Can Big Data Give us Big Ideas?
Big Data can do more than target advertisements, it could even help innovators develop new concepts and products.
Big Data can do more than target advertisements, it could even help innovators develop new concepts and products.
An expert on stress and performance, Modupe Akinola discusses how new techniques emerging in the field could reduce unnecessary stress in the office.
In 2015, KIND Snacks rose from controversy to start a conversation on FDA food labeling.
Seven ways to grow and protect your most valuable asset.
The creation of state and federal healthcare exchanges represents a significant first step towards bringing greater rationality to health insurance markets, but the design of the exchanges may still
Economic stratification can have grave consequences — no more so than in the richest country in the world.
Now that parents can have two children, Chinese growth could take a two-decade hit.
Two speakers at the recent India Business Initiative conference offer radical suggestions for solving the country’s physician shortage.
Columbia University’s physician-in-chief prescribes some radical intervention that will help cure India’s healthcare crisis.
The high pitched fervor over ‘big data’ has died down a bit, but only because companies are more focused on putting their noses to the grind stone to determine how to more effectively collect and analyze data, of all sizes, to improve their business performance.
Second only to the use of fossil fuels, deforestation is the largest driver of global climate change, but a proposal before the United Nations Conference on Climate Change could change that.
Focusing on process is more effective than trying to control every aspect of employee performance.
The global economy is undergoing a massive structural transformation. Bruce Greenwald, the Robert Heilbrunn Professor of Finance and Asset Management and director of the Heilbrunn Center for Graham & Dodd Investing, explains the coming death of manufacturing and the return of the local.
Legal systems are blocking access to credit in emerging-market countries. New research explains how — and why.
A life-long runner, associate professor Malia Mason reflects on what the sport taught her about leadership.