NYT published an article on Mukesh Ambani yesterday. A nice article which talks about Mukesh. I can't point a finger at it, but this article is very different from Mukesh's interviews I have seen or read. He is usually mild and humble. It doesn't seem so here. In this article he appears to be bossy and ruthless. Yes, ruthless. The writer mentions that by putting words into anonymous sources' mouths. The whole article seems skewed because at each paragraph the writer quotes anonymous friends and sources, who are afraid to spoil their relationship with Mukesh, creating a phobia about Mukesh. I could come across six instances of this being repeated. This writer effectively turned Mukesh into a devil, oligarch and ruthless. A mediocre piece from NYT, sad.
In his recent book, Clear and to the Point, Kosslyn explained that the four rules of PowerPoint are: The Goldilocks Rule, The Rudolph Rule, The Rule of Four, and the Birds of a Feather Rule. Here's how they work. The Goldilocks Rule refers to presenting the "just right" amount of data. Never include more information than your audience needs in a visual image. As an example, Kosslyn showed two graphs of real estate prices over time. One included ten different numbers, one for each year. The other included two numbers: a peak price, and the current price. For the purposes of a presentation about today's prices relative to peak price, those numbers were the only ones necessary. The Rudolph Rule refers to simple ways you can make information stand out and guide your audience to important details -- the way Rudolph the reindeer's red nose stood out from the other reindeers' and led them. If you're presenting a piece of relevant data in a list, why not mak...
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