Wednesday, July 15, 2026
Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Men’s favorite quiet-luxury status symbols of 2026 | Business Insider – LinkedIn

Business Insider’s Post Quiet luxury isn't going anywhere. Read about the menswear status symbols defining 2026 in the Saturday edition of Business Insider Today. #luxury #menswear #fashion Men's favorite quiet-luxury status symbols of 2026 Business Insider on LinkedIn On the Agenda Today : Six longevity-focused doctors shared the worst-case scenarios they’ve seen after patients take peptides. A day in the life of Theragun creator Dr. Jason Wersland, from meditation to a three-second trick for falling asleep. Eight status symbols men are obsessed with in 2026. To stay in one of the most expensive US zip codes, a single mother moved her parents in with her. Thank you for sharing It's fascinating to see how definitions of success continue to shift! Focusing on enduring quality and personal satisfaction over overt displays truly speaks to a deeper form of achievement. Building a life rich with meaning and genuine value is the ultimate status symbol. 💯 See more comments To view or add a comment, sign in More from this author Explore content categories

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The role of a debenture trustee is no longer limited to compliance—it’s now at the heart … – LinkedIn

The role of a debenture trustee is no longer limited to compliance—it’s now at the heart of risk management in India’s evolving debt market. In our latest episode of Bond Street, Umesh Salvi, MD of Catalyst Trusteeship Limited, shares how trusteeship has transformed over the past three decades. From asset cover monitoring and due diligence to navigating the rapid rise of AIFs, securitization trusts, and green bonds this conversation unpacks it all. Watch the full episode to understand how trustees are shaping investor protection and the future of debt markets in India. IndiaBonds Vishal Goenka For more content, visit our website: https://lnkd.in/dqD2fHgq More from this author Explore content categories

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LinkedIn veteran Daniel Shapero tapped as new CEO – Jewish Insider

Microsoft, the parent company of LinkedIn, has tapped Daniel Shapero, the professional networking site’s current chief operating officer, as its next CEO, current chief executive Ryan Roslansky announced earlier this week.  Shapero, who has been serving as COO since 2021, wrote on the platform Wednesday, “Today, I’m taking on the role as CEO of Linkedin. I joined Linkedin in May 2008 as employee #300ish, and it’s easy to say that my time at the company has been one of the most meaningful experiences of my life.” The network has close to one-and-a-half billion users worldwide.  While rarely speaking publicly about his Jewish background, Shapero highlighted his Jewish immigrant grandparents’ resilience opening businesses in Maine and Pennsylvania in a 2019 episode of the “Disrupt Yourself Podcast.” He also shared in a LinkedIn post that his great uncle was discriminated against for his background and not offered entry into medical school, instead becoming a pharmacist.  The leadership transition comes as Microsoft ramps up its AI push across its services, including introducing new generative AI tools on LinkedIn designed to draft posts, enhance user profiles and assist with personalized job searches.  “Last year when Satya Nadella asked me to lead LinkedIn

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Making the Most of a Second Chance – St. Jude Inspire

Español | English My family loves traveling. During the COVID-19 pandemic, we started a tradition of visiting national parks. Long road trips became our thing. At this point, our two kids have been to 50 of them!  Interestingly, one of those road trips took us from our home in the Bay Area in California through Memphis, Tennessee, during the summer of 2023. It was just another pin on the map. I never imagined we would return under such different circumstances — or that we would end up living there for nine months the following year.  Around Thanksgiving in 2024, my 12-year-old daughter, Anika, developed what looked like an eye stye. We did hot compresses. We waited. But it kept getting worse. In February 2025, her doctors ordered additional tests and found out it was myeloid sarcoma, a rare cancerous tumor most common in people with acute myeloid leukemia.  A few weeks later, Anika was accepted to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital® after meeting the criteria for a new treatment.  Within days, my wife and I, along with our children, moved to Memphis.  Those first months were hard. I remember that, as a scientist, I was frantically trying to figure things out and asking, “What can I do to help?” But as a father, I felt very powerless, not knowing what her treatment response was going to

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LinkedIn’s new CEO says the company you keep has a bigger impact on your career than job titles

Daniel Shapero was named CEO of LinkedIn this week, stepping into the role long held by Ryan Roslansky. But after nearly two decades at the Microsoft-owned company, Shapero says he didn’t climb to the top by chasing titles—he did it by choosing the right people.  “The best career decisions that I’ve ever made have been about the people I got to work with,” he told Bloomberg last year.  “We’re all more malleable than we give ourselves credit for. We adapt to our environment. And so the best decision I’ve ever made was when I chose to work around people who were going to shape me into the person I wanted to be, as opposed to career decisions about the specifics of the job or the task.” Early in his tenure, that philosophy meant staying put. During his first over half decade in sales, Shapero worked under the same manager—a stretch he credits with sharpening both his performance and his leadership instincts.  Rather than job-hopping for faster promotions, he doubled down on mentorship, betting that the right environment would compound over time. Shapero long had his eyes on the C-suite—but the path to the top required tough love from LinkedIn’s former

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LinkedIn CEO change: Daniel Shapero takes the helm as Ryan Roslansky broadens Microsoft role

by Todd Bishop on Apr 22, 2026 at 10:41 am April 22, 2026 at 11:02 am New LinkedIn CEO Daniel Shapero, left, and Ryan Roslansky, EVP of LinkedIn and Microsoft Office, at LinkedIn headquarters. (LinkedIn Photo) LinkedIn has a new CEO for the first time in six years. Daniel Shapero, the company’s chief operating officer since 2021, is stepping into the top job, reporting to Ryan Roslansky, who was elevated last year to executive vice president overseeing both LinkedIn and Microsoft Office. The changes come as LinkedIn crosses $5 billion in quarterly revenue for the first time, putting it on an annual run rate of more than $20 billion. The business social network has been owned by Microsoft since its acquisition by the Seattle-area tech giant for $26.2 billion in 2016. Roslansky announced the changes Wednesday (in a post on LinkedIn, of course) saying he also asked Mohak Shroff, LinkedIn’s longtime engineering leader, to take on the new role of president of platforms and digital work. Both Shapero and Shroff report to Roslansky. Roslansky put the moves in the context of the accelerating impact of AI on the labor market. “Last year when Satya Nadella asked me to lead LinkedIn

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Microsoft appoints Daniel Shapero as LinkedIn’s new CEO – The Economic Times

Synopsis Daniel Shapero has been appointed the new CEO of LinkedIn, succeeding Ryan Roslansky. Shapero, an early employee who joined in 2008, previously served as LinkedIn's Chief Operating Officer. Roslansky will continue at Microsoft, taking on expanded responsibilities in the Office productivity group. Microsoft has appointed Daniel Shapero as the new CEO of professional networking platform LinkedIn, outgoing CEO Ryan Roslansky announced in a post on the platform on Wednesday. Shapero succeeds Roslansky, who has led LinkedIn since 2020 and will continue in his role as executive vice president at Microsoft while taking on expanded responsibilities within the company’s office productivity group. “Last year when Satya Nadella asked me to lead Linkedin and Microsoft Office, I knew what he was betting on: Al is going to transform how people work and grow in their careers faster than most people expect. And Linkedin and Office would be at the centre of that. That opportunity is only getting bigger. So we're scaling the team and talent to match it. First, I've asked Daniel Shapero to become the CEO of Linkedin, reporting to me,” Roslansky wrote. Who is Daniel Shapero? Shapero joined LinkedIn in 2008 as ‘employee #300ish,’ as he recalled in a

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