Every working parent has that one thing keeping them from completely losing it. Some have the Mary Poppins-like nanny who knows exactly when to show up with wet wipes and organic muffins. Others swear by meal kits, color-coded Google calendars, or chore charts their family actually follows (unicorn families, basically).
For me? Its a group text.
Not glamorous, not particularly organized, but its my lifeline. This is where playdates get arranged, last-minute pickup emergencies get solved, and critical intel on the latest stomach bug gets dropped. Its also where I can admit, I fed my kids popcorn and blueberries for dinner, and instead of side-eye, I get heart emojis and another parent confessing, Mine ate Oreos in the car.
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This is my working parent wolf pack. And trust me, you need one too.
Because lets be honest: Working and parenting at the same time is basically like walking a tightrope in a thunderstorm while your boss Slacks you and your kids soccer coach emails the snack schedule. A wolf pack is the net below, ready to catch you with help, empathy, or at least a well-timed meme.
Heres where mine shows up most:
Carpools. Knowing that Saturdays trip to the trampoline park is someone elses problem. Bliss.
Emergency coverage. The meeting runs late, your kid spikes a 103 fever, or your train gets stuck underground. This is when your wolf pack jumps in.
Mental health. Sometimes you just text, If my child sings the Bluey theme song one more time, Im moving out. They dont call CPS. They send solidarity GIFs.
Camaraderie. Nothing heals like someone typing Same.
Start small
So how do you build one? Start with one or two parents you trust and add as you go. Look for people who are reliable, unpretentious, and living at the same chaos level as you (no judgment, but the mom with an in-house chef and a driver may not be your best emergency contact). You dont need soulmates, but you need people who wont flinch when you ask for help, and who understand that reciprocity isnt tit for tat. Youll return the favor, maybe not tomorrow, but eventually. The unspoken agreement is simple: were all drowning, so sometimes we pass the life vest.
At the end of the day, my wolf pack isnt just about logistics. Its about laughing together at 11 p.m. while rage-scrolling the 19-page school newsletter. Its about knowing Im not the only one who missed the bring a pilgrim costume email. Its about being seen through the exhaustion, the chaos, and the love that keeps us showing up.
Think of it less as a group text and more as a lifeboat, a comedy club, and a survival kit rolled into one. Every working parent deserves that kind of pack.
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There is a new calculator that shows how President Donald Trump’s big, beautiful law will affect your 2026 tax bill, and how much additional take-home pay you’ll be getting.
The calculator, from the Tax Foundationan independent, tax policy research organizationlooks at the new exemptions and tax write-offs in the massive 940-page One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), which was signed into law in July.
The savings are the result of the OBBBA extending the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, making many of the changes permanent, while adding some new short- and long-term tax rules, including the No Tax on Tips provision (which allows eligible tipped workers to deduct a portion of their income from tips on their federal income taxes), a car loan deduction, a deduction for charitable donations, and a child credit.
The new interactive tax calculator tool allows users to compare their tax liability for the 2026 tax yearbefore and after OBBBA’s tax provisions.
[Screenshot: Tax Foundation]
The nonprofit Tax Foundation found that taxpayers will see an increase in after-tax incomes of about 5.4%, on average, with the bottom 20% of earners saving 2.6% in after-tax income, and those at the top 60th to 80th percentiles saving 6.3% in after-tax income.
How the new 2026 tax law affects take-home pay, by income bracket
Here is the breakdown on how much American taxpayers are expected to save based on earnings brackets, according to the Tax Foundation and CNBC:
0%-20%, up to $17,735 in annual income:
2.6% increase in take-home pay
20%-40%, $17,736$38,572 in annual income:
5.2% increase in take-home pay
40%-60%, $38,573$73,905 in annual income:
5.7% increase in take-home pay
60%-80%, $73,906$130,661 in annual income:
6.3% increase in take-home pay
80%-100%, above $130,661 in annual income:
5% increase in take-home pay
Meanwhile, the nonpartisan think tank Tax Policy Center (TPC) estimates the law will, on average, reduce taxes for Americans by about $2,900 in 2026, with some 85% of households receiving a tax cut in 2026.
The calculations come as Americans face skyrocketing living costs, inflation, tariffs, and a tight job market, all of which are making it much harder for the average person in the U.S. to stay economically afloat.
If youre familiar with Gallup data about employee engagement, they have been playing one of their Top 40 hits for decades now. Its a classic weve all heard. The tune? People dont quit companies; they quit managers.
Weve known this for years, but here we are, still stuck in the same leadership crisis. Too many managers dont understand the difference between managing work and leading people. Heres the plain truth: You manage the work; you lead humans. And when leaders miss that, the culture and performance pay the price.
The brutal truths
So, if youre willing to take a hard look in the mirror, here are seven brutal truths about leadership every leader needs to face.
1. Good leaders remove the fear from the atmosphere
Traditional command-and-control bosses still use fear and pressure to push people forward. It may work in the short term, but it kills creativity, collaboration, and psychological safety. Modern leadersservant leadersflip the script. They create safety first, freeing their people to share ideas, take risks, and innovate without fear of punishment. When fear leaves the room, growth walks in.
2. Trust is non-negotiable for high performance
Heres the leadership gut check: Does my behavior increase trust? Trust isnt just a nice-to-haveits the foundation of high-performing teams. Leaders who build trust practice transparency, keep commitments, talk straight, and hold themselves accountable. If your people dont trust you, nothing else will stick.
3. Accepting feedback fuels good leadership
Too many leaders avoid hearing feedback because it threatens their ego. Thats a surefire way to lead in an echo chamber. The best leaders invite feedback, listen with curiosity, and ask questions until they truly understand. They dont dwell on past mistakesthey use feedback as fuel to grow and to better serve their teams.
4. Good leaders stay positive under pressure
Challenges, setbacks, and even failures are inevitable in this day and age. The difference is how leaders show up in the storm. Emotionally intelligent leaders dont sugarcoat reality, but they keep their perspective grounded in growth. They frame problems as opportunities to regroup and reset. That positivity doesnt just reduce their own stressit keeps the whole team grounded.
5. Procrastination kills leadership
Effective leaders are action-takers. They dont put off tough conversations or delay decisions until a crisis forces their hand. They anticipate issues and address them head-on before they spiral. Procrastination breeds chaos. Proactive action builds stability.
6. Boundaries are a leaders best friend
Warren Buffett said it best: The difference between successful people and really successful people is that really successful people say no to almost everything. I regularly coach executive teams to protect their time, energy, and focusto say no to distractions, negativity, and overcommitment. The flip side? Saying yes to what aligns with their values and fuels their mission.
7. In the end, leadership is really about love
Yes, love. And not the soft, sentimental, squishy kind. Im talking about love as practical, results-driven action, day in and day out. The rugged Green Bay Packers head coach Vince Lombardi nailed it when he said, I dont necessarily have to like my players and associates, but as their leader, I must love them. Love is loyalty, love is teamwork, love respects the dignity of the individual. This is the strength of any organization. In practice, leadership love looks like clearing roadblocks for your team, investing in their growth, advocating for their success, and treating them with dignity. Love is leaderships ultimate competitive advantage.
The bottom line: The old Gallup song may be around for another decade, but leaders willing to face these truthsand live them outwill finally help their teams and organizations play a new song.
Marcel Schwantes
How did you get to where you are in your career?
My interest in this question dates back 45 years to when I was an MBA student at Northwestern Universitys Kellogg School of Management. Whenever corporate executives were guest speakers at our classes, I would listen intently as they described what contributed to their career advancement. In the same vein, as I speak with leaders today, I always make a point of asking them what they consider to be the main drivers of their success.
Over more than four decades, the two most common responses are: (1) I worked hard and (2) I have several unique skill sets. As I look back on my corporate career, including as chair and CEO of Baxter International, a $12 billion health care company, I agree with the importance of working hard and having unique skills. However, having engaged in the practice of self-reflection as the foundation of my values-based leadership, I know that far more than my own efforts and talents contributed to my success.
Five factorsluck, timing, team, mentors and sponsors, and faith/spirituality or mindfulnessaccount for much of what I have achieved. As executives and those who aspire to leadership reflect on their own careers, they will no doubt see the influence of these factors. The result is a shift in perspective that encourages gratitude, attracts support, and leads to more opportunities.
1. Luck
Without question, luck plays a part in every career, such as being in the right place and connecting with the right people who open doors. Over the years, Ive heard executives attribute their early success to a lucky break, including insightful advice from a teacher, a first boss, or a mentor.
The same happened for me when I was an undergraduate student at Lawrence University. When I told one of my professors that I was considering a PhD in mathematics, he quickly offered a different opinion. Harry, if you get a doctorate in mathematics, your work will be of most interest to a small group of colleagues. Youre so outgoing, why dont you think about economics and pursuing a career in business? Youll be able to influence so many more people. If it hadnt been for that advice, I am not sure what my career path would have looked like.
2. Timing
If luck is about being in the right place, then it only makes sense that it also has to be at the right time. One episode of fortunate timing occurred when I was an undergrad looking for a summer internship. I applied in-person at the First Bank of Minneapolis, where my application was put into a stack with about 150 others.
In a stroke of fortunate timing, a vice president at the bank walked by the reception desk. I introduced myself, explained that I was looking for an internship, and politely asked for five minutes to tell him more about myself.
Twenty minutes later, I landed the internship.
Timing also played a part later in my career, especially when I was first promoted. There were times when I replaced someone who had accomplished very little in the position. Therefore, only a small effort on my part made a huge difference in what I accomplished compared to my predecessor. The more I recognize the role luck and timing played in my career, the more it reinforces a sense of genuine humility, another of my principles of values-based leadership. Its a reminder that success is not a reflection of being the smartest or the most gifted person in the room.
3. Team
I am very well aware of the fact that I have been blessed with great teams at every stage of my career. If I had not worked with these talented colleaguespeople who knew what I didnt knowthere was no way I would have reached senior leadership positions, including chief financial officer (CFO) and then CEO and chair at Baxter. In fact, my teams success directly contributed to my advancement.
For example, when I was one of eight VPs of finance at Baxter, there was an opening to become the next CFO. The other seven VPs had far more experience than I had. To my surprise, I was promoted. The reason? Everybody wants to work for you, and so many people who are promoted throughout the company were trained by you, I was told.
When I share this story with my students at Kellogg today, I do so as a reminder of the importance of creating an environment in which others want to work for you. Its the best possible showcase of leadership.
4. Mentors and sponsors
The influence and encouragement of so many have made a huge difference in my life. As I look back, I remember the late Donald Jacobs, Dean of Kellogg, who encouraged me to think about the kind of impact I would like to make as a leader: Do you want to be a very good finance person? Or do you want to be one of the people who helps run a company who happens to know a lot about finance? I chose the latter, and it made all the difference in my career.
Another important mentor was William Graham, the long-time CEO of Baxter, who used to say, Arent we blessed to do well by doing good? He lived that philosophy and impressed upon me the importance of addressing the needs of all stakeholders, including customers, suppliers, shareholders, and even society.
5. Faith, spirituality, or mindfulness
This last factor is really number one for me, but I want to be sensitive to the thinking of others (especially when teaching in a secular university). For me, though, my faith reminds me that any talents or skills that I have are God-given gifts; therefore, I am responsible for using these gifts to the best of my ability. In other words, its not about me. Spirituality, mindfulness, or the practice of faith can help others see that, as they pursue success, it really is about making a difference for others.
These five secrets to success apply to everyone at every level. Their importance becomes clearer with self-reflection, reminding us that our career advancement is not just about us. Rather, the success we achieve broadens our ability to influence and help others as they benefit from luck, timing, teams, mentors, and a spiritual/mindful perspective.
Fast Company is delighted to make this article available to any student for free. Please request a copy by email.
I was sitting on the steps of Duke Chapel at 2 a.m. in December 2023, the Gothic towers looming above me, a 210-foot reminder of everything I was about to walk away from. My phone was exploding with notifications: Y Combinator had just accepted us. ChatGPT had hit 100 million users in two monthsfaster than TikTok, faster than Instagram, faster than anything in human history.
And I was about to break my single mother’s heart.
The chapel bells rang twice, echoing across the empty quad. In six hours, I’d be dropping out of one of America’s best universities. The same university my mother had sacrificed everything to get me into. The same university whose acceptance letter made her cry tears of joy in our cramped apartment kitchen in Dhaka, Bangladesh, a place most Duke students couldn’t find on a map, where American university acceptance letters arrive like answered prayers, meant to lift entire families. The only thing harder than getting into Duke from there was explaining why I was leaving.
Now I’d make her cry again.
I threw up twice before leaving Duke that morning, once in the dorm bathroom, once behind the student center. Not from the previous night’s parties; I’d stopped going to those months earlier while my hallmates were doing keg stands. I was too busy watching the world change at warp speed. While my classmates wrote papers about AI’s potential, we were teaching it to think in practice. While they debugged thesis statements, we debugged systems that would touch millions. They worried about grades. We worried about scale.The decision wasn’t romantic. It was terrifying. But sitting on those chapel steps, watching my classmates live their normal college lives while history was being written in real time 3,000 miles away, I knew.
My cofounder, Md Abdul Halim Rafi, and I were accepted into Y Combinator’s W24 batch with Octolane AI to build the next AI Salesforce. We were one of 260 companies selected from more than 27,000 applications, less than 1% acceptance rate. Duke’s is 8%. Harvard’s is 5%. I’m not great at math, but even I could figure out which achievement was statistically more improbable.
Some trains only come once. And this one was leaving the station with or without me.
Why This Moment Is Different
History rarely offers moments when the ground shifts beneath our feet. I’ve studied them obsessively: The internet in the ’90s, when two Stanford PhD dropouts named Larry Page and Sergey Brin saw search differently. Social media in the 2000s, when a college dropout named Mark Zuckerberg connected the world from his dorm room.
Today, it’s AI, and it’s moving faster than any wave before.
Consider this: ChatGPT hit 100 million users in two months. TikTok took nine months. Instagram took 2.5 years. The telephone took 75 years. We’re watching revolution at warp speed. The AI market is projected to reach $1.81 trillion by 2030, growing at 35.9% annually, faster than the cloud computing boom, faster than mobile, faster than the internet itself.
Here’s what kept me up at Duke: By 2028, AI will autonomously make 15% of all work decisions. Not assistdecide. We’re not talking about a tool anymore. The question for me was: “Do I want to build the next GPT or learn about it in a textbook?”
Actually, scratch that. When BackRub started as a Stanford research project in 1996, Page and Brin had years to develop it before formally launching Google in 1998and even then, it took until their 2004 IPO (six years post-launch) before the world fully understood just how profitable and dominant they’d become. Zuckerberg had seven years after Facebook’s 2004 launch before Google even tried to compete with Google+ in 2011.
AI founders? Look at what happened to Character AI: They built something revolutionary, then Google just hired the team. Look at Inflection, which got $1.5 billion in funding, then Microsoft basically bought them for parts. We don’t have years. We have months. Maybe 24 if we’re lucky.
Every week I stayed in that Duke classroom, another AI startup was getting a $100 million Series B. Every test I took, OpenAI was releasing another model that made last month’s breakthrough obsolete. Every night I spent in the library, someone my age in San Francisco was defining how humanity would interact with AI forever.
The companies that win the AI race in 2026 and 2027 will dominate for decades. The rest will be Wikipedia entries nobody reads.
The Framework That Made Me Jump
Dropping out sounds romantic. In reality, it’s a calculated risk that requires brutal honesty. Here’s the framework that helped me decide:
1. Conviction: Were we solving a problem that mattered? Sales teams waste 30% to 40% of their time manually updating CRMs. The question was simple: Could we eliminate a trillion-dollar inefficiency?
2. Timing: Was this the right moment? AI adoption was exploding, but it was still early enough for startups to move faster than incumbents stuck in quarterly earnings calls.
3. Traction: Did we have proof? Early customers kept asking the same question: How fast can you onboard us? One customer pulled out credit cards mid-demo.
4. Partnership: When you’re about to jump off a cliff, you better trust who’s jumping with you.Building a startup isn’t a solo sport. When you hit the inevitable walls (and you will), you need someone who believes in the vision as deeply as you do. Someone who can carry the weight when you can’t. Someone whose skills complement yours, who challenges your assumptions, and who won’t let you quit when things get dark.My cofounder, Rafi, my best friend since high school, left his comfortable job, said goodbye to his family, and boarded a plane to San Francisco with his wife after one phone call. He did this based on nothing but my conviction and our shared dream.br>Some nights we’d code in complete silence for hours, the only sound being keyboard clicks, because we knew we didnt have the luxury of giving up.When someone trusts you with every fiber of their being, failure stops being an option.
5. Runway: Could we survive? YC and early investors gave us just enough capital to go full time. Not comfortable, but enough. But when you’re building with your best friend who crossed oceans for this dream, you make it work on breadcrumbs.
Without all five elements of this framework, I would have stayed in school. That’s why most people shouldn’t drop out, because unless those factors align perfectly, you’re not making a calculated leap. You’re gambling with your future.
Why Most People Shouldn’t Do This
Let me be brutally honest: Dropping out isn’t a badge of honor. It’s a tactical decision that’s wrong for 99% of people.
Stay in school if:
You’re running from something (hard classes, social pressure, your roommate’s terrible music taste) rather than toward something specific
You don’t have a problem that keeps you up at night and wakes you up excited (insomnia doesn’t count unless it’s productive insomnia)
You think being a “dropout founder” sounds cool on X/LinkedIn
You don’t have at least 12 months of runway secured (No, your parents basement doesn’t count as runway.)
You’re alone without a cofounder or strong support system (Chatting with Cursor AI or GitHub copilot is not a cofounder.)
You haven’t talked to at least 50 potential customers
The opportunity will still be there in two years (Spoiler: If it will, it’s not urgent enough.)
The world needs doctors who finish medical school and engineers who master their craft. We can’t all be dropout founders, and thank God for that. Someone needs to actually know what they’re doing!
What I’d Tell My Past Self
If I could go back to that terrified kid holding his Duke ID at 2:12 a.m., here’s what I’d say (yes, I remember the exact time; anxiety has a way of burning timestamps into your brain):
The fear never goes away. You just get better at moving forward despite it. Every founder you admireZuckerberg, Gates, Jobswas once exactly where you are: terrified, uncertain, but unable to ignore the pull of what could be.
Your parents will understand. Maybe not today, maybe not this year, but when they see you building something that matters, they’ll understand that you honored their sacrifices in a different way.
Failure isn’t falling, it’s not trying. You can always go back to school. You can always get a job. You can always become a consultant and use phrases like “leverage synergies” for the rest of your life. But you can’t always catch a wave that’s already crashed.
Find your tribe. The loneliest part isn’t leaving school; it’s the months when you’re building in obscurity while your friends are at parties you’re no longer invited to. Find other builders. Share your struggles. The founders who seem to have it all together are often one bad day away from quitting too.
A Final Thought
Last week I got coffee with a Duke student who’s considering dropping out. He reminded me of myself: brilliant, ambitious, and absolutely terrified. I told him what I’m telling you:
Don’t drop out to follow my path. Drop out only if staying would be a betrayal of the fire inside you. Drop out only if the problem you’re solving matters more than your comfort. Drop out only if you have something to build that the world desperately needs. And drop out only if you have someone like Rafi, someone who’d cross oceans for your shared dream.
But if you have that fire, that problem, that desperate need to build, then maybe, just maybe, the biggest risk isn’t leaving.
It’s staying.
Square, the point-of-sale system owned by Jack Dorsey’s Block, is announcing a number of new upgrades todayincluding one that will make it easier for business owners to accept payments in Bitcoin.
On Wednesday, the company made three announcements:
An expansion of its platform for restaurants (including AI-voice ordering and a bigger, broader Grubhub integration)
A conversational AI assistant embedded in its dashboard to answer questions, called Square AI
Square Bitcoin: An integrated Bitcoin payment and wallet system for business owners
The upgrades and announcements are designed to help business owners control their costs, dig up more insights within their data, and plan ahead with more confidence, Willem Avé, Squares head of product, tells Fast Company.
Were focused on anything we can do to help small businesses compete better, Avé says.
That includes a smattering of new and beefed-up features for restaurant operators, specifically, such as AI voiced ordering, which allows customers to call in and place an order with an AI assistant (while also answering questions about the menu and make customizations).
Meanwhile, a speedier kiosk will help orders get entered faster, and enhanced accounting and sales reportsplus an Order Guidewill help restaurateurs get a clearer picture of their costs and revenue.
Avé says that the voice-ordering feature is particularly interesting, as the technology has only recently become good enough to launch. At the beginning of this past summer, for example, it wouldnt have worked, he says.
We believe that the tech is finally here to build a natural, good, AI-based ordering system,” Avé adds.
‘The tech is there, the demand is there’
Perhaps the most interesting announcement of the day is the launch of Square Bitcoin, which allows businesses to accept Bitcoin payments, automatically store those payments in a designated wallet, convert other revenue to Bitcoin, and do it all with no processing fees through the end of next year.
Square has always been about accepting any type of payment that comes across the counter, Avé says, and so giving businesses the power to integrate with crypto in a relatively simple way was a natural step for the company.
The tech is there, and the demand is there, and from a cost perspective, Bitcoin payments are cheaper for businesses, he says.
While some large merchant chains accept cryptocurrency paymentsa list that includes the Home Depot, Chipotle, and Whole Foodsits been, thus far, a difficult implementation for small companies.
Squares announcement could change that, all while crypto adoption and prices reach a fever pitch. The timing isnt necessarily a coincidence, as Avé says the company has been trying to move quicker as customer needs evolve.
“This release is highlighting that speed is the name of the game, he says, and were moving faster than ever.
The worlds best engineers, entrepreneurs, and researchers face no shortage of opportunities. If youre building the future in frontier technologies like AI, you could base yourself anywhere. So the real question is where. The answer today points northto Stockholm.
The European Commission recently declared Stockholm as Europes most innovative region. Ahead of Copenhagen, London, and Zurich, the Swedish capital took the top spot. Not just overall, but on a range of individual indicators, from lifelong learning and share of tech specialists employed to cross-border scientific publications, collaboration between SMEs, patent filings, and trademarks.
Right after the European Commissions report, the citys own Lovable was declared the fastest-growing software startup in global history. This is another indicator of Stockholm as Europes capital of the futureadmittedly anecdotal, yet hard to ignore.
STOCKHOLMS LIFESTYLE EDGE
Of course, for youa global top talentthere are regions beyond Europe to consider. The U.S. and China still have metro areas that are more innovative, for now. But what Europes innovative center can also offer is another way of life.
Sweden consistently ranks among the worlds most gender-equal societies. The childcare system is outstandingenabling both parents to combine engaged parenthood with career advancement. Society is cultural, creative, democratic, egalitarian, and open. Clean air and water, smooth public transportation, and buildings designed for light and ventilation make daily life in Stockholm unusually comfortable.
Government bureaucracy is light for individuals and companies. Starting a business is easy, energy prices are among Europes lowest, and taxes not as high as Swedens reputation suggests. With no wealth or inheritance tax, low corporate tax rate, and minimal everyday costs for healthcare, childcare, and education, the benefits often exceed the income tax rate headlines.
Add in generous parental leave (exported by Spotify to the U.S.) and EU freedom of movement, and this capital offers a package of benefits rarely matched in other hubs. For many specialists, flatter structures and shorter weeks tip the balance in Stockholms favor.
Fast Company recognized our Stockholm-based real estate firm as one of the Worlds Most Innovative Companies. My job at Atrium Ljungberg can perhaps best be described as playing SimCity but in real life, with the city I love most as the game board.
To be fully transparent, the job comes with a dose of stakeholder management and administration that SimCity leaves outbut still, the analogy is strikingly true.
Stockholm is evolving, and its a thrill to be part of the ride: Atrium Ljungberg is redeveloping Slakthusomrdet, the worlds largest transformation of a meatpacking district, while also building Stockholm Wood City. The renewal of Slussen, a central hub, is nearing completion, as is the expansion of Hagastaden, linking the city with Europes top medical university and hospital. They knit old districts and new innovation hubs into a more connected city.
FROM NOBEL PRIZES TO SPOTIFY: THE CITYS LONG GAME
How did Stockholm become Europes most innovative region? It helps to start at the beginning. Stockholms tradition has long shown progress.
By the 1880s, Stockholm had the most telephones of any city in the world. The Nobel Prize was established in 1901 and soon became the worlds most prestigious award across five scientific disciplines, later joined by a sixth in economics.
A series of world-class companies were created here in the pre-WW2 industrial era, including Ericsson, Atlas Copco, and Electrolux. That period laid the groundwork for Stockholms rise.
The city gained a reputation as a hub of practical innovation and engineering. In 1954, the Royal Institute of Technology hosted Swedens first nuclear reactor, built underground in the middle of the city. By the 1980s, Stockholms universities were among Europes first online.
The 1997 Home PC reform gave Swedes tax-free access to computers via employers, driving mass adoption and digital skills.
Since the 90s, Stockholm has produced another wave of champions: Spotify, the leading music streaming service globally; EQT, one of the world’s largest private equity firms; and Klarna, a fintech giant. Stockholm now counts more listed firms than any European city, including London and Frankfurt.
Along the way, Stockholm also became a creative capital. The city that once exported timber and steel now exports pop music, design and gamingfrom Avicii to Acne and Minecraft, with billions playing our video games.
In 1968, only a quarter of Swedes had eaten out in the last quarter, and kitchens still shut at 8 p.m. Today, Stockholm is a city full of Michelin stars, neighborhood bistros, late-night bars, and clubs.
THE ECOSYSTEM BUILDING EUROPES NEXT GIANTS
Sweden ranks first in Europe by VC investment per capita and unicorn creation per capita. But capital alone doesnt build companiestalent does. In Stockholm today, workplaces are increasingly designed to attract it: more like clubs or labs than offices, they give talent autonomy, wellbeing, and connection.
A diverse set of Stockholm ventures is now breaking ground. Einride, putting autonomous electric trucks on roads across continents, and Candela, whose electric boats ferry Stockholms commuters, drive the future of transportation. Fashion and beauty names Toteme and Estrid stand beside music investor Pophouse, steward of catalogues from Avicii to KISS and Cyndi Lauper. Investors Creandum, EQT Ventures, Northzone, and Norrsken have underpinned the citys ascent as one of Europes leading venture hubs.
Scaling companies consume vast amounts of energy. To support the soaring demand, national energy company Vattenfall and the government just announced that Sweden will build a series of small modular reactors (SMRs). The initiative is notable globally: While most countries are still piloting single SMR projects, Sweden is planning a program at scale, aimed directly at powering fast-growing industries.
Propelled by clean energy, culture, and investment, few places combine beauty and dynamism like Stockholm: the Nordic Venice with its islands, a cultural city from Gustav IIIs opera house, to Max Martins pop, built on democracy and openness. Yet its real strength lies in its trajectory. For builders, creatives, and intellectuals, Stockholm has become Europes most attractive base to change the world from.
Linus Kjellberg is head of business development at Atrium Ljungberg.
When I worked in tech, I often heard engineering leaders explain why they couldnt hire more women or minorities: the so-called pipeline problem. They claimed there simply werent enough qualified candidates entering the system, so naturally the pool of diverse talent remained thin. Many of us in the ecosystem called BS. The reality wasnt a lack of qualified people; it was a lack of imagination, access, and commitment to creating inclusive environments where diverse talent could thrive.
Fast forward to my work today in womens sports. I find myself thinking about that same phrasethis time with a twist. In sports, a pipeline problem is very real, and very serious. Girls drop out of sports at far higher rates than boys, often by age 14. Not because they lack talent or ambition, but because hidden, solvable barriers stand in their way. Research points to a variety of reasons: lack of access to facilities, fewer female coaches, cultural pressures, and economic hurdles. But there are also subtler obstaclesmenstrual stigma, inadequate athletic gear, transportation gaps, or not feeling seen and supported in spaces where theyre underrepresented. These arent headline-grabbing issues, but they can determine whether a girl keeps playing or quietly walks away.
This isnt just about missed opportunities on the field. Sports participation is directly tied to confidence, leadership skills, academic performance, and future career success. When we lose girls from the pipeline, we lose future team captains, CEOs, scientists, and community leaders.
THE HIDDEN BARRIERS
With gender equity in sports, the conversation often centers on the field of playmedia coverage, equal pay, prize money, sponsorship. These are important, visible markers of progress. Yet, what often goes unnoticed are the less visible, deeply practical barriers that prevent girls from staying in the game in the first place.
This years Gainbridge Assists Powered by Parity grants, in partnership with the Womens Sports Foundation, expanded to empower changemakers addressing these obstacles. Thirty-two recipients across 20 states will receive $222,000 (total), funding projects ensuring girls can fully participate in sportand benefit from the resulting lifelong confidence, leadership, and health outcomes.
In addition to funding camps, clinics, and playing opportunities in sports from basketball and soccer to fencing, lacrosse, and wrestling, this years grantees are tackling some of the obstacles head on. These efforts recognize that access alone isnt enough if hidden barriers continue holding girls back:
Menstrual health. For many student-athletes, lack of menstrual products access is a silent barrier sidelining them from school and sport. In 2025, no girl should have to sit out practice because she cant afford pads or tampons, or because shes embarrassed to ask for them. Period Project Indianapolis is breaking that silence, distributing free menstrual products and normalizing reproductive health conversations in locker rooms and communities.
Proper gear. For adolescent girls, a well-fitting sports bra can determine whether they stay engaged in sport. Athletes for Hope, partnering with Bras for Girls, provides gear and the education girls need while navigating puberty. Without this kind of intervention, physical discomfort and body image anxieties drive too many girls to drop out during adolescence.
Mental health support. Sports can be a powerful tool for wellbeing, but only when participation feels safe and inclusive. The pressures young athletes facebalancing academics and expectationscan weigh heavily. When stress or anxiety go unaddressed, sports can feel like another impossible demand. The initiative supports programs integrating mental health resources into athletics. The Skills Center in Tampa will use its funding to host a girls sports and empowerment festival, combining physical activity with mental health workshops for Black and Latina youth. Meanwhile, ZGiRLS will deliver sport psychology programming to help girls manage stress, anxiety, and family pressures during the holiday season.
Transportation. For many girls, the challenge isnt desire but logistics. Getting to practice is a barrier. Families without reliable transportation or parents working multiple jobs cant always shuttle daughters across town. Its a small obstacle with outsized consequencesoften ending in quiet resignation. Fisk University, home to the first HBCU womens gymnastics team, is working to overcome this hurdle.
Each factor might sound small in isolation, but together, they form a web of barriers pushing girls out of sports before they can realize their potential.
INNOVATION BEYOND THE GAME
In business, we talk endlessly about innovation. We laud breakthrough technologies and new markets. But what if innovation also meant tackling the overlooked barriers that keep people from participating in the first place?
Thats what these grantees are doing: rethinking how to support the game and the players. True innovation in womens sports identifies overlooked pain points and designs solutions rooted in empathy and equity. Theyre innovating at the most fundamental level.
The demand is massive. Gainbridge Assists Powered by Parity received over 380 applications this yearmore than double last years total. Each $5,000 grant seems modest, but the ripple effects are significant. In 1974, Billie Jean King founded the Womens Sports Foundation with the $5,000 check she received for being named the Outstanding Female Athlete of the Year by the Bob Hope Cavalcade of Sports. In 2024, the program helped more than 5,000 girls pursue their athletic and academic goals. With this years expanded funding, the reach will only grow.
THE PATH FORWARD
Just as the tech industry confronted its excuses about the so-called pipeline problem, we must confront ours in sports. We can no longer shrug and accept that girls just drop out. Not when we know the reasons, and not when the solutions are within reach.
Equity in womens sports must be defined broadly. Its not just about broadcasting more games or negotiating better contractsthough those remain crucial. Its also about removing the silent, practical, and cultural barriers that quietly push girls out long before they reach elite levels.
King famously said, You have to see it to be it. But before girls can see themselves as champions, they must be given the chance to stay on the field, the court, the track, or the ice. That requires meeting them where they are, addressing their most pressing needs, and ensuring they know they belong.
Leela Srinivasan is CEO of Parity.
In todays dynamic labor market, industries from manufacturing to healthcare continue to grapple with persistent workforce shortages. To fill these gaps, organizations are looking beyond traditional talent pools. One of the most promising yet significantly underutilized groups is second-chance talent, or graduates of prison education programs. These individuals represent millions of highly motivated and skilled professionals seeking stability after incarceration.
Too often, outdated hiring methods and social stigmas have blocked justice-impacted individuals from employment opportunities that could change their lives. However, by shifting perspectives and implementing strategic programs, forward-thinking companies can access a dependable source of skilled workers while creating a positive social impact.
THE SCALE OF UNTAPPED POTENTIAL
The United States criminal justice system affects a much larger portion of the population than most realize. About 600,000 Americans are released from state and local prisons each year. This means nearly one in three or 70 million adults have a criminal record. Many of these individuals face obstacles when reentering society. In a recent episode of Geographic Solutions podcast, The VOScast, Jeffrey Abramowitz, CEO of the Petey Greene Program, stated, It is estimated that there are more than 44,000 barriers to employment for the formerly incarcerated, with 70% related to employment.
Securing stable employment after prison is often the biggest challenge for justice-involved individuals. This is due to several factors, including a lack of education, nonexistent or inadequate job skills, and the stigma of having a criminal record, which often leads to higher rates of recidivism. According to the Safer Foundation, about 75% of justice-impacted individuals stay unemployed one year after their release. These barriers not only limit an individual’s potential but also represent a missed opportunity for employers facing labor shortages.
I think we’re missing an amazing opportunity right now in the country, and that opportunity is to recognize fair chance hiring or getting people who have been challenged in the Justice space back to work, said Abramowitz in the podcast. I also believe we’re missing an opportunity and not recognizing the reality that education plays a vital role in the United States.
BRIDGE SKILLS GAPS WITH TARGETED TRAINING PROGRAMS
The path to integrating individuals with a criminal record into the workforce begins with education and training. Reentry programs play a crucial role in helping justice-impacted individuals successfully reintegrate into society. They offer a variety of services tailored to meet the needs of those returning to the community.
These programs provide job training, educational opportunities, housing support, counseling, and soft and hard skills development. A study by the RAND Corporation found that reentry education programs may boost employment prospects post-release, with participants having a 13% higher chance of getting a job than non-participants.
Many of these individuals might struggle with reading, writing, and basic math, all of which are essential components for not only getting hired but also being able to advance their career, said Abramowitz in the podcast. When we talk about getting people back into employment and finding good opportunities for them, we also need to think about the integration of education and how we can set people up to succeed.
Many nonprofit organizations are creating tailored training programs to equip people with skills, knowledge, and opportunities that directly align with market needs. Organizations like the California Prison Industry Authority (CALPIA) have led innovative reentry initiatives, preparing justice-impacted individuals for productive lives outside of prison and reducing their chances of reoffending. A recent study from the University of California, Irvine found that individuals who have participated in CALPIAs programs while incarcerated have lower rates of recidivism compared to those who did not participate.
Similarly, the North Carolina Department of Adult Correction is partnering with the Division of Workforce Solutions at the Department of Commerce for the North Carolina Pathway to Reentry. Using funds from the Pathway Home grant, the project provides pre- and post-release activities, including workshops, counseling, and training to help people transition out of incarceration and reenter their communities. It focuses on goal setting, action plans, education, and skill development for specific jobs.
Creating easily accessible pathways for skill development and job training unlocks new opportunities that not only benefit those with a criminal background but also businesses that are looking to address labor shortages.
BUILD BRIDGES WITH EMPLOYERS
With many industries facing skill and labor shortages, companies are recognizing the value of this untapped workforce. According to the Society for Human Resource Management, two in three HR professionals reported that their organization has hired individuals with criminal backgrounds. Moreover, 85% of HR leaders believe second-chance hires perform as well as or better than other employees.
Despite this, some employers may hesitate to consider second-chance hiring due to concerns about liability, employee morale, perceived unreliability, and social stigmas. A recent survey from the Second Chance Business Coalition shows that almost 90% of employers mandate background checks for applicants, and having a criminal record decreases the likelihood of progressing to a second interview by half.
To successfully hire from this talent pool, employers must move beyond these stigmas and understand that second-chance hiring is more than a charitable act. By re-evaluating long-held hiring biases and actively engaging with this talent pool, organizations can transform a societal challenge into a strategic business advantage that benefits everyone.
Companies such as JPMorganChase and Dave’s Killer Bread are notable examples of organizations that have effectively implemented a second-chance employment model. JPMorganChase reports that almost 10% of their hires over the past five years have had a criminal record, and a third of Daves Killer Bread staff, including cofounder Dave Dahl, have felony convictions.
LOOKING AHEAD
The way forward to addressing labor shortages involves a shift in how businesses perceive and engage with talent acquisition. It requires a proactive approach to recognize justice-impacted individuals as highly motivated and skilled professionals capable of contributing to the workforce.
By adopting inclusive hiring practices, companies can effectively fill labor gaps while also fostering a more diverse workplace. This strategy not only promotes economic growth by expanding the talent pool but also benefits local communities by offering opportunities for individuals to successfully reintegrate into society and attain long-term stability.
Paul Toomey is the founder and president of Geographic Solutions.
On a recent Saturday, several hundred people flocked to Los Angeles International Airport and spent most of the day looking at airplanes — all because they follow the same airline-industry blog. That sentence may require some explanation even if youve read a post or two on Cranky Flier, the commercial-aviation chronicle written by industry veteran Brett Snyder.
The avgeek gathering Snyder calls Cranky Dorkfest began in 2011. Snyder, based nearby in Long Beach, decided to see if any of his readers — many of whom regularly show up in comments on his blog under aviation-related pseudonyms — wanted to meet up. So Snyder suggested a triangular park between LAXs Runway 24R and an In-N-Out Burger that offers some of Americas finest planespotting.
The original plan was really just me putting out a blog post saying that I was going to go to the park across from In-N-Out and hoped some people would join me for burgers, spotting, and conversation, Synder says in an email. A handful did. And then it just kept growing from there.
The idea took off because the notion of people meeting online over a shared fascination and then connecting IRL shouldn’t be that strange. Especially if their meeting point happens to revolve around their common interest.
Soon, airlines, flight-tracking apps and services, and Los Angeles World Airports (LAWA) started taking notice and finding ways to participate, perhaps because of or despite its self-mocking moniker of Dorkfest. (I got some raised eyebrows explaining the event to friends.)
“You have to own it, says Snyder, whose job title at his travel agency, Cranky Concierge, is president and chief airline dork.
Plane selfies
The 2025 edition of Dorkfest began early Sept. 13 at a ramp on the south side of the airport hosted by LAWA. The authority required attendees to register in advance; a week later, signups maxed out at 500.
Attendees had the treat of two parked airliners to be explored at length: American Airlines sent a Boeing 737-800 in its throwback Astrojet livery and Delta Air Lines loaned an Airbus A350-900. With almost everybody wanting a flight-deck selfie, boarding took awhile.
LAWA catered breakfast from the local favorite Randys Donuts and brought a DJ, who spun location- and subject-relevant tracks like A Tribe Called Quests I Left My Wallet In El Segundo and the Red Hot Chili Peppers Aeroplane.
A large fraction of the attendees ignored all of that to stand next to a fence separating the area from an active taxiway so they could take in the view of arrivals and departures on LAXs two southern runways — plus a Boeing 747-8 freighter operated by Cathay Pacific Cargo taxiing nearby.
I hope people have travel plans soon
A few hours later, it was time to head over to the In-N-Out thats become my favorite fast-food joint in the world. People opened ride-hailing apps for the short ride and waited for their Ubers and Lyfts to roll up, which is when I ran into a friend from grade and high school, an aviation lawyer I hadnt seen since March of 2020.
The lunchtime scene at this In-N-Out is always great, since that block overlaps with the start of a wave of arrivals of widebody jets from overseas. Even with a few hundred extra people added to the noon crowd, the place remained as marvelously efficient as Ive seen it in past visits to L.A.
As attendees cycled their gaze from flight-tracking apps to each Boeing 777 or Airbus A350 arriving from places like Shanghai, Paris, Rome or Singapore, Snyder conducted a raffle drawing, with prizes contributed by a flock of companies.
Struggling to be heard over the roar of jet engines even with the help of a megaphone, Snyder cracked jokes as he called out winners of such goodies as a subscription to the aviation-industry publication The Air Current, free tickets or frequent-flyer miles from various airlines (I hope people have travel plans soon, he said while awarding 20,000 points from bankrupt Spirit Airlines), models of planes, and bundles of airline swag.
One airline had a formal presence: Recently merged Alaska and Hawaiian Airlines sent reps to hand out their inflight snacks of pretzel mix, Biscoff cookies, and POG (passionfruit orange guava) juice to any attendees not already stuffed from animal style Double-Doubles.
Other years have seen more in-person airline participation. Snyder recalls 2019s Dorkfest, when United Airlines CEO Oscar Munoz showed up and handed out burgers.The day wrapped up with an event hosted by NYCAviatio at a food hall called the Proud Bird, situated across Aviation Boulevard from LAXs other pair of runways. The plane that drew the most cheers out of the audience was not any passenger airliner but a more esoteric airframe: a McDonnell-Douglas MD-11 freighter operated by FedEx, the final version in a series of triple-engine widebodies dating to the DC-10.
That New York aviation-enthusiast group had started its own annual SpotLAX meetup a few years after Dorkfest began, then opted to align that gathering with Snyders.
We realized we should keep doing that, Snyder says. It really increased the opportunities for people to participate and helped justify travel from further away to come join.
The two farthest origin points for 2025s Dorkfest, per a map at the Great Circle Mapper site generated from attendee input: Shizuoka, Japan and Haikou, China.
Most real-world meetups of online communities dont draw people from that far awaywith the exception of such high-profile gatherings as the NASA Socials that the space agency hosts for launches. On one I joined for the penultimate space shuttle launch in 2011, I was struck by how readily strangers agreed to coordinate on shared housing nd rental-car transportation. Often, these gatherings are much smaller-scale, like Wikipedia-editor meetups, the weekly happy hours coordinated by some local Reddit forums (see, for example, those at r/washingtondc) or just two members of the FlyerTalk frequent-travel forum recognizing each others yellow FT luggage tags in an airport lounge.
It may be weird showing up to these events. But embrace the weirdness and the chance to get to know strangers who maybe arent so distant from you.
As Snyder says: The best moments are meeting people who I’ve never seen other than in discussion online.