MIT Sloan expert insights: 4 books from 2020
From how recommendation engines work to how misinformation spreads on social media, here are four books from MIT Sloan that made some sense of 2020.
From how recommendation engines work to how misinformation spreads on social media, here are four books from MIT Sloan that made some sense of 2020.
The sudden shift to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic dominated management discussion in 2020.
Data storytelling, the Beer Game, and three more popular ideas.
Car owners, on average, would want $3,300 to give up ownership and use of their vehicle for a month during the pandemic.
Six illustrations we loved this year.
Lenora Suki turns to impact-oriented, sustainable investors for inspiration, feedback, and collaboration.
The videoconferencing company found itself in crisis mode over security issues early in 2020.
Expanding access to capital for women and entrepreneurs of color requires deliberate and concrete action, not optics.
New research suggests accommodations by banks and the courts can help at least some small businesses survive bankruptcy.
Make these three social agreements: Listen to be changed, call in don’t call out, and question your first assumptions.