This tried and true driver training solution is truly global in its approach.
For one last-mile delivery company, having Booster deliver fuel has translated to huge benefits when it comes to time and money saved.
Bridgestone has been working on a variety of new products of interest to fleets, including a run-flat tire that lets you drive up to up to 50 miles at 50 miles per hour after puncture.
By John Wysseier, CEO and President, The CEI Group, Inc.
Panic is never a preferred business mode, yet so much has been made of the dire threat of disruption over the last few years that it may seem that's the emotion the business and trade press have been trying to instill.
That hasn't been my objective. Instead, what I and most of the keen-eyed observers I've been following have been trying to do is to persuade senior executives that they need to appreciate the dramatic ways in which digital technology is changing the face of business, and to deepen their understanding of the ever-expanding array of applications that may be used to undermine or strengthen their competitiveness.
To be sure – and as I've cited in recent posts – the pace of change in the business world driven by new technology is accelerating and is being reflected in the speed by which the roster of industry leaders has been changing recently and is forecast to continue.
By Laura Jozwiak, Senior Vice President of Sales and Client Relations, Wheels, Inc.
Social cues help us understand if we’re being understood, accepted, rebuffed, or if we’re just being plain annoying to the people around us.
Have you noticed when you’re talking to someone across a table and they lean back in their chair with their arms folded at their chest? Perhaps even with their brows furrowed?
I want you to engage in a little social experiment: sit back in your chair, cross your arms, narrow your eyes, and furrow your brows. How does that feel? It probably doesn’t feel very positive, does it? And it may remind you of a time that your actions caused this behavior in others. I have certainly been in that position before!
Social cues can lead to positive or negative reciprocation.