Data strategy ideas from MIT Sloan Management Review
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Using data to build better products and improve job satisfaction builds competitive advantage. Creating “data connectors” can help.
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Using data to build better products and improve job satisfaction builds competitive advantage. Creating “data connectors” can help.
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By assessing and applying the right type of governance, ecosystem participants can address shared challenges and grow ecosystem value.
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With carbon emissions reduction a top concern, tech leaders are building capabilities that help companies reduce their own emissions and those of suppliers and customers.
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To train employees on digital skills, companies need precise insight into current workforce skills. Artificial intelligence can help.
The Clean Investment Monitor database, a new collaboration between MIT CEEPR and the Rhodium Group, shows $213 billion in clean technology and infrastructure investments in the last year.
Ahead of the presidential inauguration, MIT Sloan's Professor Andrew Lo and other panelists described advances in their research and how these discoveries are being deployed to benefit the public.
The LFE is actively involved in research that aims to identify methods for measuring and managing risk, both standard and systemic types of risk.
The LFE’s healthcare finance initiative explores new business models and financial vehicles for raising and deploying funds to support biomedical innovation.
External link to the MIT Laboratory for Financial Engineering's WP website
This report by Fei Qin, an Associate Professor in Management at the University of Bath, and Thomas A. Kochan, the George M. Bunker Professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management, describes what the authors believe to be a state‐of‐the‐art learning system at IBM Corporation and traces the effects of...