U.S. at the tipping point
Good morning.
A few thoughts as we try to read the tea leaves to discern who is likely to win tomorrow’s U.S. election. The polling data that was pointing to a potential victory for Donald Trump just a week ago appears to have shifted towards Kamala Harris. Polymarket still favors Trump to win, but those odds have shrunk to him getting 54% of votes cast vs. 65% last week. Polling expert Frank Luntz suggests we’ve reached the limit on how much the polls can tell us, instead advising people to look at the nature of the turnout: a surge in young women at the polls bodes well for Kamala, more young men may suggest higher numbers for Trump.
In the days ahead, we’ll dissect the results and debate how we got there. Before that, I’d suggest you listen to this conversation I had with Malcolm Gladwell for the Leadership Next podcast. Many of you know Gladwell as the writer who distilled the factors needed to make a product or idea explode into a trend in his first book, The Tipping Point. Now, he is looking at how humans manipulate these factors to cause the fevers and contagions around us—for good and for ill. (Think of how the Sacklers marketed OxyContin through Perdue or political advisors tailor their campaigns for different demographics.)
One factor that’s different in this election is what Gladwell calls the “magic third”—pivoting off research from Rosabeth Moss Kanter about being “the only” in a group and the impact when those outsiders reach a third of the total. Whether you’re for Trump or Harris, you know that half of the country is behind you, eliminating the need to feel ‘shy’ about your choice. Gladwell doesn’t weigh in on the state of politics, saying “I’m baffled by it.”
What he does know is the art of connecting the dots in a way that does help C-suite leaders make better decisions. “To be a business leader in 2024 requires that somebody have much more than an understanding of good business practices and strategy. You’re leading diverse, complicated workforces. You are dealing with consumers who are way more complex and unpredictable than they ever were in the past … You have to be someone who’s curious about the whole world.”
And, of course, you have to engage with other curious people who can help you see around the corner. That’s the kind of gathering we’ve put together next week at the Fortune Global Forum in New York. I hope you’ll join us.
More news below.
Diane Brady
diane.brady@fortune.com
Follow on LinkedIn
TOP NEWS
Goldman: Net zero will cost $75 trillion
Goldman Sachs’ research revealed that reaching net zero carbon emissions globally by 2070 will require $75 trillion in investment. Doing so would prevent average temperatures from rising 2 degrees celsius above pre-industrial levels.
Andy Jassy previews AI-boosted Alexa
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy revealed that the company’s Alexa voice assistant will be getting a big AI-powered makeover during the company’s quarterly earnings call on Thursday. Jassy emphasized that while Alexa’s future will focus on completing actions rather than providing ChatGPT-like answers.
“Digitally illiterate” CEOs stifle productivity
A new survey by SThree found that about 63% of employees believed that their CEOs are “digitally illiterate” and unaware of the benefits of AI tools. These employees say the lack of AI adoption is stifling their productivity.
AROUND THE WATERCOOLER
The burrito king in coffee land: Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol’s biggest challenge is fixing the bad vibes by Azure Gilman
Tomasz Tunguz’s Theory Ventures has raised a $450 million second fund, filings say by Allie Garfinkle
Anxious Google employees just broached cost-cutting concerns with executives—who were dressed in Halloween costumes by Sasha Rogelberg
Tim Cook says he uses ‘a very good formula’ to look for Apple employees—these are the 4 traits he seeks out by Chloe Taylor
Trump sues CBS for $10 billion alleging its editing of Harris interview is election interference by Christiaan Hetzner
Nomura CEO’s year from hell: One staffer accused of bond market manipulation—and another of attempting to murder a client by Jane Thier
Here are 3 ways the U.S. election could change the future of Europe by Prarthana Prakash