The Mechanics of Ransomware Attacks

Number of words: 356 Their latest attack was unusually sophisticated from a technical perspective, with new malware code added to the original Zinc software that allowed the infection to worm its way automatically from computer to computer. Once replicated, the code encrypted and locked a computer’s hard disk, then displayed a ransom ware message demanding … Read more

The Fallout from NSA’s Alleged Data Infiltration

Number of words: 421 On October 30, the Washington Post published a story that set the industry’s hair on fire: “NSA Infiltrates Links to Yahoo, Google Data Centers Worldwide, Snowden Documents Say.” The story was co-authored by Bart Gellman, a journalist I had known and respected since he wrote for the Daily Princeton an at … Read more

Echoes of the Past: Lessons for Today’s America

Number of words: 621 The nation’s first such crisis occurred a little more than a decade after the Constitution was signed. It was 1798 when a “quasi war” broke out between the United States and France on the Caribbean Sea. The French, wanting to pressure the United States to repay loans made by its overthrown … Read more

The Intriguing Relationship Between Shell and McKinsey

Number of words: 432 Since McKinsey consultants visited Shell, in fact, the latter’s profits have swollen gigantically – never mind the sheer impossibility of proving that a chain of cause and effect links the consultancy with the profits. The story of Shell and McKinsey started in Venezuela, where two brilliant young consultants, Hugh Parker and … Read more

The Paradox of Risk in Managerial Psychology

Number of words: 630 The greater the risk, the smaller the case for the project. Risk-taking holds its pride of place among the managerial virtues for reasons deep in managerial psychology, for managers need no urging to take chances. The most purblind old buffer in the boardroom will cheerfully approve ventures of total insecurity. The … Read more

The Interplay Between Sales and Marketing

Number of words: 481 The marketeers have not only pushed production men into the cold – they have ousted the salesman. The standard sneer against ‘non-marketing-orientated’ companies is that they have merely called the sales manager a marketing manager. This is more sensible than importing a dear and dearly educated marketing manager and downgrading the … Read more

The Myth of Cost-Effectiveness in Government Management

Number of words: 573 By business standards, however, McNamara’s reign at the Pentagon was an enormously expensive failure. His hatchet-men found many sweet cost savings – the duplicated purchasing which bedevils all widely spread businesses had become gross in the Pentagon, and the management techniques which produce better housekeeping were badly needed. But exacting more … Read more