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Stepping Out On Faith: The Catch 22 of Business Growth
Hebrews 11:1 calls faith "the substance of things hoped for." Every business investment is a leap into the unseen — but the timing question matters more than the courage question. Drawing on Hipkins and Cowie's sigmoid curve and Thomas Malthus's carrying capacity, this article argues the ideal moment to innovate, hire, or expand is the midpoint of the growth phase, not the moment of decline. The Catch 22: the time to bet big is when you don't need the cards to flop right.

Dr. David Macauley
9 min read


Corporate Mobility
Remote work untethered companies from their zip codes. In 2020 alone, Dropbox, Splunk, Palantir, Oracle, Tesla, and Apple expanded or moved operations to Austin, and Manhattan and Silicon Valley felt the pressure. When firms can pick up and move, relocation stops being a real estate decision and becomes a leadership one. Employees respond to three things: personal impact, compensation, and meaningful rationale. Cost savings alone won't earn the followership a move requires.

Dr. David Macauley
6 min read


No I in Team? Think again
The old saying insists there is no I in team. Recent research in the Academy of Management Journal disagrees, and the I that matters is the one that determines whether interdependent teams share information or hoard it. Team-focused employees share with teams like them. System-focused employees share with everyone. Culture follows identity. Identity follows leadership rhetoric. Shifting from "need to know" to "duty to inform" is where that culture change starts.

Dr. David Macauley
4 min read
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