How Howard Schultz’s Leadership Style Saved Starbucks

Former CEO of Starbucks Howard Schultz smiling

What is Howard Schultz like as a leader? How did Schultz help Starbucks out of a rut? In 2008, Howard Schultz made his official return to Starbucks. In his first few months as CEO, he used two strategies to project a reassuring image to both internal and external stakeholders: strong communication and timely action. Let’s look at these two elements of Howard Schultz’s leadership style.

Eichmann in Jerusalem by Hannah Arendt: Book Overview

a young dark-haired man wearing a plaid shirt thoughtfully reads a book he's holding

What drives ordinary people to commit extraordinary evil? Can the most horrific acts stem from mundane motivations? The groundbreaking book Eichmann in Jerusalem by Hannah Arendt challenges our understanding of evil. The book examines Adolf Eichmann, a key figure in the Holocaust, through a surprising lens. Arendt’s analysis reveals unexpected insights about the nature of evil itself. Read on for an overview of this work that lays out Arendt’s controversial perspective on one of history’s most infamous criminals.

Howard Schultz: Starbucks’s Savior During Financial Trouble

Howard Schultz, Starbucks's former CEO, smiling on stage

Why did Howard Schultz return to Starbucks in the mid-2000s? How did Schultz make a smooth transition back into the CEO role? During a grave position at Starbucks, Schultz stepped in as CEO for the second time in 2008 to steer the company in a better direction. In his book Onward, he discusses his motivation for reprising his role as CEO and the leadership strategies he used to restore stakeholders’ trust in Starbucks. Discover more about the process behind Schultz’s return to Starbucks.

What Did Adolf Eichmann Do? His Role in the Nazis’ “Solutions”

a Nazi officer from behind working at a desk in an office that has maps, books, papers, and a lamp

What did Adolf Eichmann do during the Holocaust? How did his role evolve as Nazi policies changed? Hannah Arendt’s Eichmann in Jerusalem explores Adolf Eichmann’s involvement in the Nazi regime’s “Jewish question.” The book examines his progression from an advisor on Jewish emigration to a key figure in the transportation of Jews to concentration camps. Continue reading for Arendt’s analysis of Eichmann’s role in the Holocaust to discover how his actions shaped the course of history.

Adolf Eichmann’s Early Life: His Unremarkable Beginnings

a traveling salesman in a coat and hat in 1930s Germany walking along a road in the business district of a town

How much do you know about the early life of one of history’s most notorious war criminals? What led Adolf Eichmann to become a key figure in the Holocaust? In her book Eichmann in Jerusalem, Hannah Arendt explores Adolf Eichmann’s early life and his rise to power within the Nazi Party. She argues that Eichmann was an unremarkable man who went on to commit atrocious crimes. Read on to discover how a failed student and salesman became the so-called “expert” on the Jewish question, shaping the course of history in unimaginable ways.

What Is the Banality of Evil? Eichmann’s 3 Pathetic Motives

a silhouette of a Nazi officer watches as a train pulls away as the sun sets

What is the banality of evil? How can ordinary people commit extraordinary atrocities? What were Adolf Eichmann’s last words before he was hanged? In her book Eichmann in Jerusalem, Hannah Arendt explores the motivations behind Adolf Eichmann’s crimes in the Holocaust. She argues that his actions were driven by mundane factors rather than inherent wickedness. Discover how a desire for success, a sense of duty, and social conformity led an unremarkable man to participate in one of history’s greatest horrors.

Adolf Eichmann’s Trial, Verdict, & Execution (Hannah Arendt)

a balding man, seen from behind, sitting in a courtroom in the early 1960s and facing four men across the room

What exactly was Adolf Eichmann on trial for? What was the outcome, and was justice served? In her book Eichmann in Jerusalem, Hannah Arendt discusses Adolf Eichmann’s trial. She shares her reasons for thinking that the trial—although it delivered the correct verdict—was in many respects illegitimate. She also offers an assessment of Eichmann’s final words. Continue reading to learn about Adolf Eichmann’s trial, verdict, and execution.

Kanner and Asperger’s Autism Research: The 4 Major Differences

Two boxing mitts with names on them that read Kanner and Asperger

What were the differences between Kanner and Asperger’s autism research? Whose research came out on top? In the post World War I era, there were two famous doctors studying autism: Leo Kanner in the US and Hans Asperger in Austria. In his book NeuroTribes, Steve Silberman compares the two men’s approaches and points out the differences. Here’s a look at the differences in the autism research.

Bernard Rimland’s Autism Research: A New Perspective

A vintage image of a vaccine needle and bottle on a wooden table in a doctor's office

Who was Bernard Rimland? How did his autism research change how some saw the disorder? What were some of the problems with his theories? Bernard Rimland was an American psychologist in the mid-1900s. It was thanks to Rimland that parents were no longer blamed for causing autism, however, Rimland also promoted the idea that vaccines caused autism. Continue reading to learn about Bernard Rimland’s research and its impacts.