Technology
Ideas and insights about technology from MIT Sloan.
11 MIT climate tech startups to know
What does the next wave of climate innovation look like? At the 2026 ClimateCAP MBA Summit, MIT-connected startups presented solutions across energy, materials, and supply chains.
Building a case for catalytic climate finance
Many climate technologies fail not because of their effectiveness but because they falter in the “missing middle” of financing. The MIT Catalytic Climate Finance Project aims to bridge that gap.
‘AI helped me turn lab technology into an at-home product for parents’
Learn how Sensopore founder Max Jara Fornerod identified a customer base for his startup using the MIT Entrepreneurship JetPack digital adviser.
6 ‘priority technologies’ to help secure US economic interests
A new book edited by MIT professor Elisabeth B. Reynolds calls for domestic investment in critical minerals, semiconductors, biomanufacturing, quantum computing, drones, and advanced manufacturing.
How to accelerate AI transformation
A new MIT Sloan executive education course looks at how organizations need to align “the work, the workforce, and the workplace” to succeed with artificial intelligence.
Putting AI to work: The latest from MIT Sloan Management Review
New MIT Sloan Management Review insights cover types of AI startups, using agentic AI tools for knowledge work, and why AI isn't boosting productivity.
Aircraft noise impacts home values, new data shows
Here’s how aircraft noise at major airports in Boston, Chicago, and Seattle affected housing prices.
‘This AI tool helped me choose the right market for my startup’
Learn how the MIT Entrepreneurship JetPack digital adviser guided health tech startup Femmli through a detailed approach to market segmentation.
How to navigate the age of agentic AI
A new report from Sloan Management Review and BCG identifies four tensions that organizations must manage when rolling out agentic artificial intelligence.
Quantum computing reality check: What business needs to know now
Commercial quantum computing is now years, rather than decades, away. It’s time for business leaders to start tracking its evolution.