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InternetNews October 8, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
Jeff Hawkins, Innovator Though he may not strive for the robotic capacity of I, Robot, the founder of Palm and Handspring offers a glimpse into the function of intelligence and how he wants to extend that to machines. |
HBS Working Knowledge June 7, 2004 Cynthia D. Churchwell |
The Competition of Countries To be successful in a global world, countries need to build on comparative advantages, says Harvard professor Richard H. K. Vietor. But exploiting natural resources isn't the only answer. |
HBS Working Knowledge March 2, 2009 Sean Silverthorne |
When Goal Setting Goes Bad Despite the mantra that goals are good, the process of setting beneficial goals is harder than it looks. |
HBS Working Knowledge March 20, 2006 Sarah Jane Gilbert |
Do I Dare Say Something? Professors explored the challenges employees face speaking up to internal authorities. Their research focused on behavior in large, multinational corporations, but the lessons learned can apply to smaller enterprises as well. |
HBS Working Knowledge July 12, 2006 Roger Thompson |
Competition the Cure for Healthcare Michael Porter is considered by many the world's foremost authority on competition and strategy. So when he discusses the need for fundamental reform in the way the United States delivers healthcare, people listen. |
HBS Working Knowledge November 21, 2005 Sean Silverthorne |
The Geography of Corporate Giving Why do companies support nonprofits and other socially responsible activities when there is no clear-cut evidence that corporate "do-gooding" results in greater returns for shareholders? |
HBS Working Knowledge May 17, 2004 Manda Salls |
Why We Don't Study Corporate Responsibility What can business do to improve social welfare? In fact, we don't know because too little study has been given the issue, argues Harvard professor Joshua Margolis and colleagues. |
HBS Working Knowledge January 31, 2005 Gary Emmons |
Rethinking Marketing's Conventional Wisdom Making advertising hard to find is just one way companies are rewriting conventional marketing strategies, says Harvard Business School professor Youngme Moon. |
HBS Working Knowledge October 10, 2005 Manda Salls |
Corporate Responsibility and the Environment: What is the Right Thing To Do? Does it make legal, ethical, or economic sense for companies to participate in environmental corporate social responsibility programs? A new book attempts to separate fact from fiction on the debate. |
Fast Company September 2003 |
Fast Talk: Turning the (conference) tables Five top business-school deans grapple with questions from their own MBA application forms. |
HBS Working Knowledge March 29, 2004 Manda Salls |
HBS Celebrates Social Enterprise Initiative On the eve of the Social Enterprise Initiative's 10th anniversary, Harvard professor James E. Austin talks about bringing social enterprise to the forefront of business education. |
Financial Planning May 1, 2006 Marshall Eckblad |
5 Questions: Hugh Massie An interview with the president and founder of Financial DNA about the importance of financial advisers discovering their clients' financial personalities. |
HBS Working Knowledge November 15, 2010 Sean Silverthorne |
Connecting Goals and Go-To-Market Initiatives In some respects, developing strategy is the easy part. Executing that strategy in alignment with strategic priorities is where real mastery of management takes place. |
HBS Working Knowledge January 10, 2007 Garry Emmons |
Working Independently, Working Together: The Challenge of Managing National Security The issues around managing national security provide an extreme example of the challenges faced by organizations that break into specialized parts yet must get the parts to work together. |
HBS Working Knowledge July 11, 2012 Julia Hanna |
The Future of Boards In "The Future of Boards: Meeting the Governance Challenges of the Twenty-First Century," Professor Jay Lorsch brings together experts to examine the state of boards today, what lies ahead, and what needs to change. |
BusinessWeek April 18, 2005 |
"Dynamism as the Norm" Ten years ago, author Steve Goldman presciently advocated "corporate agility." Here's where he sees the trend going now. |
HBS Working Knowledge October 10, 2005 |
Readers Respond: What's the Future of Globally Organized Labor? Some readers believe unions are on their way out because of market pressures and ineffectiveness, while others think they provides a valuable service and can adapt to changing conditions. |
BusinessWeek August 15, 2005 |
Social Responsibility: 'Fundamentally Subversive'? Economist Milton Friedman explains how companies are just serving their own interests when they serve the community. |