6 insights from MIT Sloan Management Review
An interactive corporate dataset, an AI ethicist, marketing strategies, and more.
An interactive corporate dataset, an AI ethicist, marketing strategies, and more.
Phyllis Wallace took part in a landmark 1970s AT&T discrimination case and researched the working lives of young Black women.
A “red light, yellow light, green light” framework can help companies streamline AI governance and decision-making.
Institutional investors like Goldman Sachs and Citigroup have pledged to invest in projects that tackle the climate crisis. Here’s how they’re doing it — and where challenges remain.
With wind and solar cheaper and more prevalent, political willpower is what’s needed now to clean up the power grid, says climate activist Bill McKibben.
More effort is yielding fewer new ideas.
Data science is exploding, but women hold just a quarter of jobs. Four women discuss career paths, mentorship, and the benefits of diverse views.
“The Hangover” producer Scott Budnick left moviemaking to advocate for prison reform, then he came back. Here’s how he connects his two passions.
While generative AI is widely accessible and useful, businesses need to know when to use other AI tools, like traditional machine learning.
A new MIT Sloan course on pursuing happiness and a meaningful life teaches people to be kind and present and to take care of their physical and mental health.