After Hours
Podcast autorstwa TED Audio Collective / Youngme Moon, Mihir Desai, & Felix Oberholzer-Gee - Środy
Kategorie:
209 Odcinki
-
Microsoft Trending Up, Apple Trending Down…? Plus, The Marriott Data Breach
Opublikowany: 5.12.2018 -
Tackling Climate Change, and Making Sense of the Nissan-Renault Drama
Opublikowany: 28.11.2018 -
Grading The New York Times’ News Coverage, and Quick Takes on Random Things
Opublikowany: 20.11.2018 -
Uber Prepares to Go Public, and China’s Social Credit System
Opublikowany: 14.11.2018 -
Can Netflix Keep Winning? And Why People Are Fleeing Latin America
Opublikowany: 7.11.2018 -
How Bad is Airline Service, Really? And Other Customer Service Complaints
Opublikowany: 31.10.2018 -
Is Retail Dying? Plus, How Are Companies Spending their Tax Cuts?
Opublikowany: 24.10.2018 -
Debating Minimum Wage, and Reflections on a Year of #MeToo
Opublikowany: 17.10.2018 -
New Media and Predictive Policing
Opublikowany: 2.07.2018 -
Trade and Soccer
Opublikowany: 27.06.2018 -
Food, food, and more food!
Opublikowany: 15.06.2018 -
The #MeToo Movement and Its Impact on Business (Live)
Opublikowany: 4.06.2018 -
Is the Job of the Presidency Too Big? Plus, Vaping Among Teens
Opublikowany: 30.05.2018 -
Brainstorming Gun Control Ideas, and the Affordable Housing Dilemma
Opublikowany: 24.05.2018 -
A Conversation with Teens
Opublikowany: 19.05.2018 -
Antitrust and Big Tech, and Is Corporate Lobbying A Good or Bad Thing?
Opublikowany: 17.05.2018 -
Why Management Practice Matters
Opublikowany: 9.05.2018 -
The Rise of Voice Assistants like Amazon Echo, and How to Punish Wells Fargo
Opublikowany: 2.05.2018 -
The Future of Newspapers, and Debating Big Tech
Opublikowany: 26.04.2018 -
Why They Do It: White Collar Criminals
Opublikowany: 24.04.2018
Harvard Business School professors discuss and debate current events that sit at the crossroads of business and culture. Youngme Moon, Mihir Desai, and Felix Oberholzer-Gee engage in a spirited discussion on a range of topics torn from the headlines — from Facebook, to free trade, to the #MeToo movement. Informed by their unique expertise as professors at one of the world’s leading business schools, their takes are always surprising, unconventional, and insightful.