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2025-12-31 12:00:00| Fast Company

Hello and welcome to Modern CEO! Im Stephanie Mehta, CEO and chief content officer of Mansueto Ventures. Each week this newsletter explores inclusive approaches to leadership drawn from conversations with executives and entrepreneurs, and from the pages of Inc. and Fast Company. If you received this newsletter from a friend, you can sign up to get it yourself every Monday morning. CEOs deal with many challenges, but apparently their overall health and fitness isnt among them. Some 93% of CEOs surveyed by corporate wellness platform Wellhub rate their overall well-being as excellent or good. In contrast, the same study, released earlier this year, finds that only 63% of employees are equally satisfied with their well-being. The wellness conundrum Wellness is complex, and its expensive, says Cesar Carvalho, founder and CEO of Wellhub, which offers fitness and wellness benefits to employers. Thanks to their status and income, Carvalho notes, CEOs generally have the wherewithal to focus on their health and fitness. You can push meetings around, cancel meetings, reschedule stuff, he says, noting that he is able to start his day after getting his kids on their school bus. But, he notes, CEOs take for granted that other people also have that same flexibility, which may explain another CEO-employee well-being gap: Nearly all C-level executives surveyed by Deloitte believe employees credit leadership with prioritizing worker well-being. However, survey data shows that less than two-thirds of employees believe executives care about it, and fewer than six in 10 say their company embeds well-being into company culture. The problems this disconnect creates are huge, Carvalho says. Employees will leave companies if they feel management doesnt care about their health, for example. On the flip side, companies that prioritize employee health and fitness tend to outperform the broader market. Wellness in the new year Not surprisingly, Carvalho thinks the new year is an opportune time for executives to make wellness affordable and accessible for employees, calling the Monday after New Years Dayin this case, January 5the Black Friday of wellness. He says that companies launching wellness benefits in January see adoption at rates five times higher than companies introducing such benefits at other points in the year. Beyond offering benefits, including reimbursing classes, therapy, and gym memberships, CEOs can play a role in closing the executive-employee wellness gap by creating a culture where employees feel comfortable talking about their well-being. That means sharing aspects of their own wellness journey, too. When CEOs share their examples and their stories, theyre showing [employees] that well-being is not a perk; its a business imperative, Carvalho says. What will your company’s wellness plan look like in 2026? How is your company encouraging employee wellness? Please share some of your best perks and practices at stephaniemehta@mansueto.com. I hope to feature some of the most compelling examples in a future newsletter. Read more: wellness at work These three strategies alleviate hourly worker burnout Gen Z workers are depressed and need support The most innovative companies in wellness and personal care


Category: E-Commerce

 

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2025-12-31 11:30:00| Fast Company

The year 2025 was one in which political and government design broke through to the mainstream. That’s thanks in large part to the new U.S. president, who fancies himself something of a designer-in-chief. “I consider myself an important designer,” President Donald Trump said an October White House dinner to raise money for his planned ballroom. Of outside designers, he said, “boy, the things they can recommend are horrible.” That doesn’t mean political design in 2025 was all Trump. Though his administration and allies used design to help push his agenda, protesters, politicians, and other political actors also developed a new visual language this year for a new political era. Here are six defining political design trends of 2025. [Source Photo: Jackpine Dynamic Branding] 1. Nationalism is on the rise, and worn on the sleeve Trump took office promising to expand U.S. territory, and that sentiment showed up early this year in merchandise. Trump’s campaign store sold a $43 mock-up of his “Gulf of America Day, 2025” executive order while his joint fundraising committees sold “Gulf of America!” and “Make Greenland Great Again” tees. [Image: courtesy Dada Projects] Up north, Canadians responded to Trump’s trade war and threats to make the country a 51st state with national pride of their own. The premier of Ontario wore a “Canada Is Not for Sale” hat and Canada’s new Prime Minister Mark Carney leaned into patriotism for the visual identity and messaging of his winning 2025 campaign. Trump’s tariffs have also inspired a new generation of nation-of-origin “Made In” labels from Canada and Denmark. 2. Trump anti-design is now MAGA McBling Trump’s second-term administration brand is more intentional and designed to look more distinct. Trump updated his official portrait for his second term not once, but twice. (The newest iteration doesn’t use a U.S. flag in the backdrop, as is standard for public official portraits.) [Illustration: FC] His administration also changed its typefaces. Merriweather, the serif font of his first term that the January 6 committee used during its investigation into the 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol, is out. Instrument, a tall, open-source serif that’s on-trend among tech and consumer brands that use the font to look modern yet retro, is in. One of its designers, Jordan Egstad, told Bloomberg, “Using a freely available and open-source font to promote exclusionary policies is deeply ironic.” The administration’s brand was most memorably executed in the high-low staging of his speech at the McDonald’s Impact Summit in November. The slogan “The Golden Age” appeared in large, yellow Instrument Serif type at the top of a blue backdrop which was placed directly behind the president. The backdrop also featured a repeat pattern of yellow McDonald’s arches. The ultimate visual effect was a brand mash-up created by combining the official serif of the state with the logo of a giant multinational corporationand it put our McBling era reality star president very much in his element. [Source Images: Mathias Weil/Adobe Stock, Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images] At the White House, Trump has also used a script font common on wedding invitations (which could in theory read as “fancy” to the untrained eye) to label the exterior facade of the Oval Office and “The Presidential Walk of Fame,” a presidential portrait exhibit designed as partisan ragebait. 3. Serifs are insimply because they’ve become another political pawn While there’s no such thing as a Republican fonteven Trump’s campaign logos used sans-serif typefacesTrump’s administration seems somewhat partial to serif typefaces, or fonts with the small feet on their letterforms. [Illustration: FC] The State Department said this month it was switching fonts to the serif Times New Roman, a typeface developed for print newspapers that it previously used, rather than Calibri, a typeface developed for digital screen reading. Calibri was made State’s default font during then-President Joe Biden’s administration because it’s easier to read, but Secretary of State Marco Rubio characterized it as wasteful and like a diversity initiative, turning typography into yet another battle in the culture wars. 4. Government design gets a new focal point: the President Trump is working to put his stamp on government literally by having his name and likeness installed on buildings, which may be illegal. Lettering with Trump’s name has already gone up at the U.S. Institute of Peace and Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. [Photos: Alex Kent/Bloomberg/Getty Images, Mehmet Eser/Middle East Images/AFP/Getty Images, Harold Mendoza/Unsplash] Trump’s image also appeared on the facades of multiple federal buildings, including the department of Labor, Department of Agriculture, and Health and Human Services, at a reported taxpayer cost of $50,000. His face is also on annual passes for the National Park Service (NPS), which experienced budget cuts under his administration. And though he opposed legislation signed into law by former President Joe Biden that funded an Amtrak project in Washington state, Trump’s name went up on signage at the work site anyway. [Source Images: Mathias Weil/Adobe Stock, Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images] Even though U.S. law prohibits a president from appearing on U.S. currency until two years after their death, Trump allies are also pushing to put his face on a coin next year, and some believe there’s a loophole. The new National Design Studio (NDS) headed by Airbnb cofounder Joe Gebbia has also worked on projects like “Trump Card” immigration visas and “Trump Accounts,” or tax-deferred savings accounts for kids. 5. Protesters adopt a more urgent, and diffuse, design language Trump’s second term lacked a big opening protest a la the 2017 Women’s March, but demonstrations against Trump and his administration in 2025 soon developed their own visual language. Early protests focused their criticism on Elon Musk after Trump tasked him with running the short-lived DOGE, while No Kings protests brought the Revolutionary War aesthetic to the left after being popular on the right since the Obama-era Tea Party. [Photo: Mathieu Lewis-Rolland/Getty Images] In Portland, protesters dressed up in inflatable animal costumes to play up the nonviolent nature of their demonstrations while in Boston, protesters used historic buildings to project vintage type to tie their protest against Trump to American history. For the first Sun Day, a day of climate action in September, the designers of the logo left it half unfinished so participants can engage in the act of finishing it themselves. In 2025, pussyhats and “protest is the new brunch” signs feel like ancient history, and protesters have turned to more urgent messages to stand against Trump’s expansion of presidential power. Protest signs at some Tesla dealerships before Musk left DOGE used the image of him saluting at Trump’s inauguration against him, and “No Kings” protests challenged opposition to the administration into some of the largest single-day protests in U.S. history with a logo of a crown with an X through it. Brunch can wait. 6. Zohran signals a new era of Democratic design: colorfully optimistic Not since Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s 2018 campaign for a New York U.S. House seat has a political brand captured the public imagination like New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s. [Images: Zohran for NYC] The ubiquitous “Zohran for New York” logo and visual identity didn’t use any blue, the standard color in Democratic Party design, and the quirky letterform of its bespoke typography matched the warm tone of his in-person moments and social video strategy. Hand-drawn by designer Aneesh Bhoopathy and inspired by lettering from city signage and Bollywood movie posters, the logo felt authentic and New York, and it captured the excitement of Mamdani’s come-from-behind campaign. This wasn’t a campaign designed to look like politics as usual, and Mamdani used type creatively to reinforce his campaign message, like “freeze the rent.” Former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo responded to Mamdani’s surprise Democratic primary win by rebranding to a logo and message that emphasized his experience, but New Yorkers who recalled his time as governor didn’t want more. As Democrats look to Election Day 2026, the Mamdani brand and communications strategy is an example of how to campaign in a new landscape in part shaped by the biggest political design trends of 2025.


Category: E-Commerce

 

2025-12-31 11:15:00| Fast Company

There are two sorts of people in this world: Those who think it sounds like fun to brave the elements for hours on end to watch the ball drop at midnight in Times Square on New Years Eve, and then there’s the rest of us. Its become a time-honored tradition for millions of people to crowd into a few blocks of New York to celebrate a new year, and some new features await revelers this year. A larger ball will be dropped in the annual countdown to midnight, weighing in at 12,000-plus pounds and adorned with 5,200 crystals and LED lights. And theres some special red, white, and blue confetti among the nearly three tons to celebrate the countrys 250th anniversary. But with temperatures in New York forecasted to be near-freezing, many people will be perfectly happy to take in the festivities in their cozies at home. As an added bonus: You may catch one of those  memorable and meme-worthy moments from a boozed-up host or performer. Performers this year run the gamut of musical genres and generations, from Chappell Roan to Diana Ross and Jason Aldean to 50 Cent. While channel surfers can easily switch between various programming, the festivities are as easy to stream if you’ve cut the cord. Weve rounded up some of the options to ring in the new year at home. TIMES SQUARE WEBCAST If you want a commercial-free way to feel like you’re in the thick of things, the free live stream from the organization that puts on the annual ceremony may be your best bet. The Times Square Alliance begins live streaming at 6 p.m. ET for the ball lighting and continues throughout the evening. This years stream will feature backstage access and interviews with some of the performers and other celebrities who will be in Times Square throughout the night. You can check out more details about the stream and a full schedule here. While you can live stream from a browser, at TimesSquareNYC.org, the same feed will also be available on the organization’s YouTube channel. If you’re more captivated by the ball drop than anything else, then head to TimesSquareBall.net ahead of time for some live cams of the ball before it’s dropped and gather some fun facts to delight your fellow New Year’s Eve revelers. NYE COVERAGE ON CABLE OR BROADCAST TV If you’re nostalgic for the days when Dick Clark helped you cross that threshold from one year to the next, his spirit lives on in many ways. Most major television networks have some sort of coverage planned for the festivities, from New York and beyond.  ABC: Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest begins at 8 p.m. ET. While Seacrest will be helming much of the evening’s broadcast from New York, he’ll get an assist from Chance the Rapper in Chicago and Rob Gronkowski and Julianne Hough in Las Vegas. You can also stream everything on your favorite platform or at ABC.com.  CBS: New Years Eve Live: Nashvilles Big Bash, hosted by Bert Kreischer and HARDY begins at 8 p.m. ET. Instead of the ball in Times Square, you’ll be treated to the Nashville Music Note Drop on this network, along with a lineup of country music artists scheduled to perform throughout the evening. As with previous years, you can also stream this event on Paramount+. CNN: New Years Eve Live with Anderson Cooper and Andy Cohen begins at 8 p.m. ET. If you want to make a day of it, you can tune into CNN throughout the day for around-the-world coverage before the boozy duo kicks things off in the evening from Times Square. You can expect to hear a lot of hyping about the networks new streaming subscription platform, where you can catch all the action in addition to its apps. Fox: Jimmy Faillas All-American New Years Bash begins at 11 p.m. ET. There are hour-by-hour specials beginning at 9 p.m. ET but they mostly focus on a retrospective of the past year rather than a concert of sorts. The programming will also be available to stream online. NBC: A Toast to 2025! hosted by Hoda Kotb and Jenna Bush Hager begins at 10:30 p.m. ET. After bowing out of New Year’s Eve coverage last year, the network is back this year with a two-hour event that reunites this duo. You can also stream this event through the Peacock app.  PBS: From Vienna: The New Year’s Celebration 2026. If youre not feeling woozy from the night before, you can tune into something a bit more highbrow on New Year’s Day with the annual concert from the Vienna Philharmonic at 8 p.m. ET. This event will also be available via streaming online or the PBS app.


Category: E-Commerce

 

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