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Bikes, beds and bookings: Classified Moto revs up new garage-venue-hotel hybrid - Richmond BizSense


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(Slideshow photos by Adam Ewing)

In a career path that's taken him from writing ads to building motorbikes, John Ryland can now add another title to his resumé: hotelier.

The owner of local custom bike shop Classified Moto has relocated the company's garage from its previously secret spot in Manchester to a renovated building a few blocks away that moonlights as... a boutique hotel and events space.

The move was prompted by the construction of The Navigator Apartments, a 5-story building at 103 E. Second St. that replaced the 1800s-era mule barn that Ryland had used as Classified Moto's underground HQ.

At the same time, after 15 years in business, the move prompted Ryland to make the shop less secret and bring Classified Moto out in the open, while also opening up new business opportunities with the bigger building at 1000 E. Fourth St.

Having previously hosted karaoke parties and other gatherings at the old garage, Ryland said he'd been considering adding a retail or social component to the new shop. With the 10,000-square-foot Fourth Street building providing more room to work with, Ryland had the idea of renting out the excess space for lodging and events.

John Ryland in the lobby of Classified Moto's new digs. (Jonathan Spiers photo)

"I'd always thought maybe I'd have a coffee shop or retail thing one day, but I don't drink coffee, so it didn't really enthuse me," Ryland said.

"We've got 130,000 followers on Instagram, so I'm like, a lot of people will come to see (the shop). But maybe 2% of the people that come actually know anything about the bikes," he said. "That's kind of good and bad. I wished I was getting more from the people who know us, but the people who don't really like it."

Originally an office for the neighboring industrial complex now used by Kinsley and Hanover Iron Works, the 57-year-old Fourth Street building was previously owned by Estes Express Lines, which bought it in 1996, renovated it and later rented it to a local drug enforcement task force, Ryland said.

Working with Fultz & Singh Architects and UrbanCore Construction, Ryland set out to renovate the building with a mid-century modern aesthetic and motorcycle accents and references throughout. Motorbike pictures and props fill the five guest rooms, one of which is named The Minibike Room. The hotel rooms also feature lamps that Ryland made from motorcycle parts.

He manages the property with his wife, Alex Scheer, whom he met during his time as a copywriter and art director at The Martin Agency. Ryland launched Classified Moto in 2009 and, after getting laid off from Martin the following year, made it his primary gig.

Ryland is leasing the building through a rent-to-own arrangement with Boris Besler, a Classified Moto customer in Germany whom Ryland befriended and became a financial backer when the shop was forced to move.

"I told him we're getting kicked out of our space so we're looking for a new space. He said, 'Why don't we just buy one?' 'Because I don't have money,'" Ryland recalled, laughing.

"We just liked each other and never had any idea that something like this would come from it. That's why I'm so interested in the community part of it now, because that's when cool stuff starts to happen."

A balcony was added to the building, which is across the railroad tracks from the Kinsley steel plant. (Adam Ewing photo)

Besler purchased the 2-story building in 2022 for $850,000, and Ryland is paying that down monthly over 10 years, after which he said he could either buy Besler out or they could sell the building and split the profit.

"I'm 56 now, so I feel like by the time I'm 66, I'll be ready to hopefully make some money," Ryland said. Noting spillover expected from the development boom in Manchester, he added, "Everything's moving this way, so it's kind of like a real estate deal."

The building's hotel rooms are rented through Airbnb, though Ryland noted that he and his wife have a hotel license and the rooms are classified as tourist dwelling units. Nightly rates range from $180 to $250.

The upstairs events space features a stage for karaoke and bands, a bar and commercial kitchen, and a 40-foot balcony with views of the city skyline. Ryland said the space is ideal for weddings - he and Scheer had their wedding there - as well as family reunions, retreats and other events.

Rates for the events space start at $225 per hour with a four-hour minimum. The building's lobby and other common areas are also available to rent.

Parking around the building is enclosed by a security fence that Ryland added after the building was tagged with graffiti. Guests access the site with codes that open the gate and the front door.

Ryland said the renovation took two and a half years to complete and cost over $3 million.

"Which is way more than what we thought it was going to be," he said. "The original estimate to do what we wanted to do was $750,000. Everybody was like, 'Yeah, I think we can do this,' and then everything just snowballed."

He said the project required installing a new fire hydrant on the property and extending water lines out to the street. Other higher dollar costs included the balcony, sprinkler systems, and an elevator-like vertical platform lift that was needed to bring the building to code.

Ryland and Scheer opened the hotel and events space quietly about a year ago and said bookings have been pretty steady since then.

"The weekends have been really good pretty much ever since we opened, but we've got more people staying on weekdays, which is what I was hoping for," Ryland said. "If I can get the weekdays full all the time, then I can hire a manager."

The new garage in the building where Ryland makes his creations. (Jonathan Spiers photo)

The building marks a new chapter for Classified Moto, which upped its profile a decade ago when one of its bikes was featured on "The Walking Dead" TV show. Its client roster has included actor Norman Reedus, actress Katee Sackhoff and others. Last year, its bikes were featured in a five-week exhibition at Richmond's Branch Museum of Design.

While his bike-building was largely put on hold during the renovation, Ryland said he was able to fit in a few builds, including one for a customer in Dubai.

"I had a couple builds that were in the middle of happening when we got kicked out of our spot, so I just had to try to put my customers' minds at ease, and they were luckily really patient," he said. "I haven't been taking on builds until recently. This has just been all-consuming for three years now."

With the building open, Ryland said he's been focusing on getting the word out and has received enthusiastic responses from folks once they see it.

"Everybody I've shown so far is like, 'I had no idea this was over there.' Which is embarrassing," he said, "because I was in advertising so long."

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Why "Critical Thinking" Became a Buzzword Instead of a Skill


"Strong critical thinker."

You've seen the phrase everywhere.

On résumés.

In job descriptions.

In school mission statements.

In policy documents.

In performance reviews.

It's one of those terms that signals seriousness. Maturity. Intelligence.

To say you value critical thinking is to place yourself on the "reasonable" side of things.

And yet.

The more often the phrase appears, the less... clear it becomes what anyone actually means by it.

That's not an accident.

And it's not because people stopped caring about thinking well.

Something more subtle happened.

We didn't lose the skill. We changed how we talked about it.

Most conversations about critical thinking start in the wrong place.

They assume the problem is educational.

Or generational.

Or personal.

That people aren't trained enough.

Or aren't trying hard enough.

Or are too distracted.

That framing feels intuitive. It's also misleading.

Critical thinking didn't disappear.

It didn't suddenly become rare.

It got outsourced to language.

When a skill becomes a slogan, institutions stop cultivating it and start assuming it.

That's the shift worth paying attention to.

Familiarity can hide decay

The phrase "critical thinking" feels stable because it's familiar.

It's been around for decades.

It sounds academic.

It feels neutral and virtuous.

But familiarity has a strange side effect: it lowers curiosity.

When something is mentioned often enough, we stop asking what it actually refers to. We nod. We move on. We assume alignment.

In workplaces, "critical thinking" often means:

- You can question things -- as long as the conclusion aligns with leadership.

- You can analyze data -- as long as it supports the existing direction.

- You can raise concerns -- as long as they don't slow momentum.

In education, it often becomes:

- A line in a syllabus.

- A checkbox in an outcomes list.

- A word that floats above assignments without shaping how they're evaluated.

The term survives.

The practice thins.

And because everyone agrees the skill is important, no one notices the gap forming.

A pattern that shows up in interviews

This gap becomes especially visible in hiring.

Over the years, working as a Solutions Architect in the IT industry, I've interviewed candidates for multiple companies. Different roles. Different seniority levels. Different tech stacks.

One pattern repeats almost every time.

"Critical thinking" appears on a large number of résumés.

Sometimes prominently.

Sometimes grouped with communication and problem-solving.

Sometimes framed as a defining strength.

After technical discussions, I would often ask a simple, open-ended question about it. Not to test or trap -- just to understand how the candidate thought about the skill they had claimed.

What came back was rarely clarity.

Not because the candidates lacked intelligence.

Not because they were unprepared.

And not because they didn't care about thinking well.

But because the term itself had become detached from practice.

It was a signal they had learned to use, not a process they had been asked to describe.

That moment isn't a failure of individuals.

It's a symptom of how the language now functions.

The quiet shift: from practice to trait

There was a time when critical thinking was treated as something you developed.

It showed up in:

- How arguments were challenged.

- How assumptions were surfaced.

- How tradeoffs were discussed.

- How uncertainty was handled.

It was visible in behavior.

Then something changed.

Critical thinking slowly became a trait instead of a practice.

You either "had it" or you didn't.

You claimed it, or you were assumed to lack it.

It moved from verbs to labels.

Once that happens, environments stop doing the hard work.

Why design systems that reward careful dissent if everyone is already a critical thinker?

Why slow decisions down if rigor is assumed by default?

Why create space for doubt if confidence is easier to measure?

Language became cheaper than structure.

And cheaper things tend to win.

What breaks when everyone claims the skill

When a skill is widely claimed but rarely reinforced, predictable things start to happen.

Decision-making becomes performative.

People learn how to sound analytical without actually challenging underlying assumptions.

Disagreement becomes shallow.

Surface-level objections replace deeper questioning, because deeper questioning carries social risk.

Overconfidence rises.

If you're surrounded by people who all identify as critical thinkers, it becomes harder to admit uncertainty without feeling incompetent.

Conformity gets disguised as independent thought.

Shared conclusions feel earned, even when the process that led to them was narrow.

None of this requires bad intentions.

It emerges naturally when environments reward speed, alignment, and confidence more than depth, friction, and reflection.

The tragedy is that the word "critical thinking" remains present the entire time -- giving everyone plausible deniability.

This isn't about intelligence or effort

At this point, it's tempting to turn the critique inward.

To say people are lazy.

Or incurious.

Or insufficiently trained.

That move feels satisfying. It's also incomplete.

Thinking quality is not just an individual property.

It's an environmental outcome.

People think better when:

- Disagreement isn't punished.

- Slowing down doesn't signal incompetence.

- Admitting uncertainty doesn't reduce status.

- Changing your mind doesn't look like weakness.

Remove those conditions, and even very capable people will default to safer, shallower forms of reasoning.

Not because they don't know how to think critically -- but because the environment quietly teaches them not to.

If this framing resonates with you, following the thread here may be worth your time.

Why the buzzword persists anyway

If the term causes so much confusion, why does it stick around?

Because it's useful.

It allows institutions to signal values without changing incentives.

It allows leaders to demand rigor without tolerating friction.

It allows individuals to claim intellectual seriousness without risking social cost.

Buzzwords thrive when they create agreement without accountability.

"Critical thinking" is especially good at this because everyone wants to be associated with it -- and no one wants to be the person accused of lacking it.

So the word stays.

The practice becomes optional.

A different way to see the problem

The issue isn't that we need better definitions of critical thinking.

Definitions don't change behavior.

Environments do.

The more useful question isn't "How do we teach people to think critically?"

It's "What kinds of systems make critical thinking unavoidable?"

Systems where:

- Questioning alters outcomes.

- Dissent has consequences -- but not penalties.

- Depth is visible and valued.

- Silence isn't mistaken for agreement.

When those conditions exist, the skill shows up naturally.

When they don't, no amount of language can compensate.

Ending with clarity, not advice

It's worth noticing how often we reach for "critical thinking" as a comforting phrase.

We use it to reassure ourselves that rigor exists.

That someone, somewhere, is thinking carefully.

That complexity is being handled.

But words can only carry so much weight.

When a skill becomes a slogan, it stops doing the work we assign to it.

And the longer we rely on the label, the harder it becomes to notice what's missing underneath.

Seeing that shift clearly doesn't fix the problem.

But it does change how you hear the phrase the next time it appears.

And sometimes, that quiet reframing is where real thinking begins.

If this helped you see a familiar phrase differently, you'll likely enjoy what comes next.
 
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    4

Men's Bubble Watch: Virginia Tech gets biggest victory yet with Clemson upset


Neil Paine writes about sports using data and analytics. Previously, he was Sports Editor at FiveThirtyEight.

The 2026 men's NCAA tournament is rapidly approaching, which means the question top of mind for many fans is: Will your team be in or out? They have roughly five weeks until Selection Sunday to strengthen their case. Until then, we're here to track how each team on the "bubble" of the... bracket is trending.

We'll use a variety of metrics as guides, classifying teams based on how likely they are to make the field of 68 as one of the 37 at-large selections -- conditional on not winning their respective conference tournaments for one of the 31 automatic qualifying bids (AQs). To that end, we'll use Joe Lunardi's Bracketology projections and a combination of data sources -- including my forecast-model consensus and NCAA résumé metrics such as NET rankings that the selection committee will evaluate -- to judge a team's underlying potential. (For a full glossary of terms and sources, click here or scroll to the bottom of this story.)

We'll sort teams in at-large contention into the following categories:

* Locks: Teams that would need a significant change in momentum to miss the cut (which some inevitably still will). 29 current teams

* Should be in: Teams tracking safely above the cutline, if not immune to trouble. Most likely, these teams should hear their names called March 15, though their fates are not yet assured. 12 current teams

* Work to do: Teams whose upcoming results will meaningfully change their fate (for good or bad). These are the truest "on the bubble" teams, because their chances are closest to a coin flip. 16 current teams

* Long shots: Teams that would need to outperform expectations or benefit from chaos. There is little -- though not zero -- chance these ones will make the Big Dance without winning their conference tournament.

Let's go conference by conference -- in order of which project to have the most NCAA tournament bids -- to rank the teams in each category based on their chances to secure an at-large bid.

Note: All times Eastern. Only expected at-large bids are listed; each conference will receive one additional berth with an AQ.

Jump to a conference:

Big Ten | SEC | ACC

Big 12 | Big East

Mid-majors

BIG TEN

9.8 expected bids; 8.8 at-large

Locks (5)

Michigan Wolverines

Illinois Fighting Illini

Purdue Boilermakers

Nebraska Cornhuskers

Michigan State Spartans

Should be in (4)

Iowa Hawkeyes

Updated: Feb. 11, 8:24 p.m.

With a chance to run its win streak to seven games, Iowa instead fell short against Maryland on Wednesday. The Hawkeyes still own a conditional at-large probability in the mid-90% range, and a résumé inside the top 30 nationally, so the road loss only stalls their momentum for now. Helping coach Ben McCollum's team is the fact that it's borderline top 25 in our average of predictive ratings, which in turn raises its potential going forward. Iowa's schedule does get more difficult, though, jumping from 64th so far to ninth from here on nationally (fourth hardest in the Big Ten), according to the BPI.

Next game: vs. Purdue (Saturday)

Wisconsin Badgers

Updated: Feb. 10, 10:24 p.m.

After trailing by double digits with seven minutes left in regulation, Wisconsin rallied to force overtime at Illinois on Tuesday, eventually scoring an impressive win behind 49 combined points from John Blackwell and Nick Boyd. The victory was the Badgers' second Quadrant 1A win of the season, which improves a résumé that otherwise sits around 40th in the national consensus ranking (ninth in a Big Ten currently tracking for 10 bids). Their schedule doesn't let up after the trip to Champaign, with three more Quadrant 1 contests still coming up. More wins over that stretch could further solidify their at-large case.

Next game: vs. Michigan State (Friday)

Indiana Hoosiers

Updated: Feb. 10, 7:20 a.m.

Darling of the forecast models -- which now average out to a conditional at-large probability in the mid-80% range despite the team's borderline top-40 résumé ranking -- Indiana bolstered its chances with a thrilling overtime win over Wisconsin on Saturday, then rolled all over Oregon on Monday. The latter was the Hoosiers' fifth victory in six games, a stretch that includes three wins over opponents in Quadrants 1 and 2. With only the eighth-hardest remaining schedule in the Big Ten and a top-30 ranking in the predictive metrics, the Hoosiers have a good path to the tourney in front of them.

Next game: at Illinois (Sunday)

UCLA Bruins

Updated: Feb. 8, 8:02 a.m.

The Bruins recently saw their 14-game home win streak snapped in double overtime against Indiana, but they've gotten right back to winning with consecutive victories over Rutgers and, on Saturday, Washington. In the big picture, their résumé ranks in the mid-40s nationally and 10th in the Big Ten, though that might be underselling their chances. The forecast model composite thinks they're more likely to get a bid than not (76%) on the basis of two Quadrant 1 wins -- a better predictive rating than their résumé gives them credit for -- and a future projection that calls for them to end up above 20 wins on the season. That said, many high-leverage games remain for UCLA, and it faces the Big Ten's third-toughest remaining schedule.

Next game: at Michigan (Saturday)

Work to do (3)

Ohio State Buckeyes

Updated: Feb. 12, 7:14 a.m.

Bouncing back from Sunday's lopsided home loss to Michigan, the Buckeyes won Wednesday's clash with USC to help raise their at-large chances above 60% again. They still sit right on the bubble, ranking mid-40s in the national résumé rankings, and 11th in what is looking like a 10-bid Big Ten. They are also 0-7 against Quadrant 1 opponents, making them less sure of a tournament-bound team than they seemed to be earlier in the season. But they're also better than their current résumé indicates, ranking borderline top 40 in the predictive ratings. The victory over USC is a step in a better direction, and now the Buckeyes will try to compile what has been too rare of a sight this season: a winning streak.

Next game: vs. Virginia (Saturday)

USC Trojans

Updated: Feb. 12, 7:14 a.m.

Behind the play of freshman star Alijah Arenas, USC's recent win streak helped pad its bubble case. But in a crucial visit to Ohio State on Wednesday, the Trojans were unable to hang on to a second-half lead, which sliced their at-large chances below 60%. If the season ended today, they would still likely secure one of the Big Ten's last entries with the eighth-best résumé ranking in what's tracking to be a 10-bid conference. Of course, their main problem remains future results. which is why the models are less bullish. USC is a high-40s team in the predictive ratings, with the nation's 23rd most difficult remaining schedule. The next three weeks will be a wild ride for Eric Musselman's team.

Next game: vs. Illinois (Wednesday)

Long shots

Washington Huskies

SEC

9.5 expected bids (8.5 at-large)

Locks (6)

Florida Gators

Vanderbilt Commodores

Alabama Crimson Tide

Arkansas Razorbacks

Tennessee Volunteers

Kentucky Wildcats

Should be in (3)

Auburn Tigers

Updated: Feb. 10, 9:17 p.m.

A couple of weeks ago, Auburn was multiple games above .500 in the SEC and was nearing "lock" territory in the model consensus. But three straight losses -- albeit to a trio of tough opponents in Tennessee, Alabama and Vanderbilt -- have complicated the pace of that trajectory. If we zoom out, the Tigers do have four Quadrant 1 wins (including one 1A) against the nation's fourth-most-difficult schedule per the BPI, and they remain mid-30s in the national résumé ranking average. That means there's still cushion to work with, though the BPI is projecting them to barely clear 18 wins. They will be a fascinating litmus test for how much the committee values schedule strength.

Next game: at Arkansas (Saturday)

Georgia Bulldogs

Updated: Feb. 11, 9:15 p.m.

Georgia picked up a much-needed win in Saturday's visit to LSU, but Florida made quick work of the Dawgs on Wednesday to hand them their fourth loss in five games. Still in the mid-to-high 30s of the overall résumé rankings -- with a quartet of wins against the BPI top 50 -- they are still eighth in résumé average amid what is looking like a nine- or 10-bid SEC, so their at-large chances remain solid despite the recent losses. But a jump from 67th-hardest strength of schedule nationally to 21st moving forward could portend even more losses from here.

Next game: at Oklahoma (Saturday)

Texas A&M Aggies

Updated: Feb. 12, 7:24 a.m.

Trying to stop their first losing streak of the season since November, Texas A&M fell again at home to conference bubble rival Missouri on Wednesday night. The skid has sent A&M's consensus at-large odds tumbling from 90% to 74% in the past week, though most of the models in the forecast average still consider the Aggies to be in OK shape (70% or higher) for an at-large bid. They are projected by the BPI to finish the regular season with around 21 wins, which should be enough to make the tournament. They're still living on the edge, however, ranked ninth in the résumé ranking average out of what could be as few as nine tournament-bound teams from the SEC -- and the gap between them and 10th-ranked Texas has shrunk.

Next game: at Vanderbilt (Saturday)

Work to do (2)

Texas Longhorns

Updated: Feb. 7, 5:34 p.m.

Despite ranking in the mid-30s of the predictive metrics nationally, Sean Miller's team is in a tough numbers game after a handful of early defeats in SEC play. The Longhorns seem to be moving in the right direction, though, with three straight wins (and four in five). That includes Saturday's victory over Ole Miss, courtesy of a game-ending 14-0 run that turned a three-point deficit into an 11-point win over the final 3½ minutes. They are still 10th in the conference in the résumé rankings (around 50th nationally), and their schedule strength jumps from 64th hardest looking back to 19th hardest going forward. Three Quadrant 1 wins, including two for Quadrant 1A, are helpful, but the Horns need to either keep the winning streak going against a tough set of opponents, or hope the SEC gets 10 bids.

Next game: at Missouri (Saturday)

Missouri Tigers

Updated: Feb. 12, 7:32 a.m.

After a recent cold stretch, the Tigers won their third straight game (and fourth in five) with a comeback win over Texas A&M in College Station on Wednesday, courtesy of Shawn Phillips Jr.'s go-ahead dunk and game-saving block in the final 20 seconds. They still rank just 11th among SEC teams in the résumé average -- a tough spot to be in with the conference projected for 10 tournament entries at most. Mizzou does have a pair of Quadrant 1A wins (Florida and Kentucky) and five against the BPI top 50. But even if its résumé is on par with that of Texas, Missouri is much lower in the predictive metrics. Saturday's game against the Longhorns in Columbia looms large.

Next game: vs. Texas (Saturday)

Long shots

LSU Tigers

Ole Miss Rebels

Oklahoma Sooners

ACC

8.1 expected bids; 7.1 at-large

Locks (6)

Duke Blue Devils

Louisville Cardinals

Virginia Cavaliers

North Carolina Tar Heels

Clemson Tigers

NC State Wolfpack

Should be in (2)

SMU Mustangs

Updated: Feb. 10, 9:09 p.m.

The Mustangs bounced back from consecutive losses, including an especially tough one hosting NC State, with a pair of wins over Pittsburgh and Notre Dame to help stabilize their trajectory. Even after the recent losses, SMU still ranked seventh best in what should be an eight-bid ACC on résumé. And although they are seventh in the ACC (34th nationally) in the predictive ranking, they have the nation's 74th-hardest remaining schedule. That's good for managing a status quo that likely resides above the bubble if the bracket was set today -- especially if they can add another résumé win or two, which they'll have a handful more chances to do before the regular season ends.

Next game: at Syracuse (Saturday)

Miami Hurricanes

Updated: Feb. 11, 7:58 a.m.

The Hurricanes' chances had dipped with recent losses at Clemson (excusable) and to FSU and Cal at home (less so), but a return to the win column against Boston College followed by a huge, résumé-boosting victory over North Carolina has their tournament chances back on the rise. Miami is hardly a lock -- it has a low-40s résumé quality nationally (eighth in the ACC) -- but its consensus model at-large odds are now into the 70s. Which makes it more of a "should be in" team than a "work to do" team, for now. The BPI has the Canes facing the 59th-hardest remaining schedule in the nation, with four more chances to score Quadrant 1 wins.

Next game: at NC State (Saturday)

Work to do (2)

Virginia Tech Hokies

Updated: Feb. 11, 9:21 p.m.

Unlike on Saturday, when the Hokies could not overcome NC State on the road, they scored a huge road win over another Quadrant 1A foe with an upset at Clemson on Wednesday. It was their third Quadrant 1 win of the season -- and first Quadrant 1A victory -- helping to boost a résumé rating that threatened to drop out of the top 50. Conditional at-large chances below 40% still suggest they are tracking to miss the field without additional résumé boosters, in part because they only rank mid-50s in the predictive metrics. But a win in the highest-leverage game of Wednesday's slate, per BartTorvik, absolutely helped their case.

Next game: vs. Florida State (Saturday)

California Golden Bears

Updated: Feb. 11, 9:47 p.m.

Recent wins over North Carolina, Stanford, Miami and Georgia Tech vaulted Cal into bubble territory, but back-to-back losses to Clemson, then Syracuse in double overtime -- the latter of which happened amid a city-wide power outage -- splashed cold water on the Golden Bears' hopes. They still sit in the borderline top 50 on the résumé ranking, have four Quadrant 1 wins (including one Quadrant 1A) and face the ACC's second-easiest remaining schedule. But with a consensus at-large probability tumbling toward the single digits, the Bears truly do have "work to do" (and not much time to do it).

Next game: at Boston College (Saturday)

Long shots

Stanford Cardinal

Wake Forest Demon Deacons

BIG 12

7.4 expected bids (6.4 at-large)

Locks (6)

Arizona Wildcats

Houston Cougars

Kansas Jayhawks

Iowa State Cyclones

Texas Tech Red Raiders

BYU Cougars

Should be in (1)

UCF Knights

Updated: Feb. 8, 4:15 p.m.

With so many of the conference's expected bids being effective locks -- the six teams listed above each have 100% conditional at-large odds in the model consensus -- the Big 12 bubble picture really comes down to which team could be the seventh in. The Knights remain in the driver's seat for that slot despite back-to-back losses at Houston and Cincinnati over the past week. They rank around 30th in the résumé average, while only one other non-lock Big 12 team (Oklahoma State) is even in the top 50. Despite the recent defeats, the Knights are still tracking for more than 20 wins and will get the chance to regroup and bolster their tournament chances against a more winnable sequence of upcoming games against West Virginia, TCU and Utah.

Next game: vs. West Virginia (Saturday)

Work to do (3)

TCU Horned Frogs

Updated: Feb. 11, 7:58 a.m.

After a recent losing skid in Big 12 play, the Horned Frogs responded with a win over K-State and, on Tuesday, a big résumé-boosting upset win over Iowa State at home. Their case is now getting interesting: Although they sit with just 31% at-large odds after beating the Cyclones, they have four Quadrant 1 wins (including a pair of Quadrant 1A wins over Florida and Iowa State), and a couple more Quadrant 1 games coming up against Oklahoma State and UCF, in the Big 12's third-easiest remaining schedule (51st hardest nationally). Winning those would add more to their portfolio.

Next game: at Oklahoma State (Saturday)

Oklahoma State Cowboys

Updated: Feb. 11, 8:05 a.m.

The Cowboys followed Saturday's lopsided loss at the nation's No. 1 team, Arizona, with another loss Tuesday to Arizona State -- where they fell behind early and never could close the gap. Their previous upset of BYU had them creeping toward the top 40 in the résumé ranking -- still eighth best in the conference in that regard -- and just on the edge of how many bids the Big 12 could have. That said, the models remain comparatively low on Oklahoma State because its predictive ranking (now outside the top 60) is so much worse than those of some of its bubble rivals. It also faces the conference's third-toughest remaining schedule.

Next game: vs. TCU (Saturday)

West Virginia Mountaineers

Updated: Feb. 8, 3:15 p.m.

WVU certainly faces an uphill climb to get back to the tournament for the first time since 2023, and Sunday's loss at home to Texas Tech gave back some of the gains from Thursday's win at Cincinnati. The model consensus gives the Mountaineers just around a 10% at-large shot on average, and they reside outside the top 60 in the résumé rankings. West Virginia does have two wins against Quadrant 1 foes -- including one against Quadrant 1A Kansas last month -- but they sit below Baylor and TCU in the predictive ranking. WVU will get four more chances to add Quadrant 1 wins and will need to win some of them to get closer to a tourney-bound track.

Next game: at UCF (Saturday)

Long shots

Baylor Bears

Cincinnati Bearcats

Arizona State Sun Devils

BIG EAST

3.2 expected bids (2.2 at-large)

Locks (3)

UConn Huskies

St. John's Red Storm

Villanova Wildcats

Should be in (0)

None

Work to do (1)

Seton Hall Pirates

Updated: Feb. 11, 9:27 p.m.

Just when the season seemed to be slipping away from Shaheen Holloway and his team with six losses in eight games, the Pirates outlasted Providence on Wednesday in a game with exactly one lead change -- midway through the second half. They still have a steep hill to climb, entering the day with only slightly above 10% at-large chances in the forecast composite, sitting outside the top 50 nationally in résumé average with only a single Quadrant 1 win (against NC State). An at-large bid will be hard to argue for if the Big East receives only three bids, which is the current Bracketology expectation, though the Pirates have a few more high-profile chances left to make their case.

Next game: at Butler (Sunday)

Long shots

Creighton Bluejays

OTHERS

Locks (3)

Gonzaga Bulldogs (West Coast Conference)

Saint Louis Billikens (Atlantic 10)

Utah State Aggies (Mountain West)

Should be in (2)

Saint Mary's Gaels (WCC)

Updated: Feb. 12, 7:54 a.m.

Saint Mary's hasn't missed the NCAA tournament in five seasons, so it's tough to imagine that streak coming to an end, with the Gaels sitting 33rd in the résumé rankings. Yet they're here because they carry only a consensus 80% at-large probability -- not a "lock" -- likely driven by the perennial question of how many WCC teams the NCAA can accommodate for the Dance after Gonzaga. One possible trouble spot: While their résumé is better than that of Santa Clara's, the Gaels lost the first of the teams' two head-to-head matchups. They also don't have any Quadrant 1 wins -- and likely won't, unless they get revenge for a recent loss at Gonzaga when the teams meet again on Feb. 28 at Saint Mary's. But consecutive wins over San Diego, San Francisco and now Pepperdine have them back on the victory bus.

Next game: at Pacific (Saturday)

Santa Clara Broncos (WCC)

Updated: Feb. 12, 7:54 a.m.

The Santa Clara and Saint Mary's comparisons will be constant down the stretch as we debate whether the WCC could get three bids -- which has happened only once in the past 13 seasons, but legitimately could (and arguably should) this year -- and how much the committee should value head-to-head wins versus overall résumé quality. The Broncos' chances continue to rise, however, with 74% consensus at-large odds and the 41st résumé ranking, which earns them "should be in" status for now. They cruised over Seattle on Wednesday night to claim their ninth consecutive win (and 13th in 14 games). And they will get additional cracks at both Saint Mary's and Gonzaga soon.

Next game: vs. Gonzaga (Saturday)

Work to do (5)

Miami (Ohio) RedHawks (MAC)

Updated: Feb. 10, 7:32 a.m.

The MAC hasn't received multiple bids since 1998-99 -- fittingly, the same season that Wally Szczerbiak led the RedHawks to the Sweet 16 after knocking off Washington and Utah in the first two rounds. Could history repeat itself? After Arizona's loss, Miami is the sole remaining unbeaten in Division I and ranks inside the top 40 on résumé as a result. The forecast models don't quite know how to handle the RedHawks, though the committee has never excluded an eligible team with fewer than four losses in a non-pandemic season. It is true that Miami is a borderline top-90 team in the predictive ratings (Akron ranks higher in the MAC) that has run up an undefeated record against the 347th-hardest schedule in the nation. But wins are wins, and Miami got another one Saturday against Marshall in a more comfortable fashion than its recent closer victory over Buffalo.

Next game: vs. Ohio (Friday)

San Diego State Aztecs (MW)

Updated: Feb. 8, 8:34 a.m.

Saturday was a good day for SDSU: The Aztecs beat Air Force, and conference bubble rival New Mexico fell to Boise State. That said, the Aztecs are still one of the bubbliest of bubble teams. They sit 46th nationally in résumé ranking, third in the conference standings and their consensus at-large chances are almost exactly 50-50. The Mountain West could feasibly send at least three teams to the tournament this year (the conference has sent at least four teams in each of the past four seasons). With a fairly large gap in at-large odds over the next-best MW team (New Mexico at 27%), the Aztecs would figure to be in decent enough shape if they keep winning.

Next game: vs. Nevada (Saturday)

New Mexico Lobos (MW)

Updated: Feb. 12, 7:54 a.m.

Seeking a third straight NCAA tournament trip for the first time in more than a decade, the Lobos might no longer have the inside track to being the Mountain West's second-most-likely entrant after Saturday's heartbreaker against Boise State at The Pit dropped their consensus at-large odds below 50%, where they still reside after surviving Grand Canyon on Wednesday night. New Mexico is still slightly behind San Diego State in the résumé ranking though they do face the slightly easier schedule from here on out. The primary blemish for the Lobos is their head-to-head loss at the Aztecs on Jan. 17, which they won't have a chance to avenge until they play host on Feb. 28.

Next game: vs. Air Force (Tuesday)

VCU Rams (A-10)

Updated: Feb. 11, 9:08 p.m.

VCU hasn't made back-to-back NCAA tournaments since the Will Wade era nearly a decade ago, and the forecast models (around 20% consensus at-large) remain less than bullish on that streak ending this season, in part because the Rams are 0-4 against Quadrant 1 opponents with only one remaining shot at changing that (at Saint Louis on Feb. 20). However, they are right in the middle of bubble territory in overall résumé (46th nationally), and their remaining schedule is set up for plenty more wins, so they can certainly add to their case. After crushing Dayton at home to conclude last week, they were back at it Wednesday with a comfortable win at La Salle.

Next game: at Richmond (Saturday)

Boise State Broncos (MW)

Updated: Feb. 8, 8:47 a.m.

The Broncos have come on strong recently, elevating themselves into the "work to do" category with wins in six of seven games, including Saturday's critical one-point victory at fellow bubble squad New Mexico. They've tripled their conditional at-large odds in the past week -- but before we get too excited, that still leaves them at 15% odds, with a résumé ranking outside the top 60. They belong here for now, and will get further chances to build their case to the committee in the next month.

Next Game: vs. UNLV (Friday)

Long shots

Nevada Wolf Pack (MW)

Belmont Bruins (MVC)

Tulsa Golden Hurricane (American)

South Florida Bulls (American)

George Mason Patriots (A-10)

Liberty Flames (Conference USA)

Grand Canyon Lopes (MW)

McNeese Cowboys (Southland)

Dayton Flyers (A-10)

Yale Bulldogs (Ivy League)

Akron Zips (MAC)

Stephen F. Austin Lumberjacks (Southland)
 
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Happily Handicapped Nation: Almost 4 in 10 Stanford Students Claim "Disability"


"I'm disturbed, I'm depressed, I'm inadequate -- I got it all!" So exclaimed Seinfeld sitcom character George Costanza, trying to woo a woman he believed had a psychologically oriented Florence Nightingale syndrome. It was a funny scene in 1993, and entirely fictional. But today, a generation-plus later, life has sort of imitated art.

For unlike with George, whose appeal fell flat, having a... disability has now become a way to leverage advantage.

It's so bad that at Stanford University nearly four in 10 undergraduates are registered as disabled. What's more, this merely reflects a trend sweeping pseudo-elite universities in general. The issue?

While having a disability once brought stigma, it's now akin to a résumé enhancer. Moreover, a "keeping up with the handicapped Joneses" phenomenon is operative: If you don't game the system, you lose out to those who do.

The Daily Caller reported on the story last week, writing:

"One of the most prestigious universities in the US offers perks to those who say they have ADHD, night terrors, even gluten intolerance. You'd be stupid not to game the system," writes Elsa Johnson, an undergraduate at Stanford University, for The Times.

That system is Stanford's "disability accommodation" apparatus, which doles out privileges to the on-paper disabled: The "best housing on campus," extra time on tests, extra absences from class, tardiness allowances.

To put this in perspective, realize that it's akin to DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusion). Only, it's being applied on a wider scale -- to anyone willing to claim "disabled" status. We're training people to not be competent but confidence-man-like.

Even the über-liberal Atlantic recently warned of this phenomenon. As the magazine wrote in December:

Professors now struggle to accommodate the many students with an official disability designation, which may entitle them to extra time, a distraction-free environment, or the use of otherwise-prohibited technology. The University of Michigan has two centers where students with disabilities can take exams, but they frequently fill to capacity, leaving professors scrambling to find more desks and proctors. Juan Collar, a physicist at the University of Chicago, told me that so many students now take their exams in the school's low-distraction testing outposts that they have become more distracting than the main classrooms.

Accommodations in higher education were supposed to help disabled Americans enjoy the same opportunities as everyone else. ... Over the past decade and a half, however, the share of students at selective universities who qualify for accommodations -- often, extra time on tests -- has grown at a breathtaking pace. At the University of Chicago, the number has more than tripled over the past eight years; at UC Berkeley, it has nearly quintupled over the past 15 years.

This just reflects a wider problem, too. When I was a child, being "handicapped" really meant something in virtually every case. People thus labeled were in wheelchairs, and needed them, or were blind and perhaps negotiated terrain with "white canes."

But then we "evolved," and this was reflected in language. The handicapped went from being "crippled" to "handicapped" to "disabled" to "physically/mentally challenged" to "differently abled," as the euphemisms metastasized. (And, yes, I'm missing a number. Where does "special needs" fits in, for example?)

Corresponding to this, handicaps transitioned from being liabilities to social-arena reputation enhancers (and those résumé enhancers). Claiming them has, too, become a good way to enforce your own ridiculous will on others. Just consider the service-animal phenomenon.

It used to be that almost every such case involved seeing-eye dogs, which are godsends for the blind. Now we've witnessed the following:

Daffy does describe, however, what the above tells us America is becoming. After all, can we really call ourselves a serious country if we're entertaining such lunacy?

As for this disability-metastasis phenomenon's deeper effects, they didn't escape the more astute MSN commenters on the Daily Caller article.

One noted that part of the problem is the extreme over-diagnosis of various purported psychological "conditions." And a handful warned that we were training people to "cheat." Consequently, a respondent lamented, "later in life you may think that anything is OK to get your target."

Another opined that this diminution of meritocracy "will lead to a USA that no longer innovates [and] no longer creates...."

Even more significantly, it will deliver a people so morally degraded that they will be, as philosopher Edmund Burke put it, those "men of intemperate minds [who] cannot be free."

So what is the remedy? First, a simple rule must be accepted:

Certain things disqualify you from doing certain things.

A corollary: This even applies to the most sympathetic of people, to those limited through no fault of their own.

(Of course, this includes us all since only God is without limitation.)

Let's illustrate this with a couple of examples.

A good accommodation: Virtually all of us would help a wheelchair-bound student attend intellect-oriented classes. A given immobile person, after all, may turn out to be a brilliant physicist (think Stephen Hawking).

A bad accommodation: If, however, someone can't complete a legitimate test in the allotted time, it reflects lack of merit. Perhaps his talents lie in a different field, and it's a service to him to channel him toward that.

Another bad one: If you can't take a plane without an emotional support pig, maybe you should drive cross country.

Sometimes, too, a handicap is an advantage in certain contexts. Consider wrestler Adonis Lattimore. He won a Virginia state championship some years ago -- despite having no legs.

When a realm's normal rules must be altered for a handicapped person, however, it's a red flag. An example is blind wrestlers in U.S. schools. Competitors normally begin a match separated. When the rare blind wrestler competes, though, his sighted opponent must maintain contact with him at all times. This changes the sport's dynamics notably.

Stating that this is an unjust accommodation may be unpopular. But that doesn't make it untrue -- just unemotional (as in objective). But today feelings trump all. This is why we're acting like turkeys, are graduating them, and have them on our airplanes.
 
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  • This might sound crazy but jobs train you once your hired. Fake it til you make it is a real strategy. There is no morality to job applications but 8f... you dont know how to answer the questions they can provide figure out youre not qualified, but maybe they dont and then you get training.  more

  • Proud of you

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Penn State Mont Alto students 'Rock the Mock' and gain interview confidence


MONT ALTO, Pa. - Students at Penn State Mont Alto are now better prepared for internship and post-grad job interviews, thanks to the "Rock the Mock" career preparation event held on Feb. 5.

More than a dozen representatives from local employers met with students at the Allied Health Building on the Mont Alto campus. The employers engaged students in mock interviews, asking questions as they would... during an actual job interview. In addition to the skills students learned, both students and employers made valuable professional connections.

"Some of the employers walked away stating 'I think I got a solid internship contact' and 'this student will get an interview offer to be considered for a full time job,'" said Patty Gochenauer, senior manager for student life and career services at Penn State Mont Alto.

Acing the interview

The lessons students learned will go far beyond the event; the mock interviews helped participants gain confidence in acing a job interview with any company.

"I learned the importance of knowing not just you and your strengths, but researching and knowing the company to show that you're putting in the effort and would like that job. Things like that can really elevate you as a candidate," Miana Kaufman, a second-year student studying occupational therapy, reflected after going through multiple mock interviews.

Preparing for a job search

In addition to interview preparation, students learned how to set up and use a LinkedIn account, with a student photographer at the event to take a professional headshot that participants can use as a profile picture on the networking website.

Students also had the chance to perfect their elevator pitch, learning how to confidently and succinctly summarize their job experience and career goals.

"It's daunting to walk up to a perfect stranger, stick out your hand, and proceed to have a conversation about yourself. No one is organically comfortable doing that. The only way to prepare yourself for the awkward, but very necessary job interview, is to practice. And 'Rock the Mock' gives students that opportunity in a safe environment," Liz Denlea, program coordinator for the Information Technology program at Penn State Mont Alto and one of the main drivers behind "Rock the Mock," said.
 
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Single mom laid off with just 2 months of savings left -- top advice that she got could help you too


A single mother facing job loss found solace and practical advice on Reddit after feeling overwhelmed. The online community offered a blend of emotional support and actionable strategies, including financial planning and a structured job search, helping her navigate the initial panic and regain a sense of control.

When a 32-year-old single mom logged onto Reddit after losing her job, she wasn't... looking for career hacks or résumé templates. She was spiralling.

With more than 10 years of experience in B2B marketing across SaaS and energy, she had always been the one who "figured things out." But this time felt different. Recently laid off, living without nearby family support, and raising her child on her own, she had just two months of savings to stretch on a painfully slim budget.

"I'm spiraling," she admitted in her post. The severance and unused PTO would help temporarily. She filed for unemployment immediately. But what terrified her most wasn't today -- it was the stories flooding her TikTok and LinkedIn feeds about job hunts dragging on for months, even years.

ALSO READ: Employee takes WFH within a week of joining without informing boss on an overseas business trip - Internet says she crossed boundaries

"Is this too niche? Am I screwed?" she asked.

What happened next is a reminder of what online communities can be at their best.

One of the first responses came from another working mom who had also been laid off after nine years in a marketing role.

"First take a breath," she wrote. "Try not to spiral too much right now." That tone -- calm, steady, practical -- carried through much of the thread.

Several commenters emphasized immediate action without panic: file for unemployment, apply for SNAP or any available state aid, and assess the household budget right away. Cut subscription services. Shop smarter. Adjust heating. Preserve cash.

But just as important was the emotional advice: give yourself a few days to process. Cry. Be angry. Then build a routine.

ALSO READ: Quote of the Day by Maya Angelou: 'There is no greater agony than bearing...' -- Inspiring quotes by the world-famous author

The most upvoted advice wasn't abstract motivation, it was tactical. One user suggested creating a job search spreadsheet to track applications. Others recommended setting up alerts on LinkedIn, BuiltIn, Welcome to the Jungle, and Hiring.cafe. Networking, several pointed out, would be key.

Since the original poster already had an updated résumé, commenters encouraged her to tailor it aggressively for each role. One person shared that rewriting their résumé for every job -- and using AI tools to optimize for an 80% or better match -- led to four interviews and two second-round callbacks in just two weeks.

Another smart tip: pull past performance reviews and turn them into fresh résumé bullet points. It's easy to forget your wins when you're in survival mode.

Importantly, multiple users reassured her that B2B SaaS marketing is not "too niche." In fact, skills like demand generation, lifecycle marketing, pipeline growth, CAC optimization, and RevOps alignment translate across industries. Smaller B2B companies, one commenter noted, may move faster than big tech right now and often value generalists.

ALSO READ: Employee quits on the spot after raise request, then wonders if he overreacted - Internet weighs in

One blunt piece of advice stood out: step away from doom-scrolling. "What you see on social media is not often reality," one commenter warned. Reducing time on platforms that amplify layoffs and anxiety could protect her mental focus.

And there was something else, something quieter but powerful. One user reminded her to lean into family time. Jobs come and go. Kids don't.

ALSO READ: Quote of the Day by Mark Zuckerberg: 'The greatest successes come from...' -- Inspiring quotes by the Meta CEO

After reading every comment, the original poster came back with an update. She admitted much of her fear was grief talking. As the eldest daughter who had always held things together, not having immediate control felt destabilizing. But she ended on a steadier note: "It'll be ok though, I will figure it out." The panic hadn't disappeared. But it had softened.

Two months of savings can feel like a ticking clock. But what this single mom's story shows is that clarity often comes after the initial shock.

Take a breath. Make a plan. Lean on your network. Cut the noise. And remember that a layoff is a chapter, not the whole story.

Is B2B SaaS marketing too niche in today's job market?

According to professionals in the thread, no. Demand gen, growth, and lifecycle skills are highly transferable across industries.

What should you do immediately after a layoff?

File for unemployment, review your budget, apply for any eligible aid, update your résumé, and create a structured job search plan.
 
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AI Resume Generator Buying Guide 2026: 6 Must-Check Factors Before You Hit "Download


AI résumé builders can close that gap, yet the 2026 market is packed with copy-cat tools, hidden fees, and flashy templates that jam ATS parsers.

Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS) filter out roughly 75% of résumés before a recruiter sees them, Jobscan reports. AI résumé builders can close that gap, yet the 2026 market is packed with copy-cat tools, hidden fees, and flashy templates that jam ATS... parsers.

This guide cuts through the clutter.

Applicant Tracking Systems read left to right, top to bottom. Anything that interrupts that flow can delete your best accomplishments. A University of Texas HR Analytics study found that multi-column layouts are 91% more likely to fail Workday parsing than identical single-column files. In Jobscan tests, moving a designer résumé from two columns to one raised the match score from 41% to 86%, no wording changed.

Then check whether the builder has done its own ATS testing. Enhancv, for example, publishes an ATS guide based on tests with major ATS vendors and a small myth-busting study; it reports that standard fonts and well-structured layouts usually parse correctly, while information embedded in graphics is more likely to disappear.

Many résumé builders advertise a low "$1-$3 trial." The catch is that, after only a few days, the plan switches to a full subscription.

A fair platform will:

On a transparent site, you can often see this at a glance.

Novoresume's AI Resume Templates, for example, lays out a free basic tier and one-time premium plans that explicitly state there is no recurring billing or automatic subscription, and its FAQ confirms there are no hidden costs and that you see the full price before entering any payment details.

Use that as a benchmark when you compare builders: renewal rules, total charges, and what you can download for free should all be spelled out just as clearly in one place.

If you instead spot countdown timers, hidden checkout steps, or forced card entry just to preview your PDF, close the tab; unexpected fees can drain more than your job-search budget.

A résumé lists phone numbers, locations, and even salary clues that can feed identity thieves or ad networks. According to HRME's 2023 industry coverage, 53.87% of U.S. job seekers rank privacy risks as their top fear when AI tools handle their data.

Spend two minutes on these checks:

If a platform hides these details or floods the page with tracking cookies, leave. Your career story belongs in a recruiter's inbox, not a marketing database.

"AI-powered" can refer to two distinct engines:

A strong AI résumé builder combines both functions. Look for a workflow where you:

These feedback loops turn a static document into a résumé that mirrors employer language while sounding like you. If the software only writes or only scores, you will spend extra time and may miss interviews.

File type can determine if an ATS reads or rejects your résumé. In a 2025 study of 50,000 submissions across 15 ATS platforms, DOCX files parsed correctly 88% of the time, text-based PDFs 7%, and image-based PDFs just 3%.

Keep at least three versions on hand:

Before you spend hours designing, open the export menu. If you don't see DOCX, PDF, TXT, and even a "copy to Google Docs" option, choose another builder. Multiple formats let you edit on any device, meet upload rules, and send the right file fast when a recruiter calls.

A résumé builder should let you shape content the way recruiters read it, with no coding needed. At minimum, you need to:
 
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The AI Elephant in the Room: Career Growth or Career Ghosting?

As a career coach, my inbox is usually a mix of "How do I nail this interview?" and "Is my resume too long?" But lately, the vibe has shifted. Whether I’m talking to a Gen Z grad landing their first role or a seasoned executive planning a pivot, the conversation inevitably steers toward Artificial Intelligence.

The reactions... range from the "AI is the Apocalypse" crowd to the "I’ll wait and see" group. To the latter: waiting to see how AI affects your career is a bit like waiting to see if that leak in the basement is a problem while your socks are already wet.Here are the two questions I get asked the most, and my honest, coach-to-client take on them.
1. "I’m worried that AI will eventually replace my position. Should I be?"This is the big one. And look, I won't give you the "toxic positivity" answer. Some tasks will absolutely be replaced. If your job is 90% data entry, basic transcription, or repetitive scheduling, the machine is indeed faster, cheaper, and more accurate.

But here is the distinction: AI replaces tasks, not necessarily roles.Historically, every major technological shift—from the steam engine to the internet—has automated the "drudgery" of a job. When Excel came out, people thought accountants were toast. Instead, accountants stopped doing manual math and started doing high-level financial strategy.

The Human-in-the-Loop Factor:AI is the ultimate "co-pilot." It has the social awareness of a toaster and the ethical compass of a calculator. It can draft an email, but it can’t navigate the delicate office politics of why that email needs to be sent. It can analyze a spreadsheet, but it can’t tell you which business move will build long-term trust with your biggest client.My Answer: AI won't replace you, but a human using AI might. The goal isn't to out-calculate the machine; it’s to lead it.

2. "How will AI impact my growth? Will it limit my opportunities?"Clients often fear that if AI handles the "heavy lifting," there will be fewer rungs on the career ladder. They worry that entry-level roles will vanish, leaving no way to "pay your dues."In reality, we are seeing the "Junior-to-Senior Acceleration."

AI allows you to bypass the two years of "grunt work" and move straight into analysis and decision-making.The Ceiling is Higher: AI doesn't lower the ceiling; it raises the floor. It allows a single employee to do the work of a three-person team, making you exponentially more valuable to an employer.

The Skill Shift: The "hard skills" of yesterday (like basic coding or manual research) are becoming "commodity skills." The new premium is on Human-Centric Skills.The "Old" High-Demand SkillsThe "AI-Era" High-Demand SkillsManual Data AnalysisData Interpretation & StorytellingContent ProductionContent Curation & Fact-CheckingBasic Technical TroubleshootingComplex Problem Solving & EthicsRote MemorizationCritical Thinking & Strategic VisionThe Strategy: How to Stay "Un-Replaceable"If you want to ensure your professional growth remains trajectory-bound, stop looking at AI as a competitor and start looking at it as your operating system. Here is how you stay ahead:

1. Become AI-Fluent (Not an Expert)You don’t need to be a computer scientist. You just need to know how to "talk" to the tools. This means mastering Prompt Engineering—the art of asking the right questions—and understanding which AI tool is the right "hammer" for the "nail" you're hitting.

2. Double Down on the "Soft" (Human) SkillsAs technical tasks become automated, "soft skills" become the new "hard skills."Empathy & EQ: Can you manage a team through a crisis?

Negotiation: Can you close a deal that requires human rapport?Ethical Judgment: AI can give you an answer, but can it tell you if that answer is right for your company's values?3. Adopt a "Beta" MindsetThe era of "learning a trade and doing it for 40 years" is over.

Career longevity now belongs to the most adaptable. I tell my clients to treat their careers like software: constantly updating, fixing bugs, and adding new features.

The Coach’s Bottom LineThe "wait and see" approach is the only guaranteed way to get left behind. AI is a tool, not a destiny. It’s here to take the "robot" out of the human, allowing you to do the creative, strategic, and empathetic work you were actually hired for.The most successful people in the next decade won't be the smartest or the most technical—they will be the most integrated.

Written by;

Eliot Feldman, MBA
President, Higher Education Consulting Services, LLC
Advisory Board Member – Customer Experience Program
Southern Connecticut State University
 
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  • Yes, they can. And you cant just decide to stay home another year. Do you have Drs orders or a documented medical reason to be home during this... current pregnancy?
    Paid or unpaid Maternity leave (ML) is for after you give birth. You have 1 baby and 1 year of ML. Being pregnant does not equal ML. Go back to work until you deliver your next baby. Then you can go back out on ML.
    If you want to be a stay at home mom, quit and stay home. Stop taking up space on the roles and preventing your employers from filling the spot and getting work done.
    As others have stated, you should read your employee manual.
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  • Well they can't fire you while you are on leave, but they don't have to hold your job. (At least not in the US Private Sector) What this means is that... when you come back, you will most likely have a different role. However, from what you are saying I would plan my exit strategy and find a remote role that will allow you to work part time and still have benefits. I am in the process of building several businesses, and I plan to offer generous packages to my employees. Tell me more about what you do and what kind of work you would be interested in. more

8 Common interview mistakes and how to avoid them


What shouldn't you do at a job interview? WRS take a look at some of the most common job interview mistakes and offer advice on how to avoid them!

Start your preparation a few days before your interview. Research the company by looking at their website, social channels and press releases. Get familiar with your CV and prepare for possible interview questions.

Avoiding last minute prep will help... you remain as relaxed as possible the night before, allowing you to get a good night's sleep so that you are fresh and energised for your interview, and ready to make a great impression on your interviewer.

Plan ahead, research the location of the interview and plan your route. Try to arrive no more than 10 minutes early, it suggests good time management skills, and respect for the company, the position, and even your interviewer. Turning up late to an interview gives the impression that you are not enthusiastic about the position even if you are.

Make sure you've eaten and are well hydrated before the interview, a trip to the toilet just before you get there will mean that you are comfortable and able to give complete focus to your interviewer.

Unless the interviewer broaches the subject, you shouldn't discuss salary on your first stage interview. The same applies to benefits such as holidays, flexible working and company perks. Save these topics for subsequent interviews.

According to a recent survey by CV library a staggering 84.9% of interviewers describe overconfidence and arrogance as a job interview turn-off. It's important to be confident and to give the recruiter proof of your achievements and abilities, rather than walking into the interview like you've already got the job.

One of the best ways of doing this is to give your interviewer figures, stats and facts from your previous work experience, showing them unequivocal evidence that you get results and why you're a strong applicant for the role.

Often the interviewer will ask you why you are thinking about leaving your current role. If you say you hated your line manager or the company it may make the interviewer doubt your motivation for the position and your attitude. Avoid being critical, try saying that you want a new challenge or that you wish to be part of a bigger or smaller company, these are perfectly understandable and suitable reasons.

Avoid being tempted to use your phone at the interview, leave it in your car. Or put your phone on silent and put it away in your bag. Texting, or taking a call during your interview is not only rude and disruptive, but it sends a clear message to the hiring manager that the interview is not your top priority.

Don't be tempted to look at your phone when you're waiting to go into your interview. Instead, pickup some company literature and read through it whilst you wait or look at any marketing material/corporate messages on the wall. This makes a far better first impression.

If you feel like your attention is slipping, try to make every effort to stay engaged. If you're feeling tired try to take in deep breaths and sip some water to re-hydrate. Remember to keep eye contact and make an active effort to listen.

Not listening could lead to you misunderstanding the question and giving a poor answer. Don't let yourself zone out during an interview. Your potential employer will question your ability to remain focused during a day on the job.

Keep your answers concise, no matter how welcoming or friendly the interviewer seems. An interview is a professional situation so don't get side-tracked and start talking about your personal life too much.

At the end of the interview the hiring manager will always ask if you have any questions. Surprisingly, the most common answer to this question is no. This is a missed opportunity to find out more about the company and to highlight your interest in the position and reinforces your suitability as a candidate. Ask questions related to the job, the company and the industry. Don't ask questions that you should have covered in your research!
 
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12   
  • its really too real but i suggest if the complete interview questions can be shared

  • Good information

Trip CEO Olivia Ferdi on family, calm and the Oscars


Job title: Co-founder and CEO

Company: Trip

What was your first job? A Saturday job working in a clothing store,

What's been your worst job interview? I've had plenty! You'd have to ask those people that didn't hire me - ha!

What was the first music single you bought? It must have been Britney Spears.

How do you describe your job to your friends? They understand that it's not a typical 'job'.... Trip started after a personal experience when I was getting married - discovering the incredible power of natural botanical ingredients for recovery.

My friends and family were part of that, watching the idea for Trip begin after the wedding and growing in the early days, from taste-testing first recipe ideas in my kitchen to helping me sample at weekend events. They've been with me for the full ride! So they understand it's built around family, friendships and lived experiences, all to help people find their calm everyday.

"Consumers are looking for more than just a drink; they're looking for a mood"

What is the most rewarding part of your job? Hearing from our community. When someone tells us that Trip helped them navigate a stressful day or finally find some balance with family or work, it makes every late night and hurdle worth it.

Seeing the business grow each year and the excitement from our incredible team across the globe. We've recently launched in some of the biggest retailers in the US. Although seeing someone with a can of Trip while I'm out and about will never get old!

Seeing our team grow. There is nothing more fulfilling than watching a group of passionate people take an idea and turn it into something that sits on the shelves of the world's biggest retailers. Innovation is central to our culture at Trip and we love seeing people think outside the box and get creative - it's the best way to drive change.

What is the least rewarding part? Admin and spreadsheets. I'm definitely in my element when I'm out meeting our customers, or in the lab working on product development.

What is your motto in life? It's a great day to have a great day.

If you were allowed one dream perk, what would it be? That when I'm on annual leave, everyone is too! So no emails to catch up on.

Do you have any phobias? Spiders and creepy crawlies, which I'm having to hide in front of my toddler when he presents me with one.

If you could change one thing in grocery, what would it be? I'd love to see even more dedicated space for 'functional wellness'. Consumers are looking for more than just a drink; they're looking for a mood, and the layout of our stores can help them find that more easily, right next to traditional product formats.

Making the "mindful" choice the easiest choice. I'd love to continue working with retailers to ensure that low-sugar, functional, and calming options are as accessible as the traditional categories.

It's been amazing seeing Trip part of the meal deal nationwide, taking something loved and familiar and optimising for healthier choices.

What luxury would you have on a desert island? My family.

What animal most reflects your personality? A swan. Hopefully appearing calm and graceful on the surface, while underneath the water, I'm paddling away with a lot of energy to keep things moving forward.

What's your favourite film and why? I'm not sure I could choose one, it depends what mood I'm in.

Which celebrity would you most like to work with and why? We've been lucky enough to work with some incredible celebrity partners since starting Trip, it would be too tricky to choose just one. From Joe Jonas, to sharing Trip at the Oscars, to Paul Wesley, the job's taken me to some incredible and surreal places.

What would your death row meal be? A Sunday roast.
 
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Professional Graphic Portfolio Website


I'm ready to elevate my freelancing presence with a sleek, professional website that puts my graphic-design work front and center. The site will act as a digital portfolio I can share with prospective clients and agencies, so visual polish, intuitive navigation, and rock-solid performance are non-negotiable. Core structure * About Me - a concise bio with headshot, skills highlights, and... downloadable résumé. * Portfolio / Gallery - grid or masonry layout that lets visitors browse projects quickly, each item opening to a dedicated case-study page with images, descriptions, and key results. * Testimonials - clean slider or card layout for client quotes, with the option to add more in the future. Look & feel The overall style has to be unmistakably professional: balanced white space, restrained color palette, crisp typography, and subtle micro-interactions that don't distract from the artwork. Technical expectations - Fully responsive and fast-loading on all modern browsers. - Built on a platform I can edit easily (WordPress, Webflow, or a hand-coded static site with clear instructions -- open to your suggestion). - Optimized image handling: lazy loading, compression, and retina-ready graphics. - Basic on-page SEO (semantic HTML, meta tags, alt text) baked in. - Simple contact mechanism (form or email link) plus social media links. Deliverables 1. Complete website files / CMS hand-off with admin access. 2. One short screen-share walkthrough so I know how to update content myself. 3. Deployment to my hosting or detailed instructions if you prefer I handle the final push. If you have a portfolio example that matches this professional aesthetic, I'd love to see it when you respond. more

CEO reveals the little-known 'water test' she uses in job interviews


Hoping to make a good impression at a job interview or even at an important business meeting? A corporate executive has revealed a simple way you can foster a positive outcome before the meeting has even begun.

Julie Helms, a former energy industry CEO who now specialises as an executive presence educator, has been in the hiring seat during dozens of interviews - but is always stunned that so... many applicants miss out on an easy win right at the very start.

And it has absolutely nothing to do with an applicant's experience, skills or suitability for the role.

'What's the first thing you are offered in a meeting?' Julie asked in a post shared to her @juliehelmss Instagram account. 'Usually, it's a glass of water.'

'And what does everyone say to that offer? "Oh no, thanks. I'm fine."'

But if you're hoping to start the meeting on a positive note, Julie explained in a video that you shouldn't turn down this polite gesture.

'There's a scientific reason to be the person who says "Yes, please". And that is the neurological link between generosity and happiness.

'By enabling their generosity when you accept, you're giving them a tiny mood boost.'

Julie Helms, a former energy industry CEO who now specialises as an executive presence educator, shared her 'always take the water' trick for job interviews and important meetings in a recent video post

Julie explained how answering 'yes' to the polite gesture subconsciously fosters a positive environment before the meeting has even begun

Her ultimate underrated interview tip? 'Always take the water.'

Julie elaborated further to Daily Mail on the little-known business etiquette tip, explaining how it could, on a subconscious level, impact the tone of the forthcoming meeting.

'Saying "yes" to the offer of water is not just about whether you're thirsty. It's a small social gesture that helps the other person feel comfortable and valued, which quietly strengthens connection from the very start.'

As the old saying goes, "First impressions count" - and in Julie's experience, that extends to these polite small talk and social interactions before the formalities commence.

'Meetings and job interviews are just as much about rapport as they are about the actual content. The tone is often set in the first few seconds.'

'Humans are wired with survival instincts that constantly scan for cues about whether someone is a friend or a threat, often without us even realising it. Small social signals can influence that perception. Saying "yes" to water is a subtle friend cue. It helps shift both people out of a fight or flight mindset and into a more grounded, collaborative state, which supports clearer thinking and better communication.'

Furthermore, Julie says that in particularly strenuous interviews, having a glass of water at hand can be helpful on a practical level - and not just to quench any dehydration-related nerves.

'Having a glass of water gives you something natural to do with your hands and creates built-in pause moments, say if you need a second to think before answering a question.'

Julie recently shared a video explaining her 'always take the water' interview tactic in a video shared to her @juliehelmss social media accounts

Julie explained how having a glass of water at hand can be helpful on a practical level to offer natural pause moments in conversation (Picture: stock image)

'That tiny bit of space can make you appear more composed under pressure.'

So, will the meeting fall apart if you decline the offer of water at the start? Not necessarily - but Julie explains that it could introduce a 'very subtle distance' between the parties.

'Leading with a "no", even a very polite "no, thank you", can introduce a subtle distance. When the stakes are as low as a glass of water, simply saying "yes" helps establish a cooperative rhythm from the start.

'Accepting the offer also positions you as someone who expects to be there and feels comfortable in the space. Those early impressions are powerful, and they can influence how the rest of the conversation unfolds.'

An Australian CEO previously revealed how he uses the offer of a beverage during a job interview as a mini-test for potential candidates.

Former Xero Australia managing director Trent Innes admitted in a 2019 interview that he refuses to hire anyone who doesn't offer to take their empty coffee cup back to the kitchen at the end of a job interview.

He explained that this tactic gave him a snapshot into the person's 'attitude' and 'ownership'.

Before commencing his interview, Mr Innes revealed he usually takes the prospective candidate for a walk to the kitchen, where they are given a glass of water, coffee, tea or soft drink.

CEO's Underrated Interview Tips

1. Pause and observe the whole room before sitting so that you can acknowledge or greet everyone properly.

2. Keep your phone completely out of sight, not just face down on the table.

3. Avoid visible fidgeting or bouncing your knees. If you need to calm nerves, try gently pressing one thumb into the palm of your other hand - it's a discreet, nearly invisible way to release tension.

4. Take a small breath before answering a tough question instead of rushing. That brief pause helps you respond thoughtfully rather than reactively.

5. If you accept a glass of water in the meeting, ask at the end if you may return it to the kitchen or dishwasher. That small gesture reads as teamwork and consideration for shared spaces.

6. Remember, micro behaviours communicate presence, respect, and emotional composure. People often remember how you made them feel just as much as what you actually said.

Source: Julie Helms, CEO and executive presence educator, @juliehelmss

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Former Xero Australia's managing director Trent Innes (pictured) would use a "coffee cup return" test in job interviews

He previously told the Venture Podcast with Lambros Photios that what he's subsequently looking for is to see if the person offers to return the empty cup to the kitchen at the conclusion of the interview.

By implementing this approach, Mr Innes said his secret technique helps ensure he finds the perfect employee who will fit into the culture of his company.

'So what I was trying to find was what was the lowest level task I could find that regardless of what you did inside the organisation was still super important that would actually really drive a culture of ownership,' he said.

'You really want to make sure that you've got people who have got a real sense of ownership, and that's really what I was looking for.'
 
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