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A Q&A with Janis Machala

Janis Machala is founder and managing partner of Paladin Partners, an executive search and business...


Planned, Zoned & Ready

Industrial developers find the welcome mat out in Frederickson as urban land becomes scarcer


Bookend

Flip: How to Turn Everything You Know on Its Head -- and Succeed Beyond Your Wildest Imaginings

By...


The Secret to Being "On"

How to present like a pro, even if it doesn't come naturally


Boats for All Seasons

From industry to the military to pleasure, Washington boat makers meet a variety of needs


Win Place, or No-Show

Horse raising becomes less cost-effective in an economic downturn


Washington Growth Still Outpaces the Nation

As of February, the Washington economy is holding up very well compared with the national economy....


Who's Sorry Now?

Where government and business mix, politics isn't far behind


The Landscape Artist

Cascade land conservancy's Gene Duvernoy focuses on practical solutions to preserve land


You're fired... Not!

Thinking you can put a fire under your employees by threatening to can 'em? Can layoffs create a leaner, meaner organization that reacts faster to change? A new Washington State University study suggests that while Donald Trump's approach to apprentices -- "You're fired" -- may make good TV, in the real world, it will probably backfire. In experiments and field studies, psychologists at WSU, the University of Puget Sound and Wright State University in Ohio found that employees who fear losing their jobs have a hard time thinking creatively and are less able to see connections between concepts. Layoffs may spur a shortterm boost in activity, says WSU-Vancouver researcher Tahira Probst, but in the long run, "safety gets worse, creativity gets worse, and ultimately, product quality gets worse," she says. "How could this possibly be good for an organization?"

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