
From Strength to Strength: Cascale's Path Forward
Read the full blog, titled: From Strength to Strength: Cascale's Path Forward
Visit 3BL Media to see more multimedia and stories from Cascale
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
32 minutes ago
- Forbes
Don't Let AI Be Your Career Coach
With everyone all tied up in AI-induced knots, worried about their jobs, and concerned about the reliability of AI to begin with, it boggles the mind that so many people have flirted with or worse, committed to AI as a source of career coaching. The come-ons are enticing, creating the impression of infallibility to everything including Kryptonite. There's only one problem, though, That's about as likely to be successful as a robot at a wine tasting. As an independent career and executive coach for the past 28 years, I find the whole thing laughable. Staying up with the times for the sake of progress is one thing; change for change's sake rarely passes muster. Coaching: Linear or Intuitive This conflict between AI algorithms and human wisdom is the crux of the matter. I've coached thousands of people, delivered workshops to tens of thousands, and written articles which have been read by millions. Yet every single person makes a unique impression on me. That's how I learn. To me and countless other coaches, this coaching thing is much more intuitive than you might think. It's a distinctly right-brained process. But is also imprecise. A great coach is an artist Career coaching is more an art than a science; it is more intuitive than it is empirical; it works more on hunches and accumulated experience than on proofs and strictly rational systems of thought. Career coaches who consider themselves scientists are fooling themselves. We are, hopefully, artists – and when we do our jobs well, we produce good work. But it is imprecise. As such, this state of being requires mutual faith – a kind of partnership in belief between the coach and the coached, a shared vision toward which both work. Both must subscribe. Both must be comfortable with the unknown, with ambiguity, with uncertainty. But both must be optimistic, hopeful, and proactive. And while this remains imprecise, it works. Half a century ago, Harold Geneen, CEO and chairman of ITT when it was the largest conglomerate in the world, said, 'Leadership cannot be taught; it can only be learned.' Today, it's the same thing with coaching. Perspective and Experience This thought has given me an uusual perpective. Over the last 28 years, I've coached people from 17 to 82 years old (yes, 82 – really); from the executive suite to the assembly line; from the classroom to the boardroom; from the military and law enforcement to the ex-con looking for a new start; from the private sector to the public and non-profit sectors; from construction and manufacturing to biotech; from science and medicine to sports and leisure; from logistics and transportation to journalism and publishing. I coached people in dozens of industries, with hundreds of job titles and thousands of job descriptions. I've learned from each one, gaining experience and perspective. AI hasn't figured out how to do that. What I've learned as a career coach – more than anything else – is that success almost never comes in one giant leap, but almost always as a result of small steps. It takes perspective and experience – and those traits still belong to us humans alone. Don't let AI be your career coach.


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
Advent Seeks to Buy Swiss Chipmaker U-blox in $1.3 Billion Deal
Advent International offered to buy U-blox Holding AG, a Swiss maker of positioning chips, in a deal valued at about 1.05 billion Swiss francs ($1.3 billion). Advent's cash offer of 135 Swiss francs per share, while representing a 53% premium over volume-weighted averages of the last six months, is less than U-blox's closing price of 138.60 Swiss francs on Friday.


Wall Street Journal
3 hours ago
- Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Journals' News Archive for August 17, 2025
Find what you're looking for Search for topics like "tariffs", your favorite authors, companies or even a more specific query like "dollar's role as a reserve currency".