chair

    Economy Updated on Jan 30, 2026 7:29 PM EST — Published on Jan 30, 2026 5:17 PM EST

    President Donald Trump announced Friday that he would nominate Kevin Warsh to be the next chair of the Federal Reserve, an independent agency that has been under pressure from the president to lower interest rates for the last year.

    If confirmed, Warsh would succeed Fed Chair Jerome Powell — a previous Trump nominee who has incurred the president’s ire for not heeding his demands — when Powell’s term expires in May.

    Educate your inbox, Subscribe to Here’s the Deal, our politics newsletter for analysis you won’t find anywhere else. Enter your email address

    Warsh served on the Fed Board of Governors from 2006 through 2011, where he had an opportunity to help shape the U.S. economy during one of its greatest periods of turmoil in recent history. Now a fellow at the Hoover Institution, a conservative think tank, and a lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, he also worked as an economic advisor to President George W. Bush.

    Experts appear to view Warsh’s nomination with “cautious relief,” said Mark Gertler, a professor of economics at New York University.

    Here are three things to know about Warsh and how he might influence the Fed as the agency’s new head.

    1. Warsh is a lawyer, not an economist

    Like Powell, Warsh has a J.D., not a Ph.D. in economics. Powell was the first Federal Reserve chair in 30 years to not have a doctorate in economics.

    “The Fed’s culture is Ph.D. economists on top,” said Aaron Klein, a senior fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution.

    “I think Powell was pretty deferential to what the professional staff economists’ view was,” he added.

    But Warsh may have a different approach, said Klein, who first met him when Warsh was working at the National Economic Council at the White House. Lawyers view the world through a different cultural lens than macroeconomists do, he said.

    WATCH: Supreme Court hears case on Trump’s attempt to control Federal Reserve

    “The question is: Is Kevin going to shake up the culture of the Fed staff? Or is he going to show deference to the Fed’s Ph.D. economists who are accustomed to running the show?” Klein said.

    That could influence his policy decisions, too, Gertler said. Warsh isn’t an economist and doesn’t speak — or necessarily reason — like one, he added.

    “The reason I’m not too worried is Powell was not an economist either, but Powell learned over time. In fact, I think (he) learned pretty well,” Gertler said. “I’m hopeful that the same will be true with Warsh — that is, put him in there with a bunch of economists and they will help sharpen his thinking.”

    2. In many ways, Warsh is a conservative pick

    While not a macroeconomist by education, Warsh has a relatively traditional background for a Fed chair nominee, experts said.

    He’s an academic with experience in the executive branch, as well as on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, and is knowledgeable about financial markets. During his term as a board member, he was instrumental in helping then-Chair Ben Bernanke navigate the 2008 financial crisis.

    “Warsh is a serious guy with a long track record and a deep experience,” Klein said. “Warsh was the Fed board’s interlocutor with the markets during the financial crisis.”

    Gertler said that knowledge about financial markets is an important characteristic in a Fed chair, because while interest rate setting isn’t easy, it’s “straightforward.” But understanding the markets requires “specialized expertise,” which Gertler said he thinks Warsh has.

    READ MORE: GOP senators break with Trump on these 2 points

    Warsh also has a history of being intellectually conservative, Klein said, with an eye toward reducing government intervention in the markets.

    “He’s not some outsider. This is not like Pete Hegseth coming in, or Kristi Noem, or whatever. This is someone who does have some genuine expertise, and he has been at the Fed,” Gertler said.

    “He has not come across as overtly political in the way some other candidates did,” he added.

    Warsh likely understands the Fed’s culture and is unlikely to “try and tear the place apart,” Gertler noted. That’s giving experts reason for some relief, he said.

    Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: What economic experts think about Trump’s choice of Kevin Warsh for Fed chair | PBS News

    #BoardOfGovernors #EconomicExperts #Economy #FederalReserveChairman #IndependentAgency #JeromePowell #LowerInterestRates #MonetaryPolicy #PBS #PBSNews #PublicBroadcastingService #Replacement #Succeed #Thinking #TrumpSChoice
  6. What economic experts think about Trump’s choice of Kevin Warsh for Fed chair – PBS News

    USA-FED / Former U.S. Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh speaks during a monetary policy conference at Stanford University…

    By — Hannah Grabenstein

    Detailed view of the US Federal Reserve System seal on currency with yellow digital numbers. WP.

    What economic experts think about Trump’s choice of Kevin Warsh for Fed chair

    Economy Updated on Jan 30, 2026 7:29 PM EST — Published on Jan 30, 2026 5:17 PM EST

    President Donald Trump announced Friday that he would nominate Kevin Warsh to be the next chair of the Federal Reserve, an independent agency that has been under pressure from the president to lower interest rates for the last year.

    If confirmed, Warsh would succeed Fed Chair Jerome Powell — a previous Trump nominee who has incurred the president’s ire for not heeding his demands — when Powell’s term expires in May.

    Educate your inbox, Subscribe to Here’s the Deal, our politics newsletter for analysis you won’t find anywhere else. Enter your email address

    Warsh served on the Fed Board of Governors from 2006 through 2011, where he had an opportunity to help shape the U.S. economy during one of its greatest periods of turmoil in recent history. Now a fellow at the Hoover Institution, a conservative think tank, and a lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, he also worked as an economic advisor to President George W. Bush.

    Experts appear to view Warsh’s nomination with “cautious relief,” said Mark Gertler, a professor of economics at New York University.

    Here are three things to know about Warsh and how he might influence the Fed as the agency’s new head.

    1. Warsh is a lawyer, not an economist

    Like Powell, Warsh has a J.D., not a Ph.D. in economics. Powell was the first Federal Reserve chair in 30 years to not have a doctorate in economics.

    “The Fed’s culture is Ph.D. economists on top,” said Aaron Klein, a senior fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution.

    “I think Powell was pretty deferential to what the professional staff economists’ view was,” he added.

    But Warsh may have a different approach, said Klein, who first met him when Warsh was working at the National Economic Council at the White House. Lawyers view the world through a different cultural lens than macroeconomists do, he said.

    WATCH: Supreme Court hears case on Trump’s attempt to control Federal Reserve

    “The question is: Is Kevin going to shake up the culture of the Fed staff? Or is he going to show deference to the Fed’s Ph.D. economists who are accustomed to running the show?” Klein said.

    That could influence his policy decisions, too, Gertler said. Warsh isn’t an economist and doesn’t speak — or necessarily reason — like one, he added.

    “The reason I’m not too worried is Powell was not an economist either, but Powell learned over time. In fact, I think (he) learned pretty well,” Gertler said. “I’m hopeful that the same will be true with Warsh — that is, put him in there with a bunch of economists and they will help sharpen his thinking.”

    2. In many ways, Warsh is a conservative pick

    While not a macroeconomist by education, Warsh has a relatively traditional background for a Fed chair nominee, experts said.

    He’s an academic with experience in the executive branch, as well as on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, and is knowledgeable about financial markets. During his term as a board member, he was instrumental in helping then-Chair Ben Bernanke navigate the 2008 financial crisis.

    “Warsh is a serious guy with a long track record and a deep experience,” Klein said. “Warsh was the Fed board’s interlocutor with the markets during the financial crisis.”

    Gertler said that knowledge about financial markets is an important characteristic in a Fed chair, because while interest rate setting isn’t easy, it’s “straightforward.” But understanding the markets requires “specialized expertise,” which Gertler said he thinks Warsh has.

    READ MORE: GOP senators break with Trump on these 2 points

    Warsh also has a history of being intellectually conservative, Klein said, with an eye toward reducing government intervention in the markets.

    “He’s not some outsider. This is not like Pete Hegseth coming in, or Kristi Noem, or whatever. This is someone who does have some genuine expertise, and he has been at the Fed,” Gertler said.

    “He has not come across as overtly political in the way some other candidates did,” he added.

    Warsh likely understands the Fed’s culture and is unlikely to “try and tear the place apart,” Gertler noted. That’s giving experts reason for some relief, he said.

    Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: What economic experts think about Trump’s choice of Kevin Warsh for Fed chair | PBS News

    #BoardOfGovernors #EconomicExperts #Economy #FederalReserveChairman #IndependentAgency #JeromePowell #LowerInterestRates #MonetaryPolicy #PBS #PBSNews #PublicBroadcastingService #Replacement #Succeed #Thinking #TrumpSChoice
  7. What economic experts think about Trump’s choice of Kevin Warsh for Fed chair – PBS News

    USA-FED / Former U.S. Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh speaks during a monetary policy conference at Stanford University…

    By — Hannah Grabenstein

    Detailed view of the US Federal Reserve System seal on currency with yellow digital numbers. WP.

    What economic experts think about Trump’s choice of Kevin Warsh for Fed chair

    Economy Updated on Jan 30, 2026 7:29 PM EST — Published on Jan 30, 2026 5:17 PM EST

    President Donald Trump announced Friday that he would nominate Kevin Warsh to be the next chair of the Federal Reserve, an independent agency that has been under pressure from the president to lower interest rates for the last year.

    If confirmed, Warsh would succeed Fed Chair Jerome Powell — a previous Trump nominee who has incurred the president’s ire for not heeding his demands — when Powell’s term expires in May.

    Educate your inbox, Subscribe to Here’s the Deal, our politics newsletter for analysis you won’t find anywhere else. Enter your email address

    Warsh served on the Fed Board of Governors from 2006 through 2011, where he had an opportunity to help shape the U.S. economy during one of its greatest periods of turmoil in recent history. Now a fellow at the Hoover Institution, a conservative think tank, and a lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, he also worked as an economic advisor to President George W. Bush.

    Experts appear to view Warsh’s nomination with “cautious relief,” said Mark Gertler, a professor of economics at New York University.

    Here are three things to know about Warsh and how he might influence the Fed as the agency’s new head.

    1. Warsh is a lawyer, not an economist

    Like Powell, Warsh has a J.D., not a Ph.D. in economics. Powell was the first Federal Reserve chair in 30 years to not have a doctorate in economics.

    “The Fed’s culture is Ph.D. economists on top,” said Aaron Klein, a senior fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution.

    “I think Powell was pretty deferential to what the professional staff economists’ view was,” he added.

    But Warsh may have a different approach, said Klein, who first met him when Warsh was working at the National Economic Council at the White House. Lawyers view the world through a different cultural lens than macroeconomists do, he said.

    WATCH: Supreme Court hears case on Trump’s attempt to control Federal Reserve

    “The question is: Is Kevin going to shake up the culture of the Fed staff? Or is he going to show deference to the Fed’s Ph.D. economists who are accustomed to running the show?” Klein said.

    That could influence his policy decisions, too, Gertler said. Warsh isn’t an economist and doesn’t speak — or necessarily reason — like one, he added.

    “The reason I’m not too worried is Powell was not an economist either, but Powell learned over time. In fact, I think (he) learned pretty well,” Gertler said. “I’m hopeful that the same will be true with Warsh — that is, put him in there with a bunch of economists and they will help sharpen his thinking.”

    2. In many ways, Warsh is a conservative pick

    While not a macroeconomist by education, Warsh has a relatively traditional background for a Fed chair nominee, experts said.

    He’s an academic with experience in the executive branch, as well as on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, and is knowledgeable about financial markets. During his term as a board member, he was instrumental in helping then-Chair Ben Bernanke navigate the 2008 financial crisis.

    “Warsh is a serious guy with a long track record and a deep experience,” Klein said. “Warsh was the Fed board’s interlocutor with the markets during the financial crisis.”

    Gertler said that knowledge about financial markets is an important characteristic in a Fed chair, because while interest rate setting isn’t easy, it’s “straightforward.” But understanding the markets requires “specialized expertise,” which Gertler said he thinks Warsh has.

    READ MORE: GOP senators break with Trump on these 2 points

    Warsh also has a history of being intellectually conservative, Klein said, with an eye toward reducing government intervention in the markets.

    “He’s not some outsider. This is not like Pete Hegseth coming in, or Kristi Noem, or whatever. This is someone who does have some genuine expertise, and he has been at the Fed,” Gertler said.

    “He has not come across as overtly political in the way some other candidates did,” he added.

    Warsh likely understands the Fed’s culture and is unlikely to “try and tear the place apart,” Gertler noted. That’s giving experts reason for some relief, he said.

    Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: What economic experts think about Trump’s choice of Kevin Warsh for Fed chair | PBS News

    #BoardOfGovernors #EconomicExperts #Economy #FederalReserveChairman #IndependentAgency #JeromePowell #LowerInterestRates #MonetaryPolicy #PBS #PBSNews #PublicBroadcastingService #Replacement #Succeed #Thinking #TrumpSChoice
  8. A quotation from Franklin Roosevelt

    To accomplish almost anything worthwhile, it is necessary to compromise between the ideal and the practical.

    Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882-1945) American lawyer, politician, statesman, US President (1933-1945)
    Quoted in Drew Pearson and Robert S. Allen, “How the President Works,” Harper’s Monthly Magazine, Vol. 173 (1936-06)

    More about this quote: wist.info/roosevelt-franklin-d…

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #franklinroosevelt #fdr #franklindroosevelt #franklindelanoroosevelt #accomplish #compromise #ideal #idealism #practical #practicality #pragmatic #pragmatism #succeed #success

  9. A quotation from Franklin Roosevelt

    To accomplish almost anything worthwhile, it is necessary to compromise between the ideal and the practical.

    Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882-1945) American lawyer, politician, statesman, US President (1933-1945)
    Quoted in Drew Pearson and Robert S. Allen, “How the President Works,” Harper’s Monthly Magazine, Vol. 173 (1936-06)

    More about this quote: wist.info/roosevelt-franklin-d…

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #franklinroosevelt #fdr #franklindroosevelt #franklindelanoroosevelt #accomplish #compromise #ideal #idealism #practical #practicality #pragmatic #pragmatism #succeed #success

  10. Start today! 🚀 Invest in yourself for tomorrow. Be better each day. Don’t compare yourself to others. We are all uniquely different. Just make sure you're better than the person you were yesterday.

    #selfimprovement #succeed #stronger

  11. HOW TO MOVE FAST FROM FAILURE AND SUCCEED?

    The best way to easily handle criticism is by not taking ourselves too seriously.

    #succeed #failure #success #agile

  12. Effective ways to cultivate #discipline and #succeed in life
    1. Clarify your purpose, then break it into systems
    2. Train yourself to say ‘no’ without guilt
    3. Start tiny and scale slowly
    4. Lean into discomfort as a growth signal
    5. Monitor progress like a scientist
    6. Shape your environment to support focus
    7. Reward consistency over intensity
    8. Visualize the cost of indiscipline

  13. Effective ways to cultivate and in life
    1. Clarify your purpose, then break it into systems
    2. Train yourself to say ‘no’ without guilt
    3. Start tiny and scale slowly
    4. Lean into discomfort as a growth signal
    5. Monitor progress like a scientist
    6. Shape your environment to support focus
    7. Reward consistency over intensity
    8. Visualize the cost of indiscipline

  14. Effective ways to cultivate #discipline and #succeed in life
    1. Clarify your purpose, then break it into systems
    2. Train yourself to say ‘no’ without guilt
    3. Start tiny and scale slowly
    4. Lean into discomfort as a growth signal
    5. Monitor progress like a scientist
    6. Shape your environment to support focus
    7. Reward consistency over intensity
    8. Visualize the cost of indiscipline

  15. #TonyRobbins
    People who #succeed in almost everything pursue these daily #habits
    1. Start the day with a clear mental focus
    2. Strategic learning
    3. Maintain physical energy through movement
    4. Practice gratitude to shift perspective
    5. Take consistent, purposeful action


  16. People who in almost everything pursue these daily
    1. Start the day with a clear mental focus
    2. Strategic learning
    3. Maintain physical energy through movement
    4. Practice gratitude to shift perspective
    5. Take consistent, purposeful action

  17. #TonyRobbins
    People who #succeed in almost everything pursue these daily #habits
    1. Start the day with a clear mental focus
    2. Strategic learning
    3. Maintain physical energy through movement
    4. Practice gratitude to shift perspective
    5. Take consistent, purposeful action

  18. What an interesting statement: by Mani Doraisamy

    "The Era of Solopreneurs is Here"

    "An engineer with AI tool can now outbuild a 100-person engineering team."

    Whilst the #opportunities of using #AI are great, the #downside is that not #everyone will be able to #succeed as a #solopreneur

    That is where #UBI comes in: it provides a safety net for those who need more time to adjust to the new world. ❤️

    manidoraisamy.com/developer-fo

    #UBI4ME #UniversalBasicIncome #UBI4ALL #TechnologicalUnemployment

  19. What an interesting statement: by Mani Doraisamy

    "The Era of Solopreneurs is Here"

    "An engineer with AI tool can now outbuild a 100-person engineering team."

    Whilst the #opportunities of using #AI are great, the #downside is that not #everyone will be able to #succeed as a #solopreneur

    That is where #UBI comes in: it provides a safety net for those who need more time to adjust to the new world. ❤️

    manidoraisamy.com/developer-fo

    #UBI4ME #UniversalBasicIncome #UBI4ALL #TechnologicalUnemployment

  20. What an interesting statement: by Mani Doraisamy

    "The Era of Solopreneurs is Here"

    "An engineer with AI tool can now outbuild a 100-person engineering team."

    Whilst the #opportunities of using #AI are great, the #downside is that not #everyone will be able to #succeed as a #solopreneur

    That is where #UBI comes in: it provides a safety net for those who need more time to adjust to the new world. ❤️

    manidoraisamy.com/developer-fo

    #UBI4ME #UniversalBasicIncome #UBI4ALL #TechnologicalUnemployment

  21. What an interesting statement: by Mani Doraisamy

    "The Era of Solopreneurs is Here"

    "An engineer with AI tool can now outbuild a 100-person engineering team."

    Whilst the #opportunities of using #AI are great, the #downside is that not #everyone will be able to #succeed as a #solopreneur

    That is where #UBI comes in: it provides a safety net for those who need more time to adjust to the new world. ❤️

    manidoraisamy.com/developer-fo

    #UBI4ME #UniversalBasicIncome #UBI4ALL #TechnologicalUnemployment

  22. What an interesting statement: by Mani Doraisamy

    "The Era of Solopreneurs is Here"

    "An engineer with AI tool can now outbuild a 100-person engineering team."

    Whilst the #opportunities of using #AI are great, the #downside is that not #everyone will be able to #succeed as a #solopreneur

    That is where #UBI comes in: it provides a safety net for those who need more time to adjust to the new world. ❤️

    manidoraisamy.com/developer-fo

    #UBI4ME #UniversalBasicIncome #UBI4ALL #TechnologicalUnemployment

  23. What do #graduates really need to #succeed in the job #market?

    A study 📑 by ISS #researcher 🧑‍🔬 Emilia Kmiotek-Meier, alongside Tonia Rossié and Konstantin Canora, shows how the requirements 📊 for #candidates vary across different #job market segments 💼.

    Curious? 🤔👉 uni.koeln/9ZTZQ

  24. Remember that the right person, with the right tool, will succeed at the job at hand. Whether at home or work, keep this in mind. #tool #right #job #person #succeed


  25. Not about who started first or who started last.
    Not about being fast or slow
    Anyone can in the of life.

    May you succeed and however you have begun.

  26. #MysteryOfLife
    Not about who started first or who started last.
    Not about being fast or slow
    Anyone can #succeed in the #race of life.

    May you succeed and #dowell however you have begun.

  27. #MysteryOfLife
    Not about who started first or who started last.
    Not about being fast or slow
    Anyone can #succeed in the #race of life.

    May you succeed and #dowell however you have begun.