4 AI Certifications for Business Owners
AI certifications can help you adopt artificial intelligence effectively, providing practical skills and a competitive edge.
Read more at Inc.
Topics
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Warning Signs AI Is Coming For Your Business
I am slowly losing my job to AI, and there were clear warning signs. Is it coming for you too?Inc. - 19h -
Here’s What Looming Tax Hikes Could Mean for Small-Business Owners
The 20 percent Small Business Deduction has been the “single most beneficial tax deduction for small-business owners,” says one accountant.Inc. - 5d -
TikTok-owner ByteDance plans to spend $12bn on AI chips in 2025
Chinese owner of video app seeks growth from AI as its social media business comes under pressure in USFinancial Times - 5d -
4 bold AI predictions for 2025
Enterprises can prepare for AI becoming faster, cheaper and more capable in 2025, and take the lead on developing applications.VentureBeat - Jan. 16 -
4 years after Capitol riot, Harris oversees calm certification of Trump win
Congress's move Monday to certify Donald Trump's presidential victory marked the return of a mundane ceremony that will be remembered mostly for what it was not: the rampage of four years ago, when ...The Hill - Jan. 6 -
Security precautions in place for election certification, 4 years after Jan. 6 insurrection
Four years after Trump supporters stormed the Capitol to try to stop the certification of Joe Biden's 2020 election win, Congress is certifying Donald Trump's 2024 election victory. CBS News ...CBS News - Jan. 6 -
What to know about the certification of Trump's election win 4 years after Capitol insurrection
Congress is set to certify President-elect Donald Trump's election victory Monday, four years after Trump supporters stormed the Capitol to disrupt the certification of Joe Biden's election win. ...CBS News - Jan. 6 -
4 Ways to Drive Organic Business Growth
As companies find funding harder to come by, more are turning toward organic growth strategies. Here’s what they look like.Inc. - Jan. 4 -
How Business Owners Can Energize Their Teams and Hit Big Goals in 2025
Ditch predictable plans and inspire your team with bold moves and honest conversations.Inc. - Jan. 3
More from Inc.
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4 Ways OpenAI’s Operator Could Help Businesses Do Things Faster
OpenAI’s newest tool promises to handle some tasks like a human would. Here’s how businesses could potentially use it to save time.Inc. - 1h -
Why Health Care Innovators Need to Start With The Basics—Their Communities
In health care, there’s no innovation without inclusion.Inc. - 1h -
35 Years Ago, Chick-fil-A Founder Truett Cathy Said the Difference Between Success and Failure Comes Down to 1 Simple Thing
In business, let’s call it the 5 percent rule.Inc. - 2h -
How to Avoid Bad Leadership Really Comes Down to How You Answer This Question
This important question may open up the path to good leadership.Inc. - 2h -
Trouble Sleeping? Even If You’re Happy at Work, Your Job May Be to Blame, a 10-Year Study Reveals
People with desk jobs are 37 percent likelier to have trouble sleeping. Here’s how to improve those odds.Inc. - 2h
More in Business
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Tesla sues EU over tariffs on electric vehicles from China
Decision marks latest confrontation between Elon Musk and BrusselsFinancial Times - 20m -
Tech stocks tumble as China’s DeepSeek sows doubts about AI spending
Start-up’s model raises questions about need for huge western hardware investmentFinancial Times - 21m -
Bitcoin tumbles below $98,000 in risk-off move as Nasdaq stocks are crushed
Crypto is in a cooling period after running to a new record last week and was pulled lower by the DeepSeek-driven sell-off in tech stocks.CNBC - 35m -
Nvidia falls 12% in premarket trading as China's DeepSeek triggers global tech sell-off
DeepSeek launched a free, open-source large-language model in late December, claiming it was developed in just two months at a cost of under $6 million.CNBC - 36m -
China Vanke Forecasts $6.2 Billion Loss, Replaces Top Executives
China Vanke, one of the country’s largest developers, cleared out its top executives and said it anticipates a $6.2 billion loss, a sign the property meltdown is still raging.The New York Times - 44m