By applying Wriston's Law of capital and talent flow, you can predict the fortunes of companies (and countries).
Another guy who understands capital and talent flow is Dr. John Rutledge, whom I often quote on this blog.
Of course he wants to learn about new products, but he also goes to hear industry gossip on talent flow--e.g.
The email is a wonderful mini-essay on capital and talent flow.
Attempting to stem the talent flow, and to make Hong Kong more tech-friendly, the Hong Kong government spent millions to develop Cyberport, an ultra-modern tech campus with state of the art infrastructure and its own start-up incubator program.
He said capital (meaning both money and ideas), when freed to travel at the speed of light, "will go where it is wanted, stay where it is well-treated...." By applying Wriston's Law of capital and talent flow, you can predict the fortunes of countries and companies.
For Bob Hope the talent always seemed to flow easily, even on occasions when he was not on stage.
Davies was previously responsible for the flow of young talent into the first team.
As the global war for talent heats up, this flow of the best and the brightest from developing countries is likely to increase.
But he acknowledges it continues to exist, hindering the flow of capital, talent and goods around the country.
If and when, for example, Sam Su of Yum Brands becomes the first Chinese CEO of a Fortune 500 company born in China then they will accept a free flow of non-Chinese executive talent throughout their organizations.
Despite the support for McEnroe, the flow of young U.S. talent onto the professional circuit remains a trickle rather than the hoped for flood.
Businesses like Google, Zappos, and IBM have been household names as great places to work because they value the free flow of ideas and innovations that prioritize creative talent rather than traditional hierarchical social status.
But the Internet--which guarantees the free flow of information, speech, money, talent and ideas, and speeds up the distribution of these good things ... and therefore makes markets more perfect ... and therefore wrings out inflation and waste--offers the possibility, once slim but now becoming more probable by the day, that the good times can run a long while.
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