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How leaders should address race with their employees, the Warren Buffett of tech, and top healthcare startups

Matt Turner   

How leaders should address race with their employees, the Warren Buffett of tech, and top healthcare startups

Hello everyone! Welcome to this weekly roundup of the top stories in business from Business Insider executive editor Matt Turner. Please subscribe here to get this newsletter in your inbox every Sunday.

New York. Atlanta. Los Angeles. Denver. Dallas. Detroit. Washington, DC. Seattle. Miami. Chicago.

Thousands marched in cities across the US last night, with many of the protests turning violent.

The protests first broke out in Minneapolis after a black man, George Floyd, was killed after a white police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes during an arrest, as Floyd said he couldn't breathe. The arrest was caught on video, and the Minneapolis police officer who knelt on George Floyd's neck has since been charged with third-degree murder and manslaughter.

As Tati Bellamy Walker and Shana Lebowitz report, a memo from medical-device-manufacturing firm Boston Scientific on the killing of George Floyd is a case study in how leaders should address the events in Minnesota with their employees.

From their story:

The medical-device-manufacturing firm Boston Scientific released an open letter denouncing the killing of George Floyd, a black man who died in Minneapolis last week after a white officer handcuffed and pinned him on the ground.

CEO Michael Mahoney's open letter to the company shows the value of employee resource groups and listening to workers from marginalized backgrounds — especially after major incidents tied to systemic racism.

The letter explains the need for companies to stand in solidarity with marginalized workers, create a space for processing these traumatic situations, and challenging racial discrimination in the workplace.

You can read their story here:

A memo from a Massachusetts company on the killing of George Floyd is a case study in how leaders should address race and the events in Minnesota with their employees

The Warren Buffett of tech

Private-equity firm Silver Lake is best known for doing leveraged buyouts of big-name, mature technology companies. Then the pandemic hit.

As Dakin Campbell and Casey Sullivan report, the company plowed money into Google's self-driving car unit Waymo and Twitter as the coronavirus pandemic gathered steam in the US. In April and May it followed with investments in Airbnb, Expedia, and India broadband startup Reliance Jio. The big question across Wall Street and Silicon Valley now, per Dakin and Casey, is what exactly is Silver Lake up to?

From their story:

Silver Lake saw its opportunity when valuations plunged earlier this year and solid companies with iconic founders and seemingly durable business models suddenly needed financing. Silver Lake quickly showed itself to be, as one banker put it, "validation capital."

"If you're raising money and you have one key investor and you have one phone call to make, these are the guys we call," another banker said. "It's the tech version of Warren Buffett."

You can read their story here:

Silver Lake has been plowing money into bets like Airbnb, Twitter, and Waymo. Here's a look inside what's driving its rapid-fire dealmaking.

Top healthcare startups

Blake Dodge and Tyler Sonnemaker asked 13 top venture capital investors which healthcare startups they think will thrive despite the coronavirus pandemic, and why.

From their story:

Some healthcare startups are well positioned to help as the novel coronavirus upends the way healthcare is provided in the US. Lockdowns have propelled telehealth companies to new heights and put mental health services front and center for employers. The pandemic is also boosting innovation in areas like how we deliver care, make drugs, and conduct research.

You can read the full story here:

Meet the 26 healthcare startups that top VCs say are poised to take off amid the coronavirus pandemic

Below are headlines on some of the stories you might have missed from the past week. Stay safe, everyone.

-- Matt

Bill Miller and 5 longtime value investors share 10 stock picks they're betting on right now — and explain why these are the best companies for the crisis recovery

Why the CEO of $160 billion Citizens Bank is turning to digital in a bid to compete against industry titans like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America

IBM is ditching a big WeWork office in NYC, revealing the risks of the popular flex-space model as the pandemic prompts Blue Chip companies to rethink real estate

How Dave Clark, the mastermind behind Amazon's coronavirus response, became one of the most powerful executives in America

An inside look at Eaze's latest pitch deck reveals vastly scaled back ambitions from the once-soaring cannabis startup

Glossier touted its decision to close its retail stores as putting 'public health ahead of our bottom line,' but leaked letter reveals that employees urged management to shutter the stores

Leaked documents show what WPP's PR firm Hill + Knowlton Strategies is charging clients for 2020

The US housing market has an inventory crisis three months into the coronavirus pandemic. Here's why prices aren't falling even as the economy craters.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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