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She Quit Her High-Paying Job to Take a Risk. Now She’s a Top 1% Earner.


Working in tech, Nancy Marzouk was used to being the only woman in the room. But that doesn’t mean she liked it.

“I felt like I constantly overperformed, yet was under potentially more scrutiny than other people, if that makes sense,” said Marzouk, 52.

She’d gone to school for fine arts, but fell into advertising after undergrad and grew to love the industry. As she rose in the ranks at various marketing and tech agencies, she felt like she was always working harder than the people around her but wasn’t moving up the ladder at the same rate.

“The companies weren’t going to change. I had to leave to change it, basically. That’s how I felt,” she said. “I felt like I had gotten to the point in my career where it wasn’t about what I did. There was too much politics at play. And so, if you weren’t part of that, like, boys’ club, then … it didn’t matter what I did.”

Marzouk took a risk. She left her stable corporate job and launched her own startup, MediaWallah, a data management company, in 2013. Now, Marzouk makes between $600,000 and $800,000 every year, placing her in the top 1% of income earners in the country, according to SmartAsset.

Among the top 1% of income earners in the United States, only 5% are women, according to an American Sociological Review study from 2019. Emily Riley, another woman in the top 1% and a researcher, recently surveyed 145 of these women to find out what it takes to be a woman in the top 1%. Another 180 women surveyed in the report earn more than $300,000, and about 170 other women surveyed make between $100,000 and $300,000. Ranges vary slightly, but for Riley’s study top 1% income earners make more than $775,000. Women are well-represented in top 1% households as wives and partners to high-earning men, researchers found, but women themselves are rarely the sole earners in top 1% households.

“What I realized sort of in my mid career, as I started having children and I wanted more flexibility, is that I really didn’t have the tools to negotiate it in a way where I felt like I was in control,” Riley, 48, said. “I always felt as though I was one step behind, I was missing out on something. And while I continued to be reasonably successful, it just made it obvious to me that there weren’t a lot of women above me who had created a path that I could follow.”

Riley took a risk, too, after she decided to have a third child. She wanted more flexibility as a working mom, so she became a technology consultant. Like Marzouk, she found that being her own boss actually led to more income for her and her family. She said she makes just under $1 million per year.

Most of the talk around women in the workforce focuses on challenges and hurdles, Riley said. She thought about how, as a younger working woman, she had always wished for a roadmap to success. So, she went after her own research, tapping successful women in her network, in women’s groups and across LinkedIn.

“I was overwhelmed by the positive feedback,” she said. “It really seemed to touch a nerve, that other career women agreed with me, you know, this is something we would all enjoy. Instead of just feeling annoyed or frustrated or challenged, we can actually do something about it and be really excited to hear each other’s stories and to learn from one another.”

Women in the Top 1% of Income Earners Tend to Be Married, Have at Least 2 Kids

The results of Riley’s survey found there are three traits that women in the top 1% share: Drive, career management and a willingness to learn and grow.

She had anticipated that women in the top 1% would be intense and competitive, which she found was true as 44% of women in the 1% say they are competitive compared to 25% of women in the $100,000 to $300,000 bracket. But she also found women in the 1% are less compliant and more “willing to go their own way.” One in five women in the 1% are likely to “go with the flow,” versus one in three women in lower-income brackets.

Most women in the top 1% of income earners are married and have children, the survey found. While these women are usually the primary breadwinners of their households, 89% are married and 71% have two or more children.

Marzouk has two boys. Her husband works, but she has been the primary breadwinner for her family for a while now. Earlier in her career, Marzouk said, she felt like she had to go “above and beyond” at work, “or else it would impede my ability to climb up the corporate ladder.” Her partner was instrumental to her success, she said, by being supportive and encouraging her to follow her dreams and goals.

Things have gotten better for working moms in recent years, Marzouk said, but she still feels like she missed a lot of things when her kids were little. Riley said she heard a lot about guilt from the women she interviewed for this research.

“You really can’t have it all, but you can live a full life,” Riley said. “And that’s when you have a lot on your plate, and of course you can’t be everywhere at the same time. You’re going to miss some of those midweek holiday parties at your kids’ school, but you will be there for their recital on Saturday night, you know?”

‘What Would a Man Do?’

There aren’t many women who are CEOs in tech, Marzouk said, and even fewer founders. She gets excited when she hears about women who are looking to start their own company in the advertising and technology space, and wants to help them. Raising capital funds as a women is difficult, she said.

“Women are very pragmatic. Like, we think of things realistically,” she said. But being realistic with financial projections doesn’t excite potential funders, who are mostly men. “People only want to invest in the pipe dream.”

Her advice? Think like a man, Marzouk said.

“What would a man do? What would my husband do if he was in this situation?” she said. “And I actually do the opposite of what my gut is telling me, because I know who my audience is.”

A lot of women are stuck in “mid-tier” roles, Marzouk said. Sometimes, she said, women need to think about what they want to accomplish and the best way to get there − which might mean getting out of their comfort zone.

Once you break through the glass ceiling, Marzouk said, “you can do whatever you want to do.”

Madeline Mitchell’s role covering women and the caregiving economy at USA TODAY is supported by a partnership with Pivotal and Journalism Funding Partners. Funders do not provide editorial input.

Reach Madeline at [email protected] and @maddiemitch_ on X.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: She quit her high-paying job to take a risk. Now she’s a top 1% earner.

Reporting by Madeline Mitchell, USA TODAY / USA TODAY

USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect

Inherited an IRA? The 10-Year Rule Is Now Being Enforced — What You Must Do


If you’ve just inherited an IRA, you’re probably going through a confusing time right now. A loved one has likely just passed away, and you may still be grieving that loss. At the same time, you could probably use that extra cash, but you might be worried about how the withdrawals will affect your tax bill.

It’s a lot to process, and it’s OK if you don’t feel up to managing it all right now. The 10-year rule for inherited IRAs means you have plenty of time to sort out what to do with your inheritance.

Image source: Getty Images.

How the 10-year rule for inherited IRAs works

The 10-year rule is a limitation the IRS imposes on inherited IRAs to prevent the savings from growing in the account indefinitely. It enables you to take money out of the IRA whenever you’d like, as long as you’ve withdrawn everything by the end of the 10th year following the year of the account owner’s death. For example, if the account owner died in 2026, you’d have until 2037 to withdraw all the funds.

You could take it all in a lump sum, if you’d like. But doing this could lead to a large tax bill if the money comes from a traditional IRA. This isn’t the case for Roth IRAs because the original account owner paid taxes on their contributions in the year they made them. However, taking money out of the inherited Roth IRA all at once could cause you to miss investment earnings you may have gotten by waiting a little longer.

You can compromise by withdrawing some money from the IRA each year of the 10-year span. Just make sure you don’t leave any money remaining in the account by the end of the 10th year, or you could face problems with the IRS.

Exceptions to the 10-year rule

The 10-year rule applies to most non-spouse beneficiaries, and spousal beneficiaries can choose it as well. But spousal beneficiaries may also choose to roll the inherited IRA into their own retirement account. This may enable them to defer taxes on the funds for longer, but it also means they’ll pay a penalty for accessing the money before age 59 1/2.

There’s also a special class known as the “eligible designated beneficiaries.” You might belong to this group if you’re the spouse or minor child of the account holder, you’re disabled or chronically ill, or you’re not more than 10 years younger than the original owner. These individuals can follow the 10-year rule, but they also have another option.

They can take distributions based on their life expectancy. There’s a specific formula you’d follow that determines how much you must withdraw in a given year. The remainder can grow as long as you want it to. This is a nice choice if you don’t need the money right now. However, minor children can only use this method until they turn 18. Then, they must default to the 10-year rule.

Congress Taxes College Endowments But Still Sends Them Financial Aid — That Makes No Sense


The U.S. Should Means-Test Colleges The Same Way It Means-Tests Americans

Harvard University sits on an endowment (PDF File) worth roughly $56.9 billion. That’s more than the GDP of over 100 countries. Yet in the 2024-25 academic year, Harvard students still received over $14.4 million in need-based federal grants and another $5.3 million in non-need-based aid, according to its own Common Data Set filing. 

Harvard is not alone. Yale, with a $41.1 billion endowment, Princeton at $36.4 billion, Stanford at $37.6 billion, and MIT at $24.6 billion all participate in Title IV federal student aid programs. These schools receive Pell Grants, Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants (FSEOG), federal work-study funds, and process billions in federal student loans for their students.

The endowment tax signed into law on July 4, 2025, as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, is a step in the right direction. But it doesn’t go far enough.

The federal government should stop giving Title IV financial aid (including Pell Grants and federal student loans) to colleges that are sitting on massive endowments generating investment profits. If a college has the resources to fund every student’s education from its own endowment returns, American taxpayers shouldn’t be subsidizing it.

And every dollar in financial aid funds spent at these wealth schools is a potential dollar that could be spent at a college that really needs the funds: think state or community colleges that deliver positive student results but may lack that extra funding.

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The Numbers Don’t Add Up

The scale of accumulated wealth in American higher education is staggering.

More than 80 colleges and universities have endowments exceeding $1 billion. This includes not just private elite institutions but also massive public university systems. The University of Texas System holds $47.5 billion. Texas A&M holds $20.4 billion. The University of Michigan holds $19.2 billion. The University of California system holds $19.1 billion.

Among private institutions, the numbers are even more striking when viewed per student. Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, and MIT each have endowments above $2 million per student. Another 18 institutions exceed $1 million per student. These schools collected billions in investment returns in 2024 alone, growing their wealth while simultaneously accepting federal taxpayer dollars.

Critics of endowment reform often point out that much of this wealth is “restricted” by donor wishes – going towards a building or a certain school’s dean’s salary. But the data tells a different story.

About 40% of higher education endowment assets are subject to permanent restrictions, 30% are temporarily restricted, and roughly 29% are quasi-endowment—meaning the institution itself chose to set the money aside and can choose to spend it differently.

At Harvard, unrestricted funds account for approximately 20% of its endowment. That’s still roughly $10 billion in unrestricted funds alone – more than the total endowment of most universities in America.

The New Endowment Tax Is A Start, But Not Enough

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act introduced a tiered endowment tax that replaced the flat 1.4% excise tax that had been in effect since 2017.

The new rates are based on endowment dollars per student: 1.4% for institutions with $500,000 to $750,000 per student, 4% for $750,000 to $2 million per student, and 8% for those exceeding $2 million per student.

The tax applies to private institutions with at least 3,000 tuition-paying students, more than 50% of whom are in the U.S., and at least $500,000 in endowment per student.

Yale’s president estimated the university will pay approximately $280 million in the first year under the new rates. Harvard, with the largest endowment, will likely pay even more. 

Taxing endowment income is a reasonable policy. But taxation alone doesn’t address the core absurdity: that these same institutions continue to receive federal student aid. Yale students still received nearly $19 million in Federal aid, when you combine both the student and parent grants and student loans.

The tax says, “You have too much money, so we’ll take a cut.”

The smarter policy says, “You have too much money, so use your own resources to help your students.”

And once you see the numbers, it’s hard to ignore. Yale knows that their families received $19 million in aid (including $6 million in student loans) – knowing full well they have so much in excess funds they’ll pay $280 million in taxes. If they won’t make the right decisions for their families, the government should.

We “Means Test” Americans For Many Social Programs — Why Not Colleges?

The United States operates roughly 80 means-tested federal programs, spending over $1 trillion annually on benefits for low-income Americans.

These programs span every area of life: Medicaid for healthcare, SNAP for food assistance, Section 8 vouchers for housing, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), the Earned Income Tax Credit, and Supplemental Security Income, among dozens of others.

Every one of these programs requires applicants to prove they lack sufficient resources before receiving help. A family earning too much can’t get Medicaid. A household with too many assets may be denied SNAP benefits.

The principle is straightforward: government resources should go to those who need them, not to those who can afford to help themselves.

Yet we apply no equivalent standard to the institutions that receive federal student aid. Harvard, with $56.9 billion in endowment assets, receives the same type of Title IV funding as a community college with no endowment and a student body that is overwhelmingly low-income.

A regional state university serving first-generation students gets the same category of federal Pell Grant funding as Princeton, which is sitting on $3.75 million per student.

If a family earning $200,000 a year can’t get food stamps, why can a university sitting on $53 billion get Pell Grant money?

Federal Aid Should Go To Both Students AND Colleges Who Actually Need It

The Pell Grant program disbursed $36.6 billion to 7.2 million recipients in the 2024-25 award year. The maximum individual Pell Grant was $7,395.

This is the primary federal grant program for low-income students and it faces a projected $11.5 billion shortfall. At the same time, Pell dollars are flowing to students at schools that could easily replace every dollar of federal aid with institutional money.

Consider what redirecting those funds could accomplish. The federal grants going to students at the 23 schools with over $1 million in endowment per student could instead be routed to community colleges, regional public universities, and historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs)—institutions that serve the students who need help the most and have the fewest institutional resources to provide it.

Just looking at the data for these few schools – implementing these proposals would shift over $100 million in financial aid to colleges that need it.

The federal aid being sent to these institutions is a rounding error on their balance sheets. But for a community college struggling to keep its doors open, those same federal dollars are the difference between offering classes and cutting programs.

The Proposal: Ban Title IV for Endowment-Rich Schools

Congress should pass legislation prohibiting institutions from participating in Title IV federal student aid programs (including Pell Grants, Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, federal work-study, and federal student loans) if the institution’s endowment generates a net investment profit in any given fiscal year AND the institution meets certain endowment-per-student thresholds.

A reasonable threshold might mirror the existing endowment tax brackets. Any private institution with more than $500,000 in endowment per student that generates a profit on its investments should be required to replace federal student aid dollar-for-dollar with institutional aid.

You don’t need taxpayer money to educate your students—use your own.

This isn’t about punishing these schools. It’s about allocating scarce federal resources where they’re actually needed.

Schools like Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford already provide generous institutional financial aid. They have the infrastructure and the assets to cover every dollar of federal aid their students currently receive. In many cases, they already supplement federal aid with their own funds anyway.

For students at these institutions, the transition would be seamless. The school simply replaces the federal Pell Grant with an institutional grant of the same amount. The student’s cost doesn’t change.

What changes is that federal dollars (your tax dollars) go to students at schools that genuinely need the help.

What Are The Objections?

This proposal will no doubt draw sharp criticism from university administrators.

In talking with some industry insiders, the three strongest counter-arguments deserve a conversation.

“Title IV Aid Is a Student’s Money—You’re Punishing Students, Not Schools”

The most common objection I heard is that Pell Grants and federal loans follow the student, not the institution. Under this view, a low-income student admitted to Harvard has the same legal right to a Pell Grant as one attending a community college.

Restricting Title IV at wealthy schools, the argument goes, strips a federal benefit from the students the program was designed to serve.

This sounds persuasive until you look at the math. Harvard’s 2024–25 Common Data Set shows it already provides $249.5 million in institutional grants to undergraduates. Replacing $14.5 million in federal grants (about 5.8% of what Harvard already spends on aid) is trivial.

My proposal requires dollar-for-dollar replacement, so no student loses a single dollar. A student receiving a $7,395 Pell Grant at Harvard would instead receive a $7,395 institutional grant from Harvard. The student’s net cost doesn’t change. What changes is that federal dollars stop flowing to a school with $53.2 billion in assets.

The “student money” framing also ignores the fact that it’s actually the government’s money, and it’s not flowing to where the money could do more good. Only about 16% of students at highly-endowed private universities receive Pell Grants. At community colleges, that figure commonly exceeds 50%. 

Redirecting those same federal dollars means reaching 3 to 4 times more low-income students per dollar spent. The Pell Grant program faces a projected $11.5 billion shortfall – this isn’t about taking benefits away from students, it’s about stretching limited federal resources further.

“Elite Colleges Are Engines of Social Mobility—Don’t Discourage Low-Income Students from Attending”

A more nuanced objection draws Mark Kantrowitz’s insights into undermatching – where low income students are already under-applying to selective colleges. Removing federal aid could create a psychological barrier: even if the school replaces the dollars, the signal is that the federal government doesn’t support low-income students attending elite schools.

But the data actually undermines this argument more than it supports it. At Ivy Plus colleges, more students come from the top 1% of the income distribution than from the entire bottom 50%. Children from the top 1% are 77 times more likely to attend an Ivy Plus school than children from the bottom 20%.

The “mobility rate” (which measures what fraction of a school’s entire student body are bottom-to-top success stories) is actually highest at mid-tier public institutions like CUNY campuses, California state colleges, and University of Texas schools. These are the schools this proposal would redirect federal funds toward.

Yes, elite schools are effective for the few low-income students who get in. But the federal government gets far more mobility per dollar at the public institutions that serve the overwhelming majority of low-income students.

If Harvard can seamlessly replace a $7,395 Pell Grant with a $7,395 institutional grant (which it demonstrably can based on it’s balance sheet) there is no practical barrier to a low-income student attending. The FAFSA process doesn’t change for the student. The school simply funds the award itself.

“This Sets a Dangerous Precedent—Government Will Weaponize Student Aid Against Universities”

The third objection I heard is political: that giving the government a new lever to restrict Title IV based on institutional characteristics opens the door to politically motivated restrictions. And the government is already attacking admissions policies and more.

This argument conflates objective financial criteria with political targeting. Means-testing based on endowment-per-student ratios is no different in principle from means-testing individuals based on income—something the federal government already does across 80-plus programs spending over $1 trillion annually. The threshold is financial and quantifiable, not ideological.

The slippery slope concern also ignores that the government already sets multiple financial benchmarks that determine Title IV eligibility.

Schools must maintain acceptable cohort default rates, meet financial responsibility standards, and comply with ROI rules. Schools that fail those benchmarks lose access to federal aid. 

Adding a financial capacity test for institutions with enormous wealth is consistent with existing practice.

If anything, a clear statutory threshold based on endowment-per-student protects schools better than the current environment, where Harvard saw 350 federal research grants frozen or terminated by executive action in 2025 without any defined financial criteria at all. 

A transparent, legislated standard is the opposite of weaponization – it’s rule of law.The problem is that colleges don’t want to admit what this rule will do: it will encourage colleges to begin supporting students financially. Something the current college tuition crisis has failed at.

Let’s Send Financial Aid Dollars To Where They’re Actually Needed And Stop Giving Handouts To Wealthy Schools

The American social safety net is built on a simple idea: help goes to those who need it.

We don’t give unemployment benefits to billionaires. We don’t give food assistance to households earning six figures. We don’t give Medicaid to people with comprehensive private insurance. Yet we give federal student aid to institutions with more wealth than most countries.

The new endowment tax is a start. It acknowledges that these institutions have accumulated wealth that should be contributing more to the public good. But taxing the endowment while simultaneously sending federal financial aid dollars back to the same schools is contradictory. 

Congress should take the next logical step: means-test colleges the same way we means-test Americans. If your endowment is generating profits, use that money for your students.

Let federal financial aid money flow to the schools and students who actually need it. 

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The post Congress Taxes College Endowments But Still Sends Them Financial Aid — That Makes No Sense appeared first on The College Investor.

How Leaders Can Get Strategic About Energy Costs


Most businesses, especially small to medium-sized ones, still treat energy like rent: essential, predictable, and largely outside managerial control. That era is ending as energy prices and supply volatility shift from being marginal operating-cost questions to board-level resilience, strategy, and competitiveness issues.



Anker Portable Charger, 10,000mAh 30W Power Bank for $20 on Amazon


Anker Portable Charger, 10,000mAh 30W Power Bank for $20

This article contains Amazon affiliate links.

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Keep in mind that Amazon offers free shipping on orders of $35+, or free next-day shipping on all orders with Amazon Prime. Prime members can also share benefits with a Household member. Students and all 18-25 year olds as well as EBT/SNAP/Medicaid cardholders can get a discounted Prime membership.

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Outlook for Ontario housing starts weakens further away from 1.5 million goal




Ontario’s housing start projections have been revised downward once again in the province’s budget, putting the government even farther off track from building 1.5 million homes over 10 years — a target to which the ministers in charge say they pay no mind.

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Buddhist monk says workers struggle to wind down—he shares 30-second tip to reset



Workers in high-pressure careers may count down the hours until they can escape the office and get a moment of relief—but a Japanese Zen Buddhist monk says a reset doesn’t have to wait. Toryo Ito, the vice abbot of the oldest Zen temple in Kyoto, is bringing a mediation-based practice to the corporate world and helping workers cope with their stressful careers.

“I want to shift their awareness of the definition of ‘strong.’ People who are very good at business tend to focus on the power [and] force,” he tells Fortune. “My definition of [strength] is how you get back to the core of your idea, how to come back to your body and heart in daily life.”

Ito says helping people navigate their high-stress jobs is one of the most frequent requests he gets from white-collar pupils. The 46-year-old leader at Ryosokuin Temple was born into a lineage of Zen monks, and started sharing his practice with companies and their staffers back in 2012.

Serving as director of mindfulness at Japanese skincare company Tatcha since 2021 and leading meditation workshops at Fortune 500 businesses like Meta and Sony, the monk is bringing his ancient practice to people all around the world with a modern approach. He travels to Tokyo to teach mindfulness once a month, conducting overseas sessions up to 10 times a year.

When it comes to handling stress while on the job, Ito says it’s a dilemma he’s mitigated with his meditation attendees “thoughtfully and proactively.” And luckily, workers don’t have to wait to clock out to reset their nervous systems. Ito shares a 30-second method to reconnect with themselves and achieve a sense of calm. 

“When you get so much information, [you become] obsessed with a lot of decisions,” Ito explains. It’s okay to recognize that you’ve dwelled on the feeling, and he shares a “way to notice that earlier, and then develop the way—our technique—to get back to your origin, to your body, quickly.”

The Zen way anyone can achieve a calmer mindset in 30 seconds 

Millions of workers have become hardwired to bustle into their offices, overwhelmed by packed commutes and chaotic starts to the day. But even while toiling away at their laptops, professionals can take one short step to return to their center. Opening up a new document or answering emails can turn into a meditative moment. 

“I often teach them what you can do in your daily routine, such as drinking coffee, for example, or opening a laptop. Before opening your laptop, just take 30 seconds to breathe in, breathe out carefully,” Ito explains. 

By taking a beat to sit in silence with closed eyes, people are giving themselves a moment to notice the world, rather than shut it out. Ito says it’s important to be observant during those 30 seconds: pay attention to the noise in the room, what it smells like in that moment. If you pick up a cup of coffee to drink, focus on the taste.

Engaging the senses centers mindfulness even in the most hectic work environments, lowering stress and opening up the headspace for thinking. 

“When you send an important message to your colleague, just take 30 seconds to listen to the sound surrounding you, smell the surroundings,” he continues. “Your habit, your work, can become meditative time.”

Ito offers another Zen strategy for one of the most nerve-wracking moments at work: going into a stressful meeting. Focusing on your steps and entering the room intentionally helps build up “your personal ritual,” the monk says. 

“When you enter the conference room, just open the door,” he says. “Put your feet together, then walk from the left foot first, then right foot. Always do that, then you can find the slight changes of that everytime…You have a strong routine that gives you that awareness.”

Professionals might lose their rhythm, or recognize a difference in their breathing, but it all goes back into Zen’s practice of noticing—and having those small meditative habits to reconnect to the body.

When Analytical Tools Scale, First-Order Information Differentiates


Cognitive abilities describe how humans collect, process, and interpret information such as attention, memory, pattern recognition, logical reasoning, and quantitative analysis.

Non-cognitive abilities include traits such as motivation, perseverance, communication, ethical judgment, and the capacity to act under uncertainty.

The framework below categorizes these capabilities across two dimensions: cognitive versus non-cognitive, and basic versus advanced.

Basic cognitive capabilities (QIII: third quadrant), such as memorization, structured record-keeping, and routine calculation, have long been automated. Their automation marked the first wave of technological compression.

Advanced cognitive capabilities (QII), including high-dimensional modeling, statistical inference, and complex analytical verification, are increasingly within the reach of AI systems. As these tools scale across firms, analytical differentiation narrows.

By contrast, advanced non-cognitive capabilities (QI), such as setting goals under uncertainty, exercising ethical judgment, and creating or obtaining first-order information, remain less amenable to standardization. These capabilities influence how organizations interpret ambiguous signals, coordinate decisions, and allocate capital when data is incomplete.

The implication is organizational rather than purely technical. When analytical tools become widely accessible, sustainable advantage depends less on computational sophistication and more on how firms structure teams, cultivate judgment, and design decision processes that integrate technology with human insight.