@mitchjoel has defined one of the biggest issues of the day in simple economic terms: AI slop is a supply-side problem… brain rot is a demand-side collapse (and much more human). https://t.co/GF9zEQOlyI
If your New Years' resolutions are already starting to falter, maybe you need to tweak your design: Designing For Sustainable Change https://t.co/s4znJ2yJkv #strategicdesign#designforhealth#healthdesign
High-performing people don’t go it alone.
Athletes, artists, chess masters all rely on coaches—people who see what they can’t.
Leaders in health & social impact are no different.
Coaching isn’t a luxury or weakness. It’s how clarity is built in complexity.
See 2026 with new eyes.
Let’s talk: https://t.co/izHD53ynam
Health Innovation comes from knowing how to create something people pay attention to and works. The latest Design Loft lesson is on this connection: Distinctiveness and Design https://t.co/GMZO9zcBBE #healthinnovation#designthinking
I love this piece -- it shows how we've convinced ourselves that a great meal or evening out is due to the chef. But it's the entire team. The greatest dish in the world cannot survive bad service https://t.co/OyV5Jvy1KF
Listening to this podcast episode from @Marketplace on 'algospeak' makes me think our language is devolving into an attention-driven toilet bowl along with everything else that's algorithm/attention driven https://t.co/a0g5uYa4m4
Good advice doesn’t always come from people close to you. It comes from people who want what's best for you.
When people are trying to influence you or please you, they tend to give biased suggestions.
The most reliable sources of wisdom are people who put your interests first.
What is strategic design and how does it bring together systems thinking, evaluation, planning and evaluation? Find out >
https://t.co/SmumKVTJQK #systemsthinking#strategicdesign
The winner of the #NMA25 Editor Grand Prix is @taimhuynh! For their work with @thelocal.to! The jury said: "Tai Huynh is a shining example of what it means to be an editor in contemporary Canadian journalism."