Neal Freiman
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So really this generational shift
has huge implications for remote work, commercial real estate, everything that goes into that, huge societal shifts.
So it's very interesting to see this study out.
A lot of people do not like to go to the office.
That is certainly clear.
But it seems like these companies that were built from 2020 on were just remote native from the first place.
And that's why we're seeing such drastic discrepancies between companies that were created after 2020 and those before 1990.
Because if you started a company in 2020 or 2021 or 2022,
You have Slack built in.
You have Zoom built in.
And probably now you have AI tools built in that all leads to maybe more asynchronous workplace.
So even if these Gen Z bosses stare down these Gen Z workers who want to go back to the office, seems like the genie is out of the bottle.
And there will be at least a certain amount of days that will be remote work for the foreseeable future.
Tide Pod meet the Tide Triscuit.
Yesterday, Tide announced its latest attempt to change the way you do laundry, revealing that its new Tile-like detergent brand will roll out nationwide in April.
It's Tide's biggest laundry innovation since the Tide Pod in 2012, which has grown to a $2 billion a year business for parent company Procter & Gamble.
Called Tide Evo, these tiles really do resemble a Triscuit, though you shouldn't snack on them.
Each one is made up of more than 15 miles of super thin fibers stacked in six different layers of cleaning ingredients.
The tile gradually dissolves when the water hits, and it's specifically designed to be washed cold.
And the process of inventing it, talk about the laundry equivalent of the Manhattan Project.