
Is Your Bonus at Risk?
Tech & mobile communications have reshaped work, with Covid accelerating the shift to hybrid roles.
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As a by-product of modern communications, hybrid and remote working has flourished but with financial services giants such as JP Morgan and HSBC demanding more office time from staff, FatGreen Executive ask if the tide has turned to far?
We explore the benefits and challenges of working from home and the implications to bonuses.
Lessons in Leadership,
from Battlefield to Boardoom
People who rise fastest lead, inspire, and take ownership.
Whether restructuring a business, scaling a fintech, or building investor confidence, leadership is the multiplier.
Senior roles demand vision, resilience, and the ability to rally teams through uncertainty.
WW2 commanders were not just strategists, they were communicators, morale-builders, and decisive under pressure.
Today’s top executives lead with clarity, empathy, and action. Explore the articles below for leadership lessons from history’s most inspiring generals.

Admiral Yamamoto
80 Sen, the master mind of Japan's Pearl Harbour attack. Read how Yamamoto's experience living in America before WW2 provided him justification for his first move strike.

General Davis
Ollie, General Davis leader of the revered Red Tail fighter squadron of the Tuskegee Airmen. Read how he overcame racial segregation to become the first African-American brigadier general in the USAF.

General Patton
Old Blood and Guts, "lead me, follow me or get the hell out of my way". Read how Patton's understanding of mobile warfare earned him recognition as the allies most feared General.

Field Marshal Montgomery
Monty, described by Winston Churchill as “Indomitable in retreat, invincible in advance, insufferable in victory.” Read how he was famed for outmaneuvering the Desert Fox in North Africa.

Field Marshall Rommel
The Desert Fox, respected for his lightening strikes and ability to secure tactical advantage. Read how he utilised armour innovatively whilst commanding the Afrika Corps agaisnt the British in North Africa.
