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Harvard Business IdeaCast
What Leaders Get Wrong About Listening
2025/06/03
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Listening well is an essential aspect of leadership - not just to maintain good relationships with employees, but to drive real business improvements and results. But many of us still get it wrong - or might think we are good listeners but don't give that impression to our teams. Jeff Yip, assistant professor of management at Simon Fraser University’s Beedle School of Business, explains why the skill is so important to business success and identifies the five main mistakes leaders make when it comes to listening. He is coauthor, along with Colin Fisher of University College London, of the HBR article “Are You Really A Good Listener?”
Does the Tech Industry Need a Reboot?
2025/05/27
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Although we’ve seen great successes come out of the technology sector in recent decades, many critics — and even some insiders — say it’s due for an overhaul. As a longtime Silicon Valley engineer and executive and cofounder of the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing conference, Telle Whitney argues that tech culture is still too closed-off and unwelcoming to different points of view, which leads to products and services that aren’t as good as they could be — for consumers and society. She thinks the industry — and corporate tech departments — can stay innovative while also becoming more inclusive and shares her advice for leaders who want to help. Whitney is the author of the new book Rebooting Tech Culture: How to Ignite Innovation and Build Organizations Where Everyone Can Thrive.
The Secrets Behind Barry Diller’s Business Success
2025/05/20
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To achieve long-term success in tumultuous businesses like media and entertainment, following formulas and data won't get you there. Barry Diller, the current Chairman and Senior Executive of both IAC and Expedia Group, has built a decades-long career in TV, film, and digital media by going with his instincts and betting on what he views as good ideas with limitless potential. He shares what he's learned about navigating the larger-than-life personalities in Hollywood, developing talent over time, and taking advantage of luck when it comes your way. Diller is the author of the new memoir, Who Knew.
Unexpectedly Out of a Job? Here’s How to Bounce Back
2025/05/13
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In a period of increasing political and economic uncertainty, government funding cuts, and AI that can outperform humans, many people are rightly worried about how those forces might disrupt their careers. Layoffs loom, and even those in senior leadership might soon experience - or have already endured - a setback they weren't expecting. Whitney Johnson, the CEO of Disruption Advisors, has advice on how to deal with the emotions surrounding those kinds of shocks, tactical steps you can take to get back in the game, and ways to learn from the experience so you're better positioned for the future.
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy on Agility, AI Strategy, and the Changing Role of Managers
2025/05/06
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It's a tough time to lead one of the biggest companies in the world - one that depends on supply chains, physical infrastructure, and top tech talent to stay competitive. But Andy Jassy, who took over as CEO of Amazon from legendary founder Jeff Bezos in 2021, manages in a way that he says helps him stay focused on what is best for their products and ultimately their customers. He explains his decision to get workers back to the office five days a week, why he is building an organization less dependent on managers, and how their artificial intelligence strategy differs from the rest.
Introducing a New Era of HBR IdeaCast
2025/04/30
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A new sound is in store for the HBR IdeaCast. Every Tuesday, we'll keep giving you the insights, research, and advice you need to lead, featuring practical conversations with leading thinkers. But as Adi Ignatius, editor-at-large at Harvard Business Review, joins executive editor Alison Beard as cohost of the show, we're offering even more to better serve you.
Look forward to more interviews with C-suite executives, more expert perspectives on the most pressing, up-to-date problems facing leaders, and some special surprises for HBR subscribers. The new and improved HBR IdeaCast kicks off next Tuesday, be sure to hit subscribe so you don't miss an episode.
Tell us what topics you'd like us to cover: ideacast@hbr.org
The Growth of the Private-Sector Space Industry
2025/04/29
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Many industries depend on the government to finance infrastructure and research before a true private market can develop. In the case of space, there is still a strong need for public-private collaboration. But as costs drop to reach space, more private-sector companies can enter the market. Matthew Weinzierl is a senior associate dean and professor at Harvard Business School, and Brendan Rosseau is a strategy manager at Blue Origin. They explain the evolving role of the U.S. government to foster innovation and competition as the space economy increasingly privatizes. They also identify the emerging opportunities for businesses and individuals. Weinzierl and Rosseau are authors of the book Space to Grow: Unlocking the Final Economic Frontier.
How Immigrant Entrepreneurs Build Lasting Businesses
2025/04/22
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It's a common story: an immigrant arrives in a new country, sees a need, and works hard to build a successful business around it. Think of Chobani, Google, or Tesla. Indeed, 45 percent of Fortune 500 companies had immigrant founders. While most research focuses on why these people launched their businesses, perhaps more interesting is how they achieved lasting success. Neri Karra Sillaman is an entrepreneurship expert at Oxford University and the founder of luxury leather goods company Neri Karra. She's studied these entrepreneurs and shares her findings, which offer lessons for anyone in the corporate world. Sillaman wrote the book Pioneers: Eight Principles of Business Longevity from Immigrant Entrepreneurs.
The Conversations You Should Be Having with Your Manager
2025/04/15
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As you advance in your career, you develop the skills to lead teams and manage direct reports. But no matter your role or seniority, you’ll always need to manage those above you and to develop the right relationships to progress. The secret to managing up, says Melody Wilding, is being strategic and thoughtful in several key kinds of conversations with your boss and boss’s boss—including finding alignment, setting boundaries, getting visibility for your work, and winning a promotion. She explains how the effort pays off both in future opportunities and your day-to-day satisfaction on the job. Wilding is an executive coach and the author of the book Managing Up: How to Get What You Need from the People in Charge.
What All Leaders Can Learn from Taylor Swift
2025/04/08
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Whether you're a fan of Taylor Swift or not, no one can deny her success as both a music star and businesswoman. Her career has been a masterclass in everything from customer connection to innovation, decision-making to digital adaption, offering lessons for people in any industry. HBR senior editor Kevin Evers investigated Swift's rise and evolution for his new book, There's Nothing Like This: The Strategic Genius of Taylor Swift, and found interesting patterns. He explains how she's kept audiences loyal, why her Eras tour was so successful, and the vision and "productive paranoia" that have kept her on top. Evers also wrote the HBR article "The Strategic Genius of Taylor Swift."
Navigating the Hybrid Work Dilemma
2025/04/01
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Many organizational leaders believe remote work is here to stay. Others are requiring employees return to the workplace. But Prithriwaj “Raj” Choudhury, an associate professor at Harvard Business School, says it’s not a simple managerial choice between two options. He explains three main variations of hybrid work: quarterly, monthly, and weekly. And he shares three key challenges to remote work: isolation, communication, and socialization. And he breaks down the specific management practices necessary to make those hybrid arrangements succeed most effectively, adding that AI is making some of those practices easier and cheaper than ever. Choudhury’s new book is The World Is Your Office: How Work from Anywhere Boosts Talent, Productivity, and Innovation.
The Keys to Great Conversation
2025/03/25
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Whether we’re interacting with colleagues, clients, friends, family members or strangers, conversations are the way most of us build — or break — relationships. And yet we don’t often think deeply about how to approach this type of casual communication. Alison Wood Brooks, associate professor at Harvard Business School, has studied what it takes to create a great conversation and offers research-backed tips for improving your skills. Brooks is the author of the book Talk: The Science of Conversation and the Art of Being Ourselves.
When Sales Incentives Backfire
2025/03/18
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Sales commissions act as a crucial lever to increase revenue and customers. But sometimes those incentives bring unintended consequences. New research identifies eight ways that salespeople across industries cheat or bend the rules to maximize their gain—often at the expense of the company's bottom line and customer loyalty. Huntsman School of Business professor Timothy Gardner and consultant Colin Wong explain these tactics, like sandbagging, falsifying data, and giving excessive discounts to close deals. The researchers also share how company leaders can audit, correct, and monitor an incentive program—and when they should let some practices slide to maintain productivity and motivation. Gardner and Wong are coauthors of the HBR article “How Salespeople Game the System.”
Are You an Inspirational Leader?
2025/03/11
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What does it take to really energize people and motivate them toward a goal? Inspirational leadership might seem idiosyncratic and hard to quantify, but, according to Adam Galinsky, professor at Columbia Business School, it involves three key elements: having a vision, setting an example, and mentoring. His research shows this is true across industries and geographies, and he offers advice on how to improve in each area. He's author of the book Inspire: The Universal Path for Leading Yourself and Others as well as the HBR article “What Sets Inspirational Leaders Apart”.
Stop Multitasking and Try Timeboxing
2025/03/04
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There are all kinds of productivity tools out there promising to help you make the most of your day. Some people swear by timeboxing: the method of reserving time on your calendar each day for each task you want to get done, and then truly focusing on that one thing at a time. The return on merging your to-do list with your calendar like this, says Marc Zao-Sanders, is higher productivity, better collaboration, and less distraction and anxiety. He explains how try to the method yourself and the how your team and organization benefit from it, not just you. Zao-Sanders is author of the book "Timeboxing: The Power of Doing One Thing at a Time."
How Leaders Can Encourage Learning
2025/02/25
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In an age of rapidly changing technology, it’s more important than ever for organizations to effectively support employee learning. Gianpiero Petriglieri, associate professor at INSEAD, has studied leaders who do this well and says they fall into three categories: custodians, challengers, or connectors. He explains which type of learning leader works best in which contexts and how all three approaches can help individuals and teams reach the next level. Petriglieri is author of the HBR article "Three Ways to Lead Learning."
The Consumer Psychology of Adopting AI
2025/02/18
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Despite all the ways that artificial intelligence promises to improve our lives, many consumers feel anxious and are averse to AI-powered products and services. For marketers and product managers, it’s vital to understand what is driving that resistance to adoption. Julian De Freitas is an assistant professor in the marketing unit at Harvard Business School. He has identified five main ways people see artificial intelligence negatively: that AI is opaque, emotionless, inflexible, autonomous, and not human enough. Through real-life cases and the latest research, he explains how companies can soothe anxieties and encourage consumer adoption. De Freitas the author of the HBR article "Why People Resist Embracing AI."
If DEI Programs Aren’t Effective, What Is?
2025/02/11
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Amid the backlash against diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives in the United States and elsewhere, leaders in both the public and private sectors are reevaluating their organizations' policies and goals. While many employers and employees still value and support DEI, a growing chorus argues that such programs run counter to meritocratic ideals. Iris Bohnet and Siri Chilazi of the Harvard Kennedy School think there's one principle everyone should be able to agree on -- fairness -- and argue for a data-driven approach to measuring it. They share their research on how to make workplace systems more fair and offer cases we can all learn from. They wrote the book Make Work Fair: Data-Driven Design for Real Results.
What the EV Industry’s Challenges Reveal About Innovation and Regulation
2025/02/04
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Many consumers are buying electric vehicles, thanks to sportscar-like performance, government incentives, and personal motivations to minimize climate change. But the EV industry overall has revved and sputtered in unpredictable ways and offers a case study in managing innovation, regulation, and competition. Mike Colias, deputy bureau chief at The Wall Street Journal, explains the complex landscape that incumbents such as GM and Ford and start-ups like Tesla find themselves in. Through stories of iconic industry executives and bold competitive moves, he shares insights that leaders in every industry can learn from. Colias wrote the new book Inevitable: Inside the Messy, Unstoppable Transition to Electric Vehicles.
Employment Is Changing Forever
2025/01/28
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As organizations and workers face a new wave of technological change, Deborah Perry Piscione argues that we're at a pivot point where old models of employment will be replaced by entirely new ones. Get ready for GenAI-assisted, decentralized, sometimes autonomous workforces, and “jobs” that span gigs, companies, industries, geographies, and the metaverse. Piscione describes this new reality and how mindset shifts and upskilling can help us prepare. She's the coauthor, along with Josh Drean, of the book Employment is Dead: How Disruptive Technologies are Revolutionizing the Way We Work.
To Fix Broken Work Systems, You Need to Reset
2025/01/21
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If you've ever tried to change things at work, you know the headwinds you face. Teams and processes are often trapped in longstanding, ineffective patterns that are hard to budge. Dan Heath, senior fellow at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business, explains proven techniques to reset. Those include making the problem visible, jolting incremental progress to start gaining traction, and motivating teams into a new direction. He shares real-life examples of how leaders and teams broke through seemingly intractable work situations. Heath is the author of the new book Reset: How to Change What’s Not Working.
How to Get Better at Saying No
2025/01/14
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Our families, schools, and workplaces often train us to comply: taking on additional work when asked, agreeing with the group's consensus, and going along to get along with our bosses and colleagues. So, even when we're told to "think different" and "embrace conflict," we often hold ourselves back. But when individuals learn to say no more often, it can have huge benefits for their careers and organizations, says Dr. Sunita Sah. A psychologist and professor at Cornell's SC Johnson College of Business, she shares a research-backed framework for evaluating whether to comply or defy at work and offers advice on how to do both more effectively. Sah is author of the book Defy: The Power of No In a World That Demands Yes.
Dealing with Perfectionism
2025/01/07
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High standards, attention to detail, and self-control are invaluable qualities at work. They’re also aspects of perfectionism, something to which many high achievers credit much of their success. But Ellen Hendriksen, clinical psychologist at Boston University's Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders, says being your own worst critic can also lead to constant dissatisfaction at work and alienation from coworkers. Her new book is How to Be Enough: Self-Acceptance for Self-Critics and Perfectionists. Drawing on her own research, clinical work, and personal experience as a perfectionist, she explains where perfectionism comes from and how it affects teams. Hendriksen shares how not to be so hard on yourself—while still keeping your high standards.
How To Enhance Your Leadership with “Personal Power”
2024/12/31
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We all know the stereotypes of leaders who use charisma, manipulation, domineering behavior, or their status in the hierarchy to exert control. But there is another type of leader whose power isn’t necessarily related to their position on the org chart. Chris Lipp has spent years studying people who’ve developed this “personal power” that is rooted in their internal values. Lipp is a professor at Tulane University’s Freeman School of Business, an executive coach, and the author of the new book The Science of Personal Power. He’s investigated where this second type of power comes from, how it can enhance our lives, and how to tap into it using some simple strategies and tools.
Best of IdeaCast: To Build Stronger Teams, Ask Better Questions
2024/12/24
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Asking questions is a powerful way to build trust, exchange ideas, and unlock value in organizations. And it is a skill that can be honed to make work conversations more productive, say Leslie K. John and Alison Wood Brooks, professors at Harvard Business School. In this classic episode, they join former host Sarah Green Carmichael to talk through insights from behavioral science research. They share techniques to adjust the frame, tone, and type of questions to improve results—whether you’re looking to get information, find solutions, or just get someone to like you. Brooks and John wrote the article “The Surprising Power of Questions” in the May–June 2018 issue of Harvard Business Review.
The Case for Selling Products that Adapt
2024/12/17
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Many companies make money by selling goods that need to be constantly replaced; think fast fashion, or tech devices that come out in new versions each year. But according to Vijay Govindarajan, professor at Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business, smart organizations are increasingly eschewing that strategy for one focused on products that grow with the consumer through creative design or software updates. He shares several examples and explains how this approach can deliver more value for the buyer – and for the business – over the long term. Govindarajan is the coauthor of the HBR article "Design Products That Won't Become Obsolete."
A Hollywood Producer’s Formula for Taking Bigger Risks
2024/12/10
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Hollywood is known for huge personalities and behemoth production studios taking big swings. But critics worry that the movie industry is playing it way too safe recently — by churning out remakes and fleshing out franchises, rather than dreaming up new things. And the same can be said of many established businesses in other industries. Larry Kasanoff, a movie producer and former studio head, has lessons from his career taking passionate risks to make groundbreaking movies like Platoon, Dirty Dancing, and Mortal Kombat. He breaks down his framework for innovation in three parts: Create, Ask, and Play. Kasanoff is the author of A Touch of the Madness: How to Be More Innovative in Work and Life . . . by Being a Little Crazy.
Boost Your Creativity in Any Job
2024/12/03
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We all know that innovative thinking is vital to individual, team, and organizational success. But we still often put creativity in a box, assuming it's only for people in certain roles or best attempted once a year at an off-site brainstorming session. Marketing executives Kathryn Jacob and Sue Unerman argue that we all need to be exercising our creative muscles more regularly, especially in the age of AI, when routine work can be outsourced to algorithms but new thinking still comes from human minds. They offer prompts for spurring more creativity -- by yourself or with a team -- no matter where you work. Jacob and Unerman are the authors of the book A Year of Creativity: 52 Smart Ideas for Boosting, Creativity, Innovation, and Inspiration at Work.
Tried-and-True Networking Tips from Decades of Experience
2024/11/26
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Twenty-five years ago, a Harvard Business School case study featured the exceptional networking practices of Silicon Valley entrepreneur and venture capitalist Heidi Roizen. This was before the rise of online social networks and the ubiquity of social media. But today, Roizen says that those developments have not fundamentally changed how she builds and maintains strong personal and professional relationships. Now a partner at Threshold Ventures and a lecturer at Stanford Graduate School of Business, she shares the biggest missteps that she sees people take. She also explains the impact of AI and remote work on networking, her most effective strategies for building relationships, and her frank advice for those just starting their careers. Roizen is subject of the HBS case study “Heidi Roizen.”
Future of Business: Palo Alto Networks’ Nikesh Arora on Managing Risk in the Age of AI
2024/11/21
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Palo Alto Networks is the leading global cybersecurity company. Over his six-year tenure there, CEO Nikesh Arora has expanded and reorganized the organization, including safely incorporating generative AI into all of its products. Nikesh explains how he’s managing new opportunities and risks in the age of generative AI – including the single cybersecurity risk that keeps him up at night. He also shares his approach to leading innovation and evolving Palo Alto’s go-to-market strategy when new technologies are developing so rapidly.
10 Gems from IdeaCast’s First 1,000 Episodes
2024/11/19
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This week marks a huge milestone for the HBR IdeaCast: our 1000th episode! Since the podcast launched in 2006, so much has happened. What hasn’t changed is our commitment to sharing in-depth conversations with expert thinkers on key business, management, and leadership issues. To celebrate, hosts Alison Beard and Curt Nickisch have scoured the archive for ten episodes with top-notch insights to give your career a rocket boost. The curated selection features a diverse group of academics—from business strategy icon Michael Porter to burnout researcher Christina Maslach—and practitioners, such as Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and Oscar-winning director Ron Howard. Their powerful ideas and timeless advice cover a range of communication, leadership, and problem-solving skills that are essential for success—whether you’re in your first job, managing a team, or leading an organization.
Listen to the episodes:
#677: Why People — and Companies — Need Purpose (2019)
#114: Speaking Well in Tough Moments (2008)
#371: Lead Authentically, Without Oversharing (2013)
#924: How One F-35 Fighter Pilot Makes Decisions Under Pressure (2023)
#949: Making Peace with Your Midlife, Mid-career Self (2024)
#889: Ron Howard on Collaborative Leadership and Career Longevity (2022)
#596: Microsoft’s CEO on Rediscovering the Company’s Soul (2017)
#595: Transcending Either-Or Decision Making (2017)
#771: Why Burnout Happens — and How Bosses Can Help (2020)
#229: How to Fix Capitalism (2011)
The IdeaCast team would like to thank all the guests who've contributed their voices and expertise as well as all the people who've made the show possible behind the scenes.
Future of Business: Baidu’s Robin Li on the Technology Trends that Will Transform Business
2024/11/14
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Baidu launched in 2000 as a search engine platform. Two decades later, it’s become one of the few companies in the world that offers a full AI stack. Its core businesses span mobile, cloud, intelligent driving and other growth initiatives, and its products and services have attracted hundreds of millions of users and hundreds of thousands of enterprise customers. Leading all of that is co-founder, CEO, and chairman Robin Li. He explains how Baidu has built generative AI into its business – including their AI chatbot, ERNIE Bot. Robin also shares the technology trends he’s keeping an eye on – from AI bubbles to robotaxis – and how he anticipates these fast-moving changes will transform our world.
The Growing Trend of Part-Time Executives
2024/11/12
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Imagine you’re leading a small organization, but you’re struggling to recruit and afford the senior talent you need to grow. You could hire a part-time executive. So-called “fractional leadership” is common in startups and is spreading to other businesses and nonprofits. But while a fast-growing number of senior leaders seek this work arrangement, many companies are unsure of how to go about it. Tomoko Yokoi and Amy Bonsall are experts on the practice. Yokoi is a researcher at the TONOMUS Global Center for Digital and AI Transformation at IMD Business School. Bonsall is a former executive at IDEO and Old Navy who works as a part-time chief product officer with several organizations. They explain when and how fractional leadership works best—for the individual as well as the organization—and how to do it right. Yokoi and Bonsall wrote the HBR article “How Part-Time Senior Leaders Can Help Your Business.”
Future of Business: SAIC’s Toni Townes-Whitley on Leading Strategic Transformation
2024/11/07
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With more than $7 billion in annual revenue and 24,000 employees, SAIC provides engineering, digital, AI, and mission support to defense, space, intelligence, and civilian customers. CEO Toni Townes-Whitley took the helm a year ago, after stints as a senior executive at Microsoft, CGI Federal, and Unisys. She discusses her approach to strategic transformation at SAIC through fine tuning and employee upskilling, rather than wholesale change. She also shares how the company is incorporating cutting edge technologies, like generative AI, with appropriate safeguards for government clients.
Unifying Leadership in a Divided Time
2024/11/05
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Around the world, the past few years have been marked by increasing political polarization and public outrage. Like it or not, this spills over into the business world, with employees, customers, and shareholders more willing than ever to challenge companies -- and one another -- on a range of issues. It's hard to know how to lead gracefully in such turbulent times, but Karthik Ramanna, professor at the University of Oxford's Blavatnik School of Government, has some answers. Drawing on his work with government officials and corporate executives, he walks us through the root causes of our current crisis, explains how to effectively navigate through disagreement, and offers practical takeaways for managers at every level. Ramanna is the author of the book The Age of Outrage: How to Lead in a Polarized World.
Future of Business: Reid Hoffman on Managing Technological Change and Innovation
2024/10/31
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Reid Hoffman is one of the most prominent and recognizable voices in Silicon Valley, and after predicting some of the biggest trends that have shaped our world in the last 25 years, he is sharing his thoughts on the future of artificial intelligence. In this interview with HBR Editor in Chief Adi Ignatius, Hoffman shares his approach to managing technological change and innovation, explains why he thinks generative AI won't destroy jobs, and imagines how these new tools will transform our world. Spoiler: It's all about managing technological change and innovation the right way. Previously, Hoffman founded or co-founded PayPal, Inflection AI, and LinkedIn, where he served as CEO and is now its executive chairman. He’s also an active early-stage investor at Greylock Partners, host of the Masters of Scale and Possible podcasts, and author of the forthcoming book Superagency.
Turn Employee Feedback into Real Results
2024/10/29
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We live in an age of data. But having powerful tools to gather employee feedback doesn't mean you’ll get powerful results. It’s challenging for executives to turn that feedback into substantive action. New research from Ethan Burris, professor of management at the McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin, sheds light on how to weed through all the data, make sure workers feel heard, and turn employee insights into real results. Burris is a coauthor of the HBR article "What Companies Get Wrong About the Employee Experience."
The Real Reasons Employees Quit — and How to Retain Them
2024/10/22
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Unwelcome employee turnover can create big problems for managers, teams, and organizations, so it's important to understand the real drivers of attrition. New research from Ethan Bernstein, associate professor at Harvard Business School, and Michael Horn, cofounder of the Clayton Christensen Institute, points to a host of push and pull forces that cause workers to jump ship and also outlines better retention strategies. They are the coauthors, along with Bob Moesta, of the HBR article "Why Employees Quit" and the book Job Moves: 9 Steps for Making Progress in Your Career.
Here’s How Managers Can Rediscover Their Joy at Work
2024/10/15
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Managing is a tough job, sometimes a seemingly thankless one where you can feel squeezed from all sides. But for team leaders who are feeling burnt out or overwhelmed with their job, Daisy Auger-Domínguez has advice on regaining your joy at work. She recommends various techniques to incorporate optimism and well-being into your management role. They include remembering your purpose, embracing a beginner’s mindset, keeping a folder of positive feedback as inspiration, and celebrating the contributions of team members. Auger-Domínguez is a workplace strategist and the author of the HBR article "Finding Joy as a Manager — Even on Bad Days."
Malcolm Gladwell’s New Take on Tipping Points
2024/10/10
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There was a time when business leaders and managers didn't worry so much about psychology or other social science research. Malcolm Gladwell's writing played a big role in changing that. His popular exploration of tipping points — the phenomenon where small, incremental actions can suddenly fuse into a full-blown social behavior — brought research insights to life and made them mainstream. Now he's revisiting tipping points, this time looking at how they can be used for damaging results. In this episode, HBR editor in chief Adi Ignatius speaks to Gladwell about how the author’s ideas have changed, the importance of social science and journalism in today's world of virality, and the unexpected ways leaders should consider human behavior. Gladwell is the author of the new book Revenge of the Tipping Point: Overstories, Superspreaders, and the Rise of Social Engineering.
Why AI Isn’t Enough To Beat The Competition
2024/10/08
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Many companies are investing heavily in artificial intelligence right now, hoping to improve both efficiency and innovation. But, as with any technology that sees widespread adoption, AI itself won't be enough to build a long-term advantage over competitors, says Jay Barney, professor at the University of Utah's Eccles School of Business. Yes, leaders need to deploy these new tools, especially those that use GenAI, to stay relevant. But they also need to think about how AI can be applied to their business' differentiating competencies and offerings to truly add value. Barney is the coauthor, along with Martin Reeves of Boston Consulting Group, of the HBR article "AI Won't Give You a New Sustainable Advantage."
How Tribalism Can Actually Strengthen Workplace Culture
2024/10/01
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We live in a world that seems more divisive and polarized than ever, and it’s common to describe this phenomenon as tribalism. But Michael Morris, professor at Columbia Business School, says that term is often misunderstood and that tribal instincts can in fact be very positive influences in society and at work. He uses the lens of cultural psychology to explain the deep-seated instincts behind the human need to join and identify as a group. And he breaks down how team managers and organizational leaders can leverage tribal instincts in positive ways strengthen workplace culture. Morris is the author of the new book Tribal: How the Cultural Instincts That Divide Us Can Help Bring Us Together.
What We Can Learn from Great Political Speakers
2024/09/24
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The worlds of business and politics might seem worlds apart, but executives can learn a lot from the most successful political communicators. Terry Szuplat spent several years on the speechwriting team for President Barack Obama, helping to carefully craft his messages and win over audiences. He has gone on to coach business leaders including Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, and he says that many of the same principles for good speechwriting and delivery apply - whether you’re giving a presentation to your team, pitching a client, or making comments in a moment of crisis. He explains the importance of authenticity and personal stories, structure, language choice and presence. Szuplat is the author of the book Say It Well: Find Your Voice, Speak Your Mind, Inspire Any Audience.
Training Your Brain to Work More Effectively
2024/09/17
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What if the key to efficiency in a world increasingly powered by AI wasn't quantity, but quality? Neuroscientist Mithu Storoni has looked at how and when our brains are the most creative and truly productive at knowledge work. As automation and AI take more rote takes off our plates, she shares how we can train our brains to be more effective at doing work that really matters. She explains how our brains tackle different kinds of work, how we can better schedule our days to align with those states of mind, and what this all means for managers and organizations. Storoni is the author of the new book Hyperefficient: Optimize Your Brain to Transform the Way You Work.
The AI Skills You Should Be Building Now
2024/09/10
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Generative artificial intelligence is here to stay, and that means employees and managers need to think even more carefully about how to make the most effective use of it. Accenture's H. James Wilson, global managing director of technology research and thought leadership, and Paul R. Daugherty, chief technology and innovation officer, argue that we all need to build what they call "fusion skills." They include intelligent interrogation (using research-backed prompting techniques to deliver better results), judgment integration (ensuring there is a human in the loop when necessary), and reciprocal apprenticing (training ChatGPT, Claude, Co-pilot or proprietary tools to improve while we get better at working with them). They offer advice on how to hone all three. Together, they wrote the HBR book Human + Machine: Reimagining Work in the Age of AI, now available in a New and Expanded Edition as well as the HBR article “Embracing Gen AI At Work.”
Dysfunctional Leadership Teams — and How to Fix Them
2024/09/03
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CEOs get a ton of credit or blame for a company’s performance. But the entire leadership team is vital to success, and any dysfunction is often overlooked. Sometimes the CEOs leading them don’t even see that they’re not working. Thomas Keil, management professor at the University of Zurich, and Marianna Zangrillo, a partner at The Next Advisors, have interviewed more than 100 CEOs and senior executives. Their research identifies three main types of failing leadership teams: shark tanks, petting zoos, and mediocracies. And they identify the pitfalls of each pattern and how to turn those teams around. Keil and Zangrillo wrote the HBR article "Why Leadership Teams Fail."
Lessons from a Turnaround Expert
2024/08/27
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When a company, division, or product line has been struggling for some time, it can feel nearly impossible to get things back on track. But big turnarounds are possible, provided you have a team willing to work hard, be creative, and embrace change. When he was president and CEO of Marvel, Peter Cuneo oversaw the resurgence and sale of the media company, but even before that he had a long track track for turning around many types of consumer-facing businesses. He shares the strategies that work best for shaking up organizations and teams and boosting their performance. Cuneo is also the managing principal of Cuneo and Company.
Is Your Company Reading Data the Wrong Way?
2024/08/20
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We live in an age where we have more data than ever. But most leaders have two strong reactions to new data. Either they rely too heavily on studies or information to make decisions. Or they dismiss outright data that could be very relevant. The better way is learning how to interpret, question, and engage with data and studies, say Harvard Business School professor Amy Edmondson and Johns Hopkins Carey Business School professor Michael Luca. They break down the essential analytical tools to assess and interrogate data to be able to apply it to business decisions. Edmondson and Luca are coauthors of the HBR article "Where Data-Driven Decision-Making Can Go Wrong."
What to Do When You’re Overlooked
2024/08/13
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Are you the sort of person who works really hard, hits your deadlines, runs successful projects, wins over clients... but never seems to get noticed for all that diligence, much less promoted? Especially if you’re on the quieter and more understated side, working in an organization where the loud and showy get the most recognition, this can be frustrating. But there are ways to get noticed while also staying true to yourself, says Jessica Chen. She's a former TV news reporter and the founder of Soulcast Media, a communications consultancy, and she shares lessons about more effective communication and self-promotion. Chen wrote the book Smart, Not Loud: How to Get Noticed at Work for All the Right Reasons.
The Right Way to Manage Emotions on Your Team
2024/08/06
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Many managers don't know what to say when a team member appears angry, frustrated, or sad. They might even feel it is unprofessional to acknowledge those feelings at all. But research shows that avoidance is costly. Doctoral student Christina Bradley and professor Lindy Greer, both of the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan, say teams perform better when their leaders respond effectively to members’ emotions. The researchers outline when and how to do that in a way that builds stronger relationships, teams, and organizational culture. Bradley and Greer are coauthors, with Michigan Ross professor Jeffrey Sanchez-Burks, of the HBR article "When Your Employee Feels Angry, Sad, or Dejected."
An Astronaut’s Advice on High-Stakes Collaboration
2024/07/30
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It's hard to imagine a more challenging work environment than the International Space Station. During her 24 years as a NASA astronaut, including a six-month stint on the ISS, Cady Coleman learned pivotal lessons about everything from managing stress and assessing risk to cross-cultural communication and navigating bias. She shares how the skills she picked up can be applied in all kinds of careers. Coleman is the author of the book Sharing Space: An Astronaut's Guide to Mission Wonder and Making Change.
Trying to Persuade and Other Big Mistakes Marketers Make
2024/07/23
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Many marketers today focus on getting consumers to consciously change their behavior. But that’s a sure path to failure, according to Leslie Zane, founder of Triggers Brand Consulting. She says neuroscience research shows that mastering instinct is far more effective than persuasion. And she shares her key lessons for aligning with the instinctive mind to improve company brands, new products, social campaigns, or your own personal brand. Zane is the author of the book The Power of Instinct: The New Rules of Persuasion in Business and Life.
Is People-Pleasing Holding You Back?
2024/07/16
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There's a fine line between pitching in to help your team and taking on too much at the expense of your mental health and performance. Author and coach Hailey Magee walks us through why some of us fall into people-pleasing patterns, the negative impact it can have on our careers, and how to stop. She also offers advice for managers on how to help employees identify and break out of these bad habits. Magee is the author of Stop People Pleasing and Find Your Power.
Why We Should Pay More Attention to Departing CEOs
2024/07/09
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When news breaks of a CEO succession, much of the attention is given to the new leader and how they will change the company. But new research shows that the leave-taking process of the outgoing chief executive is often mishandled, with negative impacts on succession and the organization. Rebecca Slan Jerusalim, an executive director at Russell Reynolds Associates, and Navio Kwok, a leadership advisor at RRA, say that boards are often surprised when a CEO gives notice, and they often make that person feel excluded during the handoff process. The researchers share stories from the front lines about CEO psychology, best practices for outgoing leaders and their boards, and broader lessons for effective transitions. Jerusalim and Kwok wrote the HBR article "The Vital Role of the Outgoing CEO."
Darius Rucker on Resilience and Reinvention
2024/07/02
Darius Rucker has reached the top of the music charts in not just one but two genres: first as the lead singer of the 1990s band Hootie and the Blowfish, then in a second act as a solo country star. He shares lessons on following your passion, staying humble, working your way up, and defying stereotypes and expectations. He's the author of a new memoir Life's Too Short.
When Your Employee Is Underperforming
2024/06/25
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Many managers struggle with initiating difficult conversations around an individual’s subpar performance. Often, leaders wait way too long to sit down with an employee who isn’t meeting expectations. Leadership coach Jenny Fernandez says that increasing the frequency of feedback and consciously developing better relationships with direct reports help make these conversations easier to start. And she shares how the right preparation, tone, and open-minded approach lead to more effective discussions that improve not just the one-on-one relationship, but also team morale and turnover rates. Fernandez is the author of the HBR article "How to Talk to an Employee Who Isn’t Meeting Expectations."
Why Managers Play Favorites – and How They Can Change
2024/06/18
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While most good bosses try to be fair and balanced with their direct reports, it's only human to prefer the company and work styles of some team members over others, and employees are keenly aware of those preferences. They see favorites and non-favorites, ingroups and outgroups -- and when those divisions fester, they can destroy team culture and performance. Ginka Toegel, professor at IMD Business School, explains why even well-intentioned managers succumb to favoritism, how workers on both sides are affected, and what we can do to both avoid and rectify the problem. Toegel is the coauthor of the HBR article "Stop Playing Favorites."
Tech at Work: The Future of Spatial Computing
2024/06/13
Managing technology has never been more challenging. HBR IdeaCast’s new special series, Tech at Work, offers research, stories, and advice to make technology work for you and your team. This week: how to prepare your company for the future of spatial computing.
Yum! Brands’ Former CEO on Why You Should Never Stop Learning
2024/06/11
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After 15 years leading the parent company of KFC, Pizza Hut, and Taco Bell, David Novak wanted to help others become better leaders. He believes the key is to put learning at the center of everything you do, whether you’re an entry-level worker or a multinational executive. Novak outlines three main areas for learning: from your own life experiences, from the people and situations available right now, and from the habit of curiosity. Above all, he says the most effective leaders turn their learnings into action, something that takes insight and practice. Novak’s new book is How Leaders Learn: Master the Habits of the World's Most Successful People.
Why You Need to Stress Test Your Strategies (and Tactics)
2024/06/04
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While many teams and organizations engage in scenario planning, most don't go far enough. Arjan Singh, consultant and adjunct professor at Southern Methodist University, says a more disciplined approach, borrowed from the military, can help leaders truly test how their strategies, operations, and tactics hold up against competitors, shifting market dynamics, and unexpected events. He's helped hundreds of companies identify risks and find new ways to innovate by leading them through corporate war games, and he explains his process and results. Singh is the author of the book Competitive Success: Building Winning Strategies with Corporate War Games.
Tech at Work: How to Get the Most Out of Digital Collaboration Tools
2024/05/30
Managing technology has never been more challenging. HBR IdeaCast’s new special series, Tech at Work, offers research, stories, and advice to make technology work for you and your team. This week: how your team can get the most out of digital collaboration tools.
What Venture Capitalists Can Teach Companies About Decision-Making
2024/05/28
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Venture capital firms notoriously embrace risk and take big swings, hoping that one startup will become a monster hit that pays for many other failed investments. This VC approach scares established companies, but it shouldn’t. Stanford Graduate School of Business professor Ilya Strebulaev says that VC firms have proven best practices that all leaders should apply in their own companies. He explains exactly how VC’s operationalize risk, embrace disagreement over consensus, and stay agile in their decision-making—all valuable lessons that apply outside of Silicon Valley. With author Alex Dang, Strebulaev cowrote the new book The Venture Mindset: How to Make Smarter Bets and Achieve Extraordinary Growth and the HBR article "Make Decisions with a VC Mindset."
How to Navigate Change at Any Career Stage
2024/05/21
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Disruption and transformation at the new normal in nearly every industry. So how do you stay ahead of the curve? Over the past four decades, Bonnie Hammer successfully adapted to massive changes in the media industry, rising from production assistant to leadership roles in broadcast, cable, and streaming. Now vice chair of NBCUniversal, she has advice on how to get noticed, acquire the right skillsets, make smart decisions, and adjust to shifting corporate and market dynamics. She's the author of the book 15 Lies Women Are Told at Work: ...and the Truth We Need to Succeed.
Tech at Work: How the End of Cookies Will Transform Digital Marketing
2024/05/16
Managing technology has never been more challenging. HBR IdeaCast’s new special series, Tech at Work, offers research, stories, and advice to make technology work for you and your team. This week: how digital marketers are preparing for the end of third-party cookies—and what this change means for the open Internet.
The Hidden Burden of Long Covid and What Companies Can Do
2024/05/14
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Around 18 million adults in the U.S. alone suffer from long Covid, a chronic illness with a wide range of symptoms and severity. With approved therapies a long way off, workers with long Covid often struggle in silence. And most companies have neither a good understanding of the situation nor effective policies in place, say MIT research scientist Beth Pollack and Vanguard University professor Ludmila Praslova. They share the conditions associated with long Covid, what life is like for those workers, and the accommodations and flexibility they recommend HR leaders and organizations implement. Pollack and Praslova are coauthors with researcher Katie Bach of the HBR Big Idea article “Long Covid at Work: A Manager's Guide.”
Behind the Boom in Celebrity Brands
2024/05/07
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There was a time when consumer goods companies paid musicians, athletes, and actors for endorsements, or to license their name and likeness. But in recent years, there's been an explosion of celebrities getting into business directly, selling everything from shapewear to tequila. Ayelet Israeli, professor at Harvard Business School, says the growth of social media and online, direct-to-consumer retail accelerated this trend, but notes that not all celebrity brands are a success. She explains what works and doesn't, and outlines lessons for non-famous entrepreneurs and established companies. Israeli is coauthor of the HBR article "What Makes a Successful Celebrity Brand?"
Tech at Work: What GenAI Means for Companies Right Now
2024/05/02
Managing technology has never been more challenging. HBR IdeaCast’s new special series, Tech at Work, offers research, stories, and advice to make technology work for you and your team. This week: how your team can get the most out of working with generative AI.
How Bad Leaders Get Worse over Time
2024/04/30
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There's plenty of advice on how to grow into a better leader. And it takes effort to become more effective. But bad leadership gets worse almost effortlessly, says Barbara Kellerman, a Center for Public Leadership Fellow at Harvard Kennedy School. She shares real examples from the public and private sectors of how bad leaders spiral downward, and how bad followership enables that negative trend. She gives her advice for recognizing and avoiding ineffective and unethical leaders. Kellerman is the author of the new book Leadership from Bad to Worse: What Happens When Bad Festers.
Special Series: Tech at Work
2024/04/25
Managing technology has never been more challenging. HBR IdeaCast’s new special series, Tech at Work, offers research, stories, and advice to make technology work for you and your team.
Listen every other Thursday starting May 2 in the HBR IdeaCast feed, after the regular Tuesday episode.
Feeling Unmotivated? Here’s How to Get Out of the Rut
2024/04/23
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Worker disengagement is on the rise around the world. Even those of us who generally like our jobs sometimes find it hard to muster energy and focus. So what's the key to regaining motivation? Harvard Business School professor Boris Groysberg and research associate Robin Abrahams share a four part process to help you get your groove back: detachment, empathy, action and reframing. They offer simple tips like thinking in the third person, helping others, and gamification to help get back on track. Groysberg and Abrahams are the authors of the HBR article "Advice for the Unmotivated."
Are You Asking the Right Questions?
2024/04/16
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Few leaders have been trained to ask great questions. That might explain why they tend to be good at certain kinds of questions, and less effective at other kinds. Unfortunately, that hurts their ability to pursue strategic priorities. Arnaud Chevallier, strategy professor at IMD Business School, explains how leaders can break out of that rut and systematically ask five kinds of questions: investigative, speculative, productive, interpretive, and subjective. He shares real-life examples of how asking the right sort of question at a key time can unlock value and propel your organization. With his IMD colleagues Frédéric Dalsace and Jean-Louis Barsoux, Chevallier wrote the HBR article "The Art of Asking Smarter Questions."
A Roadmap for Today’s Entrepreneurs
2024/04/09
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Many people aspire to entrepreneurship but we all know it's a high-risk endeavor. Bill Aulet, the Ethernet Inventors Professor of Entrepreneurship at the MIT Sloan School of Management, has for decades studied what it takes for start-ups to succeed and advises the next generation of founders on how to do it. He discusses the key trends and changes he's seen over the past few years, and outlines concrete steps anyone can take to get a new venture -- including those within larger organizations -- off the ground. Aulet is the author of the newly updated book Disciplined Entrepreneurship: 24 Steps to a Successful Startup.
Treat Email Like Laundry — and Other Tips from Google’s Productivity Expert
2024/04/02
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The amount of work we need to get done seems to grow daily. To avoid becoming overwhelmed, we have to become more productive than ever. Laura Mae Martin has advice on what has worked well at one of the biggest organizations in the world. She's the Executive Productivity Advisor at Google and shares the practical ways she helps her colleagues and company executives manage their time, calendars, email inboxes, and more. Martin is the author of the new book Uptime: A Practical Guide to Personal Productivity and Wellbeing.
Why the Glass Cliff Persists
2024/03/26
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It's been nearly two decades since the term "glass cliff" was coined; it refers to the tendency for women to break through the glass ceiling to top management roles only when there is a big crisis to overcome, which makes it more difficult for them to succeed. In short, senior female leaders are often set up to fail — and this continues to happen today, as recent examples from business, politics, and academia show. Sophie Williams, a former C-suite advertising executive and global leader at Netflix, has researched why the glass cliff remains a problem and offers advice for women facing them — as well as lessons for the broader corporate world. She's the author of the book "The Glass Cliff: Why Women in Power Are Undermined - and How to Fight Back."
Why Leaders Need to Value Their Retirement-Age Workforce
2024/03/19
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A growing number of workers are reaching retirement age around the globe. At the same time, many countries face a worker shortage, especially in critical areas like health care. Ken Dychtwald, cofounder and CEO of Age Wave, says it’s time for companies to stop overlooking this valuable labor pool, because AI alone won't alleviate the tight supply. He explains why many late-career people want to work longer. And he shares creative and often simple ways that companies can keep older workers engaged, including phased retirements, non-ageist recruiting, mentorship programs, and grandparental leave. Dychtwald is a coauthor of the HBR article "Redesigning Retirement."
What’s Your Interviewing Style?
2024/03/12
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There's a lot of advice out there on how to get job interviews right, whether you're the one trying to get hired or the one evaluating the candidates. But the dos and don'ts aren't always applicable to every person. In fact, author Anna Papalia thinks we're better served by understanding and leveraging our own natural interviewing style. Having spent years as a corporate recruiter, organizational consultant, and coach to students and professions, she's conducted thousands of real and mock interviews and noticed that people tend to fall into one of four categories: charmer, examiner, challenger, or harmonizer. She outlines the strengths and weaknesses of each and explains how this framework can help us get better from both sides of the desks. Papalia wrote the book "Interviewology: The New Science of Interviewing."
To Negotiate Better, Start with Yourself
2024/03/05
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The coauthor of the classic book Getting to Yes has new advice on how to negotiate, designed for a world that feels more conflicted than ever. William Ury, cofounder of Harvard’s Program on Negotiation, has come to learn that the biggest obstacle in a negotiation is often yourself—not your opponent. Ury, who also coined the term BATNA, explains the latest thinking from his research and consulting. He shares his tried-and-true methods for overcoming yourself to negotiate better outcomes at work and in life. Ury wrote the new book Possible: How We Survive (and Thrive) in an Age of Conflict.
Rethinking Growth at All Costs
2024/02/27
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Many companies, especially in the tech world, have come to embrace the idea of growth at all costs. But according to research from Gary Pisano, professor at Harvard Business School, most firms fail to consistently increase revenues and profits over the long term, adjusting for inflation. He says that it’s important for leaders to think more strategically about not just the rate of growth they want to achieve but the direction they want to grow in and their method for doing so. Trying to grow too fast can be the downfall of many organizations. He shares examples of companies that have fallen into this trap, as well as those getting the balance right. Pisano wrote the HBR article "How Fast Should Your Company Really Grow?"
Companies Can Win by Reducing Overwork
2024/02/20
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Organizations regularly reward devoted workers who put in long hours. At the same time, “always-on” communication spurred by the pandemic and new digital tools encourage workaholism. But research shows that it’s not just individuals who are harmed by overworking. Their employers are, too. Malissa Clark, associate professor and head of the Healthy Work Lab at the University of Georgia, explains how companies unwittingly create a workaholic culture — one that ultimately backfires with higher turnover and disengaged employees. She shares what companies can easily do to change that. Clark wrote the new book Never Not Working: Why the Always-On Culture Is Bad for Business--and How to Fix It.
When Should Companies Weigh in on Contentious Issues?
2024/02/13
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In a globally connected and highly politicized world, organizations are increasingly expected to comment on social, political, and environmental issues. But taking a stance doesn't always make business sense and can backfire when employees or consumers see a disconnect between leaders’ words and actions. Alison Taylor, associate professor at New York University, says there's a better way to make decisions on corporate speech, which includes involving workers in the process. Taylor is the author of the HBR book Higher Ground: How Business Can Do the Right Thing in a Turbulent World and the HBR article “Corporate Advocacy in a Time of Social Outrage.”
Stuck on a Problem? Try Switching Up Your Approach
2024/02/06
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Many leaders confidently go about tackling challenges. After all, relying on their experience got them to where they are. But taking the same approach over and over again can actually hold you back. Sometimes you need to switch up your tactics to break through to the next level. Decision-making expert Cheryl Strauss Einhorn says the first step is to understand your personal problem-solving style. Then she explains a framework to assess the situation and select the best approach. Einhorn is founder and CEO of Decisive. She also wrote the book Problem Solver: Maximizing Your Strengths to Make Better Decisions and the HBR article “When Your Go-To Problem-Solving Approach Fails.”
How to Reduce the Friction that Hurts You — and Harness the Friction that Helps
2024/01/30
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Organizations too often subject their employees and customers to unnecessary friction that creates inefficiency and causes frustration. But, in some situations, friction can be a positive force, spurring more innovation and better decision-making. So how do you reduce the bad kind and embrace the good? Stanford professors Bob Sutton and Huggy Rao have studied this problem for seven years and offer strategies for leaders at every level to help them recognize when friction is needed or not and then add or subtract accordingly. They share ample examples of people and companies getting it right. Sutton and Rao are the authors of The Friction Project: How Smart Leaders Make the Right Things Easier and the Wrong Things Harder, as well as the HBR article, "Rid Your Organization of Obstacles that Infuriate Everyone."
What the New Freelance Economy Means for Your Talent Strategy
2024/01/23
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The rapid pace of technological change is making a big impact on hiring. Some organizations are dynamically securing freelance workers through platform apps like Upwork and Freelancer. Other companies are investing heavily in work enabled by artificial intelligence. John Winsor and Jin Paik say these structural changes call for a reimagining of your talent strategy — one that is open to flexible, project-based work for talent inside or outside your organization — and they explain how to go about it. Winsor is the founder and chair of Open Assembly and an executive-in-residence at the Laboratory for Innovation Science at Harvard. Paik is a cofounder and managing partner at the AI consultancy Altruistic and a visiting research scientist at Harvard Business School. Together, they wrote the book Open Talent: Leveraging the Global Workforce to Solve Your Biggest Challenges and the HBR article "Do You Need an External Talent Cloud?"
Making Peace with Your Midlife, Mid-career Self
2024/01/16
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Research shows that happiness bottoms out for people in their mid to late 40s. We might struggle with mid-career slumps, caring for both children and aging parents, and existential questions about whether everything has turned out as we'd planned. But Chip Conley says we can approach this phase of our personal and profesional lives with a different perspective. He's a former hospitality industry CEO and founder of the Modern Elder Academy, and he explains how to reframe our thinking about middle age, find new energy, and become more fulfilled and successful people at work and home. Conley wrote the book Learning to Love Midlife: 12 Reasons Why Life Gets Better with Age.
Supercharge Your One-on-One Meetings
2024/01/09
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Most good bosses know that they should schedule regular one-on-ones with each of their team members. But fewer know exactly how to manage these meetings well, in part because organizations rarely offer relevant training. Steven Rogelberg, Chancellor's Professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, has spent years researching the best way to prepare for, structure, engage in, and follow up on one-on-ones. He says they're a key way to boost performance, and offers tips for ensuring that we all get more out of them. Rogelberg is author of the book Glad We Met: The Art and Science of 1:1 Meetings.
The Best Return-to-Office Policies Aren’t One-Size-Fits-All
2024/01/02
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A growing number of companies are mandating office time for employees and structuring hybrid work under broad, rigid rules. But pushing people into the office is a mistake, argues Kimberly Shells, a senior director in the Gartner HR practice. She shares research showing how much flexibility and autonomy and belonging workers want. And Shells says organizations can still foster those qualities in an in-person office culture that also improves productivity and collaboration. She explains that companies should follow through on a clear purpose and craft policies that allow for options, flexibility, offsite team-building events, and support services such as on-site childcare. Shells cowrote the HBR article “Return-to-Office Plans Don’t Have to Undermine Employee Autonomy.”
Best of IdeaCast: Behaviors of Successful CEOs
2023/12/26
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For the qualities that top-performing CEOs have in common, research shows some surprising results. It turns out that charisma, confidence, and pedigree all have little bearing on CEO success. Elena Botelho, partner at leadership advisory firm ghSMART and coleader of its CEO Genome Project, studied high performers in the corner office. The analysis found that they demonstrated four business behaviors: quick decision making, engaging for impact, adapting proactively, and delivering reliably. Botelho cowrote the HBR article “What Sets Successful CEOs Apart.”
Why More Companies Are Getting in on the Resale Game
2023/12/19
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For a long time, conventional wisdom ruled that companies should avoid reselling their own products in used condition. There’s the threat of cannibalization, marketing confusion, and tricky logistics that can erase margins. But more name-brand retailers are jumping into resale, says Wharton marketing professor Tom Robertson. Thanks in part to Gen Z with its zeal for sustainability, he says consumer demand is rising fast for reused goods. He sees a revolution where brands cash in on resale, knowing that if they don’t own those customer relationships and sales, others will. Robertson wrote the HBR article “The Resale Revolution.”
How Hybrid Work Is (And Isn’t) Reshaping Cities
2023/12/12
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Economic activity has long been concentrated in big metropolitan areas. But has the rise of remote work technology -- and its accelerated adoption during the pandemic -- changed that? How are talent flows between geographies changing? And what does it mean for employers? Richard Florida, professor at the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto known for coining the term "creative class," shares his latest research, which shows the deepening links between urban centers in various parts of the world, and he explains how these "meta cities" remain important places for people to connect. He is coauthor of the HBR article “The Rise of the Meta City.”
Setting AI Projects Up for Success
2023/12/05
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Unfortunately, you can’t set up your organization’s artificial intelligence projects like just any other IT project. By their nature, AI endeavors are quite different and suffer high failure rates. But there are proven approaches you can take to increase your odds of success. Iavor Bojinov, assistant professor at Harvard Business School and former LinkedIn data scientist, breaks down five critical steps for an AI project to turn into an effective product: selection, development, evaluation, adoption, and management. He’s the author of the HBR article “Keep Your AI Projects on Track.”
New Here: Getting a Raise Is a Process, Not a Conversation
2023/11/30
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Introducing HBR’s podcast for young professionals, New Here, hosted by Elainy Mata. Whether it’s your first job or a fresh start, New Here will help you build a meaningful career on your own terms. In this episode, author and personal finance expert Anne-Lyse Ngatta and author, career advisor, and past HBR IdeaCast guest Gorick Ng explain how to lay the groundwork before you ask for a raise, when and how to start the conversation with your manager, and how to navigate the negotiation that may follow.
Fast Casual Food Pioneer Ron Shaich Explains How to Find a Niche — and then Scale
2023/11/28
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The restaurant business is notoriously competitive and often propelled by passing fads. But, first at the helm of Au Bon Pain, and then as the founder of Panera Bread, Ron Shaich managed to create an entirely new category of dining between fast food and table service and then dominate that market in the United States. He says the strategies that brought him success can be applied in any type of organization: listen to and observe customers so you know what they want, create a truly differentiated offering, execute with excellence, and find the right opportunities to grow. He’s employed this playbook as an investor in newer ventures like Cava and Tatte, as well. Shaich wrote the book Know What Matters: Lessons from a Lifetime of Transformations.
Why Private Equity Needs to Invest More in Talent Development
2023/11/21
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Traditionally, private equity companies have created value at the companies they own by taking on debt, restructuring, and exploiting underserved opportunities. But surging interest rates and increased competition have made it much harder to deliver strong returns. Ted Bililies, a partner and managing director of AlixPartners, says private equity leaders can no longer count on financial engineering to drive performance. Instead, they need to invest in the human capital at their portfolio companies. Bililies wrote the HBR article “Private Equity Needs a New Talent Strategy.”
Nvidia’s CEO On What It Takes To Run An A.I.-Led Company Now
2023/11/14
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The future of AI goes far beyond individuals using ChatGPT. Companies are now integrating artificial intelligence into all aspects of their businesses. One key player in this transition is Nvidia, the AI-driven computing company, which makes both hardware and software for a range of industries. In this episode, HBR editor in chief Adi Ignatius speaks with Nvidia’s CEO and cofounder Jensen Huang at HBR’s Future of Business conference about how he keeps his company agile in the face of accelerating change and where he sees AI going next.
A High-Performance Coach on the Key to Achieving Your Full Potential
2023/11/07
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What holds many people back from attaining the success they want - whether it's winning an Olympic medal or a seat in the C-suite - isn’t a lack of effort or talent. It’s the fear of other people’s opinions. That’s according to Michael Gervais, a performance expert and founder of the consultancy Finding Mastery. He works with top athletes and executives around the world to help them overcome FOPO and improve their performance and well-being. Gervais is the author of the book The First Rule of Mastery: Stop Worrying about What People Think of You.
How Job Training Must Change in the AI Age
2023/10/31
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The rapid expansion of artificial intelligence technology is creating, destroying, and changing jobs. And Harvard Business School professor Raffaella Sadun has been studying how leading companies are training and reskilling employees for this new paradigm. She says many firms underestimate how quickly and significantly workers will need to be reskilled and leave this effort to the HR department. Instead, she explains leaders and middle managers across the company are essential to manage this change. With Jorge Tamayo and Leila Doumi of HBS and Sagar Goel and Orsolya Kovács-Ondrejkovic of the BCG Henderson Institute, Sadun wrote the HBR article “Reskilling in the Age of AI.”
Getting Feedback Right on Diverse Teams
2023/10/24
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We know that teams mixing people of different generations, genders, and cultures yield better outcomes, and that frank, constructive feedback is key to improving individual, group, and organizational performance. But these two attributes -- diversity and candor -- often clash, says Erin Meyer, a professor at INSEAD. She's studied the challenges that arise when teammates with different backgrounds try to give one another advice and offers recommendations for overcoming them, including establishing norms around regular feedback and ensuring that it is asked for, designed to assist, and actionable. She’s the author of the HBR article “When Diversity Meets Feedback.”
Tools for Managers to Help Employees with Their Mental Health Challenges
2023/10/17
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It’s a reality that more employees are discussing their mental health in the workplace. And proactive leaders can serve their teams better by listening and responding. At the same time, managers can’t play the role of a therapist or the HR department. Counseling psychologist Kiran Bhatti and University of Cambridge leadership professor Thomas Roulet argue that following the basic practice of cognitive behavioral therapy can serve managers well. The researchers explain the mental-health first-aid tool, how managers can help employees address emotional distress and negative behavioral patterns, and how that can strengthen the work culture and ultimately the business. Bhatti and Roulet wrote the HBR article, “Helping an Employee in Distress.”
Reflecting on What Matters After a Terminal Cancer Diagnosis
2023/10/10
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How does someone who's been told he will die much sooner than expected find contentment in the time he has left? As a former therapist, cofounder of the Deeper Coaching Institute, and business book author, Mark Goulston has spent his entire career trying to help others manage their emotions, improve their communication, and find the right balance between the personal and the professional. Faced with his own cancer diagnosis, he's been reflecting on lessons learned in his own life, things he and clients wish they'd done differently, and how to both prepare for a "good" death and leave a meaningful legacy. He shares his newfound perspective and his advice for early, mid- and late-career leaders.
How to Solve Tough Problems Better and Faster
2023/10/03
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When it comes to solving complicated problems, the default for many organizational leaders is to take their time to work through the issues at hand. Unfortunately, that often leads to patchwork solutions or problems not truly getting resolved. Instead, Anne Morriss offers a different framework: to increase trust and transparency and the speed of execution to truly tackle big problems. Morriss is an entrepreneur, leadership coach, and founder of the Leadership Consortium. With Harvard Business School professor Frances Frei, she wrote the new book, Move Fast and Fix Things: The Trusted Leader’s Guide to Solving Hard Problems.
Improve Your Impromptu Speaking
2023/09/26
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We all know that leaders need to captivate audiences and effectively convey their ideas. But not every speaking opportunity can be prepared and practiced. That's why it's so important to learn the skill of speaking off-the-cuff, and Matt Abrahams, lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School of Business and host of the podcast Think Fast, Talk Smart, has advice to help. He explains how to stay calm in these situations, craft a compelling message, and ensure you've made a good impression. Abrahams is author of the book Think Faster, Talk Smarter: How to Speak Successfully When You’re Put on the Spot as well as the HBR article “How to Shine When You’re Put on the Spot.”
How Companies Can Recommit to Their DEI Goals
2023/09/19
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After the summer of 2020 in the United States, many organizations made a big push to increase diversity, equity, and inclusion in their ranks and operations. But now, many fear that that momentum is slipping, especially in the face of economic headwinds. Laura Morgan Roberts, organizational psychologist and professor at the University of Virginia Darden School of Business, says it is time to recommit to these efforts by creating the conditions for all workers to flourish. She explains four freedoms that organizations can foster to allow employees to become their best selves — and even be able to fade into the background when they choose. Roberts wrote the HBR Big Idea article “Where Does DEI Go From Here?”
People with Disabilities Are an Untapped Talent Pool
2023/09/12
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It is now accepted wisdom that increasing the diversity of your workforce in any dimension can improve both organizational culture and performance. But one group — people living with intellectual, developmental, and physical disabilities — continues to be overlooked by many companies. Luisa Alemany, associate professor at London Business School, has studied workplaces that do recruit and hire employees with disabilities and found that it can be a true source of competitive advantage. She explains four main ways this talent strategy benefits the firm. She’s the coauthor, along with Freek Vermeulen, of the HBR article “Disability as a Source of Competitive Advantage.”
If You Want Culture Change, Create New Stories
2023/09/05
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Many leaders realize they need to change their organization’s culture to save the business. But employees usually resist change and stick to past norms. Jay Barney, professor at the University of Utah’s Eccles School of Business, studied leaders who successfully led culture change and found one thing in common: they created and spread stories. He says it's not about making up stories but taking action — in authentic, yet theatrical and memorable ways. The new stories then emanate throughout the workforce and rewrite the old narrative. Barney explains the six rules of this practice that leaders need to follow. He’s a coauthor, with Manoel Amorim and Carlos Júlio, of The Secret of Culture Change: How to Build Authentic Stories That Transform Your Organization and the HBR article “Create Stories That Change Your Company’s Culture.”
Leading a Workforce Empowered by New AI Tools
2023/08/29
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New AI technology enables anyone to become a programmer — opening doors to faster analytics and automation but also presenting big challenges. Organizations need policies and strategies to manage the chaos created by what Tom Davenport calls “citizen developers.” Davenport is a professor of management and information technology at Babson College, and he’s been studying how employees are using new AI tools and how companies can both encourage and benefit from this work. He suggests practical ways for team and organizational leaders and IT departments to best oversee these efforts. Davenport is coauthor of the HBR article “We’re All Programmers Now” and the book All-in On AI: How Smart Companies Win Big with Artificial Intelligence.
How One Ukrainian Company Cultivated Resiliency Amid War
2023/08/22
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Companies plan for crises and aim to be resilient and adaptive in the face of all kinds of risks, but it’s always easier said than done. And perhaps none of these threats is as serious as war. That’s what Roman Rodomansky had to prepare his company for. He’s the cofounder and COO at Ralabs, a Ukrainian software development company. As Russia prepared to invade his home country, Rodomansky and his leadership team crafted a plan to survive and keep serving clients. He shares how his firm put people first, communicated with customers, and managed to become resilient. Rodomansky wrote the HBR article “A Cofounder of Ralabs on Leading a Ukrainian Start-Up Through a Year of War.”
How to Reinvent a Consumer Brand
2023/08/15
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How does a brand or product that's been around for decades suddenly become popular with a whole new segment of consumers? Terence Reilly has some pointers. As CMO of Crocs, he used social media and celebrity collaborations to drive sales of its signature boat shoes. Now, as president at Stanley, he has made the company's durable mugs TikTok famous and bestsellers across numerous retail outlets. He explains how listening to employees and customers and acting quickly on their insights can help any organization spur growth.
The VC Fund Closing Equity Gaps — and Making Money
2023/08/08
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Much of the business world has bought into the idea of stakeholder capitalism. But Freada Kapor Klein and Mitch Kapor say that doing some good by doing well isn’t enough when the business impact still creates negative effects and broader disparities overall. Freada, with a background in social justice and empirical research, and Mitch, an entrepreneur and investor who got his start making early spreadsheet software, strive to invest in ventures that close the distance between those with wealth and privilege and those without. The founders explain their metrics and decision-making process at Kapor Capital. The profitable firm explicitly invests in tech startups serving low-income and underrepresented communities. Freada and Mitch wrote the book Closing the Equity Gap: Creating Wealth and Fostering Justice in Startup Investing.
How Companies Can Adapt to More Government Intervention
2023/08/01
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After decades of industrial policy that favored globalization and free trade, we are entering a new era. Prompted by the pandemic, climate change, rising geopolitical tensions and economic concerns, countries and groups of countries are once again using the power they have to intervene in the private sector, whether it's investing in drug development, offering clean energy tax breaks, or incentivizing domestic manufacturing. Harvard Business School professor Willy Shih wants to help corporate leaders navigate these changes in a way that protects their businesses, workers, and customers. He explains the new challenges - as well as opportunities. Shih wrote the HBR article, "The New Era of Industrial Policy is Here."
How One F-35 Fighter Pilot Makes Decisions Under Pressure
2023/07/25
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There are few jobs that demand decisive, clear thinking under pressure more than that of a fighter jet pilot. But the best combat pilots don't act on gut and muscle memory alone. They train to use proven mental models for making tough, fast decisions with extremely high stakes. Hasard Lee is a U.S. Air Force fighter pilot and instructor who has learned, practiced, and taught these techniques. He breaks down the tools that individuals and organizational leaders alike can apply to some of their biggest problems and most difficult situations. Lee wrote the new book The Art of Clear Thinking: A Stealth Fighter Pilot’s Timeless Rules for Making Tough Decisions.
In Defense of Middle Management
2023/07/18
What the Best Leaders Know — and What Skills They Develop
2023/07/11
Best of IdeaCast: Escape Your Comfort Zone
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Why Entrepreneurs Don’t Need Venture Capital to Scale
2023/06/27
NBA Star Chris Paul on Mentorship and Taking a Stand
2023/06/20
When Small Stresses Lead to Big Problems
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Why More Companies Should Have a Sabbatical Policy
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Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai on Leadership, AI, and Big Tech
2023/05/30
How Generative AI Changes Strategy
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Stop Looking for the Perfect Job
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How Generative AI Changes Organizational Culture
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Breaking Through When You Feel Stuck
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How Generative AI Changes Creativity
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A Marketing Professor and a Matchmaker Talk Personal Branding
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How Generative AI Changes Productivity
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Disruption Isn’t the Only Path to Innovation
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Special Series: How Generative AI Changes Everything
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Reid Hoffman on Building AI and Other Tech More Responsibly
2023/04/25
Stop Neglecting Low-Wage Workers
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How Managing Your Anxiety Can Make You a Better Leader
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A Forensic Accountant on How Companies Can Avoid Fraud and Scandal
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X’s Astro Teller on Managing Moonshot Innovation
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Brain Tech Is Getting Really Good. Here’s What Managers Need to Know
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Why You (and Your Company) Need to Experiment with ChatGPT Now
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IBM’s Ginni Rometty on Skill-Building and Success
2023/03/07
The Ins and Outs of the Influencer Industry
2023/02/28
Why Leaders Should Rethink Their Decision-Making Process
2023/02/21
The Subtle Art of Disagreeing with Your Boss
2023/02/14
Why Many Companies Get Layoffs Wrong
2023/02/07
A Deeper Understanding of Creativity at Work
2023/01/31
Guy Raz on What Great Business Leaders Have in Common
2023/01/24
Money, Flexibility, Development? Figuring Out What Employees Really Value
2023/01/17
Work Insights from the World’s Longest Happiness Study
2023/01/10
Best of IdeaCast 2022
2023/01/03
LinkedIn’s CEO on Hiring Strategies and the Skills That Matter Most (from The New World of Work)
2022/12/27
Ron Howard on Collaborative Leadership and Career Longevity
2022/12/20
Why Some Start-Ups Fail to Scale
2022/12/13
You’ve Made Some DEI Progress. Don’t Stop Now
2022/12/06
The Growing “Do Good” Economy
2022/11/29
Let’s Protect Our Frontline Workers from Rude Customers
2022/11/22
What We Still Misunderstand About Mentorship and Sponsorship
2022/11/15
Grit Is Good. But Quitting Can Be, Too.
2022/11/08
How Women (and Everyone) Can Form Deeper Bonds to Fight Bias at Work
2022/11/01
4 Business Ideas That Changed the World: Emotional Intelligence
2022/10/27
What Leaders Need to Know About a Looming Recession – and Other Global Threats
2022/10/25
4 Business Ideas That Changed the World: Shareholder Value
2022/10/20
NASA’s Science Head on Leading Space Missions with Risk of Spectacular Failure
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4 Business Ideas That Changed the World: Disruptive Innovation
2022/10/13
What Kara Swisher Has Learned From Decades Covering Tech
2022/10/11
4 Business Ideas That Changed the World: Scientific Management
2022/10/06
To Improve AI Outcomes, Think About the Entire System
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Introducing 4 Business Ideas That Changed the World
2022/09/29
Advice from the CEO of an All-Remote Company
2022/09/27
It’s Time to Fine-Tune Performance Management
2022/09/20
Rolling Stone’s Jann Wenner on Cultivating Creative Talent
2022/09/13
Work-Life Supports That Truly Help Your Organization
2022/09/06
What Business Leaders Should Know Now About the Metaverse
2022/08/30
Why Companies Decide to Sell on Amazon—or Not
2022/08/23
Strategies for Dealing with Difficult Coworkers
2022/08/16
Decisions Don’t Have to Be Either-Or
2022/08/09
Is Cynicism Ruining Your Organization?
2022/08/02
The Case for Embracing Uncertainty
2022/07/26
How the Unionization Trend is Changing Workplace Dynamics
2022/07/19
Red Flags You Won’t See on a CEO’s Resume
2022/07/12
Sad, Mad, Anxious? How to Work Through Your ‘Big Feelings’
2022/07/05
Open Digital Platforms to Spur Innovation
2022/06/28
A Debate Champion on How to Have More Productive Disagreements at Work
2022/06/21
Fighting Bias and Inequality at the Team Level
2022/06/14
The Pros and Cons of Our “Middleman Economy”
2022/06/07
Immigration, Upward Mobility, and the U.S. Economy
2022/05/31
Leadership Lessons from a Republican Governor in a Blue State
2022/05/24
How Government and Business Can Tackle Big Global Crises Together
2022/05/17
Comedian Sarah Cooper On Bringing Humor to Any Career
2022/05/10
3 Strategies for Dealing with Procrastination
2022/05/03
Find Joy in Any Job: How Do I Get My Team to Love Work?
2022/04/28
Let’s Redefine the Role of Manager
2022/04/26
Find Joy in Any Job: How Do I Improve the Role I Have?
2022/04/21
How Understanding Your Family Dynamics Can Improve Work
2022/04/19
Find Joy in Any Job: What Do I Really Love To Do?
2022/04/14
How Political Polarization Is Changing Work
2022/04/12
Find Joy in Any Job: Why Am I Unhappy at Work?
2022/04/07
Working with Colleagues: Should You Collaborate or Compete?
2022/04/05
Filmmaker Ken Burns on Lessons in Innovation and Collaboration
2022/03/29
Breaking Free of the Cult of Productivity
2022/03/22
DEI Isn’t Enough; Companies Need Anti-Racist Leadership
2022/03/15
You’re Overlooking a Source of Diversity: Age
2022/03/08
Regrets Are Inevitable. Start Learning From Them.
2022/03/01
Why Some Companies Thrived During the Pandemic
2022/02/22
Inside Companies that Get the Purpose-Profit Balance Right
2022/02/15
The Positives—and Perils—of Storytelling
2022/02/08
Need a Reset? Try This One Quick Meditation Session (Bonus)
2022/02/03
No, Tech Start-ups Aren’t Taking Over the World
2022/02/01
Why Companies Should Stop Political Spending Now
2022/01/25
How Companies Reckon with Past Wrongdoing
2022/01/18
To Get Ahead, You Need Both Ambition and Humility
2022/01/11
We’re Bad at Measuring Inequality—Here’s Why That Matters
2022/01/04
Best of IdeaCast: What Sets Successful People Apart
2021/12/28
There Still Aren’t Enough “Good Jobs”
2021/12/21
Gaslighting at Work—and What to Do About It
2021/12/14
How to Use All Your Vacation — And Really Unplug
2021/12/07
One Way to Fight the Great Resignation? Re-recruit Your Current Employees
2021/11/30
Why the Highest Paying Jobs So Rarely Go to Women
2021/11/23
In a New Role? Here’s How to Hit the Ground Running
2021/11/16
The Future of Work Is Projects—So You’ve Got to Get Them Right
2021/11/09
Anti-Bias Policies That Really Work in Customer Service
2021/11/02
Find Focus in a Chaotic World
2021/10/26
Algorithms Won’t Solve All Your Pricing Problems
2021/10/19
Tech’s Exponential Growth – and How to Solve the Problems It’s Created
2021/10/12
First He Saved Unilever. Now He Wants to Save Capitalism.
2021/10/05
How to Make Strategic Career Decisions, Even in a Crisis (Back to Work, Better)
2021/09/28
The Innovation System Behind Moderna’s Covid-19 Vaccine
2021/09/23
Can Big Tech Reform Itself?
2021/09/14
Why Companies Need Returnship Programs (Back to Work, Better)
2021/09/07
How the Pandemic Changed Talent Management (Back to Work, Better)
2021/08/31
Best of IdeaCast: Saying No to More Work
2021/08/26
What We Still Need to Learn about AI in Marketing — and Beyond
2021/08/24
Rethinking Our Relationship with Work (Back to Work, Better)
2021/08/17
When Entrepreneurs Distort the Truth
2021/08/10
Moving the Needle on DEI
2021/08/03
Building Successful Hybrid Teams (Back to Work, Better)
2021/07/27
Lessons in Innovation from Bowie, Beyoncé, and More
2021/07/20
Stop Networking, Start Connecting
2021/07/13
Best Buy’s Hubert Joly on Walking the Talk of Stakeholder Capitalism
2021/07/06
Hybrid Work Is Here To Stay. Now What? (Back to Work, Better)
2021/06/29
The Rise and Fall of Carlos Ghosn: Part 4
2021/06/24
What Anthropologists Can Teach Us About Work Culture
2021/06/22
The Rise and Fall of Carlos Ghosn: Part 3
2021/06/17
Former Washington Post Top Editor on Leading Through Change
2021/06/15
The Rise and Fall of Carlos Ghosn: Part 2
2021/06/10
What Business Leaders Need to Know About China Now
2021/06/08
The Rise and Fall of Carlos Ghosn: Part 1
2021/06/03
How Leaders Can Encourage Imagination
2021/06/01
CEO Series: Ursula Burns on Leading with Authenticity at Xerox
2021/05/27
Why Smart People (Sometimes) Make Bad Decisions
2021/05/25
CEO Series: 23andMe’s Anne Wojcicki on Scientific Breakthroughs and Public Trust
2021/05/20
Understanding the Venture Capital Gender Gap
2021/05/18
CEO Series: Mastercard’s Ajay Banga on Promoting Financial Inclusion
2021/05/13
How To Talk Yourself Up (Without Turning People Off)
2021/05/11
CEO Series: Mary Barra of General Motors on Committing to an Eco-Friendly Future
2021/05/06
How Tech Adoption Fuels China’s Innovation Boom
2021/05/04
Quit Overthinking Things
2021/04/27
Streamlining Your Company’s Strategy
2021/04/20
The Career Rules You Didn’t Learn at School
2021/04/13
How the Creative Economy is Changing with Covid-19
2021/04/06
Building a Company While Battling Depression
2021/03/30
The Competitive Advantage of an Offboarding Program
2021/03/23
Workplace Design, Post-Pandemic (Back to Work, Better)
2021/03/16
New Recruiting Strategies for a Post-Covid World (Back to Work, Better)
2021/03/09
What Black Leaders Bring to the Table
2021/03/02
How CEOs Can Drive Sales — or Kill Deals
2021/02/23
Bill Gates on How Business Leaders Can Fight Climate Change
2021/02/16
Taking on a Senior Leadership Role Remotely
2021/02/09
How Many Managers Does It Take to Change a Lightbulb?
2021/02/02
What Sets Family Businesses Apart
2021/01/26
Goodbye Bureaucracy, Hello Common Sense
2021/01/19
How Empathy Helps Bridge Generational Differences
2021/01/12
What Kind of Networker Are You?
2021/01/05
Stop Micromanaging and Give People the Help They Really Need
2020/12/29
Better Ways to Manage Up and Out
2020/12/22
Why Burnout Happens — and How Bosses Can Help
2020/12/15
When to Team Up with Your Competition
2020/12/08
Race at Work: Lessons in Diversity and Culture from Mastercard
2020/12/03
What Business Leaders Should Know About Cryptocurrency
2020/12/01
Why Companies and Skilled Workers Are Turning to On-Demand Work
2020/11/24
Women at Work: Too Shy to Be a Leader
2020/11/23
How Jeff Bezos Built One of the World’s Most Valuable Companies
2020/11/17
Managing Working Parents During the Pandemic
2020/11/10
Defining and Adapting Your Leadership Style
2020/11/06
How Those With Power and Privilege Can Help Others Advance
2020/10/27
Why Work-From-Anywhere Is Here to Stay
2020/10/20
The Fundamental Human Relationship with Work
2020/10/13
How to Build Workplaces That Protect Employee Health
2020/10/06
When Efficiency Goes Too Far
2020/09/29
The Subtle Art of Saying No
2020/09/22
Cultivate a Trans-Inclusive Workplace
2020/09/15
Creating More Resilient Supply Chains
2020/09/08
To Build Grit, Go Back to Basics
2020/09/01
Why Work Friends are Worth It
2020/08/25
Breaking Down Bureaucracy and Building Up Workers
2020/08/18
Mastering the Art of Persuasion
2020/08/11
Adapting Negotiations to a Remote World
2020/08/04
Future-Proofing Your Strategy with Scenario Planning
2020/07/28
Every Business Can Be a Subscription Business
2020/07/21
Helping People Move from Trauma to Growth
2020/07/14
Pricing Strategies for Uncertain Times
2020/07/07
AB InBev CEO on Adapting in the Face of Crisis
2020/06/30
Applying Porter’s Five Forces to Fix U.S. Politics
2020/06/23
Megan Rapinoe on Leading — On and Off the Field
2020/06/16
Corporate America’s Work in Fighting Racism is Just Beginning
2020/06/09
Great Leaders Use Tough Love to Improve Performance
2020/06/02
Staying Agile Beyond a Crisis
2020/05/26
Smarter Side Gigs
2020/05/19
To Build Strategy, Start with the Future
2020/05/12
How Marketers Can Drive Social Change and Profits
2020/05/05
Digital Transformation, One Discovery at a Time
2020/04/28
Another Workplace Crisis: Loneliness
2020/04/21
Managing Crises in the Short and Long Term
2020/04/14
How Entrepreneurs Succeed Outside Silicon Valley
2020/04/07
Working Parents, Let Go of the Idea of Balance
2020/03/31
Real Leaders: Oprah Winfrey and the Power of Empathy
2020/03/26
Adjusting to Remote Work During the Coronavirus Crisis
2020/03/24
Real Leaders: Abraham Lincoln and the Power of Emotional Discipline
2020/03/19
Square’s Cofounder on Discovering — and Defending — Innovations
2020/03/17
Real Leaders: Rachel Carson Seeds the Environmental Movement
2020/03/12
Why Capitalists Need to Save Democracy
2020/03/10
Real Leaders: Ernest Shackleton Leads a Harrowing Expedition
2020/03/05
How Workplaces — Not Women — Need to Change to Improve Equality
2020/03/03
Rules for Effective Hiring — and Firing
2020/02/25
Defining Radical Candor – and How to Do It
2020/02/18
How People Succeed By Defying Expectations
2020/02/11
How to Set Up — and Learn — from Experiments
2020/02/04
How to Capture All the Advantages of Open Innovation
2020/01/28
Revisiting “Jobs To Be Done” with Clayton Christensen
2020/01/27
Why Business Leaders Should Solve Problems Beyond Their Companies
2020/01/21
A New Way to Combat Bias at Work
2020/01/14
Setting a High Bar for Your Customer Service
2020/01/07
The Right Way to Form New Habits
2019/12/31
How One CEO Successfully Led a Digital Transformation
2019/12/24
The Art of Asking for (and Getting) Help
2019/12/17
The Tipping Point Between Failure and Success
2019/12/10
Why Cybersecurity Isn’t Only a Tech Problem
2019/12/03
A Nobel Prize Winner on Rethinking Poverty (and Business)
2019/11/26
To Truly Delight Customers, You Need Aesthetic Intelligence
2019/11/19
Why “Connector” Managers Build Better Talent
2019/11/12
Why Meetings Go Wrong (And How to Fix Them)
2019/11/05
Why Open Offices Aren’t Working — and How to Fix Them
2019/10/29
Accelerate Learning to Boost Your Career
2019/10/22
HBR Presents: The Anxious Achiever with Morra Aarons-Mele
2019/10/17
How to Have a Relationship and a Career
2019/10/15
The CEO of Dick’s Sporting Goods on Becoming a Gun Control Advocate
2019/10/08
Melinda Gates on Fighting for Gender Equality
2019/10/04
How Companies Like Google and Alibaba Respond to Fast-Moving Markets
2019/10/01
How to Be Less Distracted at Work — and in Life
2019/09/24
Dematerialization and What It Means for the Economy — and Climate Change
2019/09/17
What Great Coaching Looks Like
2019/09/10
The Inherent Failures of Long-Term Contracts — and How to Fix Them
2019/09/03
How African-Americans Advance at Work — And What Organizations Can Do to Help
2019/08/27
The Challenges (and Triumphs) of a Young Manager
2019/08/20
How to Thrive as a Working Parent
2019/08/13
How Robots and AI Are Changing Job Training
2019/08/06
Finding (and Keeping) Your Company’s Soul
2019/07/30
Improve Your Critical Thinking at Work
2019/07/23
Business Lessons from How Marvel Makes Movies
2019/07/16
The 3 Types of Leaders of Innovative Companies
2019/07/09
Stopping White-Collar Crime at Your Company
2019/07/02
How to Fix Your Hiring Process
2019/06/25
The Surprising Benefits of Sponsoring Others at Work
2019/06/18
Why You Need Innovation Capital — And How to Get It
2019/06/11
Advice for Entrepreneurs from a Leading Venture Capitalist
2019/06/04
Understanding the Space Economy
2019/05/28
Why It’s Time to Finally Worry about ESG
2019/05/21
How Having a Rival Improves Performance
2019/05/14
Global Workers Are Ready for Retraining
2019/05/07
HBR Presents: Cold Call
2019/05/02
How China Is Upending Western Marketing Practices
2019/04/30
What Managers Get Wrong About Feedback
2019/04/23
HBR Presents: Exponential View with Azeem Azhar
2019/04/18
Avoiding the Expertise Trap
2019/04/16
HBR Presents: After Hours
2019/04/11
Why People — and Companies — Need Purpose
2019/04/09
The Right Way to Get Your First 1,000 Customers
2019/04/02
Why U.S. Working Moms Are So Stressed – And What To Do About It
2019/03/26
A Theoretical Physicist (and Entrepreneur) on Why Companies Stop Innovating
2019/03/19
Why Are We Still Promoting Incompetent Men?
2019/03/12
Make Customers Happier with Operational Transparency
2019/03/05
Fixing Tech’s Gender Gap
2019/02/26
How Innovative Companies Help Frontier Markets Grow
2019/02/19
How to Cope With a Mid-Career Crisis
2019/02/12
Why Business Jargon Isn’t All Bad
2019/02/05
Use Your Money to Buy Happier Time
2019/01/29
Creating Psychological Safety in the Workplace
2019/01/22
How Retirement Changes Your Identity
2019/01/15
The Harsh Reality of Innovative Companies
2019/01/08
How One Google Engineer Turned Tragedy into a Moonshot
2019/01/02
Improving Civility in the Workplace
2018/12/26
How One CEO Creates Joy at Work
2018/12/18
Why It’s So Hard to Sell New Products
2018/12/11
The Right Way to Solve Complex Business Problems
2018/12/04
Speak Out Successfully
2018/11/27
How Your Identity Changes When You Change Jobs
2018/11/20
Why Management History Needs to Reckon with Slavery
2018/11/13
Avoiding Miscommunication in a Digital World
2018/11/06
Stop Initiative Overload
2018/10/30
When Men Mentor Women
2018/10/23
John Kerry on Leadership, Compromise, and Change
2018/10/16
The Power of Curiosity
2018/10/09
How Companies Can Tap Into Talent Clusters
2018/10/02
A Hollywood Executive On Negotiation, Talent, and Risk
2018/09/25
How Companies Get Creativity Right (and Wrong)
2018/09/18
How Alibaba Is Leading Digital Innovation in China
2018/09/11
The Science Behind Sleep and High Performance
2018/09/04
Understanding Digital Strategy
2018/08/28
Managing Someone Who’s Too Collaborative
2018/08/21
Networking Myths Dispelled
2018/08/14
Designing AI to Make Decisions
2018/08/10
Why Opening Up at Work Is Harder for Minorities
2018/08/07
Learning from GE’s Stumbles
2018/07/31
Turning Purpose Into Performance
2018/07/24
The 2 Types of Respect Leaders Must Show
2018/07/17
How Some Companies Beat the Competition… For Centuries
2018/07/10
Architect Daniel Libeskind on Working Unconventionally
2018/07/03
When India Killed Off Cash Overnight
2018/06/27
Getting People to Help You
2018/06/19
How to Become More Self-Aware
2018/06/12
Bill Clinton and James Patterson on Collaboration and Cybersecurity
2018/06/05
Ask Better Questions
2018/05/29
How AI Is Making Prediction Cheaper
2018/05/22
Dual-Career Couples Are Forcing Firms to Rethink Talent Management
2018/05/15
Choosing a Strategy for Your Startup
2018/05/08
Use Learning to Engage Your Team
2018/05/01
Why Technical Experts Make Great Leaders
2018/04/24
How AI Can Improve How We Work
2018/04/17
You May Be a Workaholic If
2018/04/11
Make Work Engaging Again
2018/04/03
Why CEOs Are Taking a Stand
2018/03/27
Leading with Less Ego
2018/03/21
McKinsey’s Head on Why Corporate Sustainability Efforts Are Falling Short
2018/03/13
Harvard’s President on Leading During a Time of Change
2018/03/07
Make Tools Like Slack Work for Your Company
2018/02/27
The CEO of Merck on Race, Leadership, and High Drug Prices
2018/02/19
The Future of MBA Education
2018/02/14
Introducing Dear HBR:
2018/02/09
Does Your Firm See You as a High Potential?
2018/02/06
Women at Work: Make Yourself Heard
2018/01/30
Controlling Your Emotions During a Negotiation
2018/01/23
For Better Customer Service, Offer Options, Not Apologies
2018/01/16
Why Leaders Should Make a Habit of Teaching
2018/01/09
Hiring the Best People
2018/01/02
Breaking Down the New U.S. Corporate Tax Law
2017/12/26
Making Unlimited Vacation Time Work
2017/12/20
How Technology Tests Our Trust
2017/12/12
Box’s CEO on Pivoting to the Enterprise Market
2017/12/05
Why More CEOs Should Be Hired from Within
2017/11/28
Dow Chemical’s CEO on Running an Environmentally Friendly Multinational
2017/11/21
When ‘Best Practices’ Backfire
2017/11/14
The Hardscrabble Business of Chinese Manufacturing in Africa
2017/11/07
Astronaut Scott Kelly on Working in Space
2017/10/31
2017’s Top-Performing CEO on Getting Product Right
2017/10/24
Everyday People Who Led Momentous Change
2017/10/19
So, You Want to Join a Startup
2017/10/12
How Successful Solopreneurs Make Money
2017/10/05
Microsoft’s CEO on Rediscovering the Company’s Soul
2017/09/28
Transcending Either-Or Decision Making
2017/09/21
Find Your Happy Place at Work
2017/09/14
How to Fix “Team Creep”
2017/09/07
Why Everyone Should See Themselves as a Leader
2017/08/31
Basic Competence Can Be a Strategy
2017/08/24
How the U.S. Navy is Responding to Climate Change
2017/08/18
When to Listen to a Dire Warning
2017/08/10
When Startups Scrapped the Business Plan
2017/08/03
Build Your Portfolio Career
2017/07/27
How AI Is Already Changing Business
2017/07/20
Nike’s Co-founder on Innovation, Culture, and Succession
2017/07/13
How Authority and Decision-Making Differ Across Cultures
2017/07/06
Mental Preparation Secrets of Top Athletes, Entertainers, and Surgeons
2017/06/29
The Talent Pool Your Company Probably Overlooks
2017/06/22
Blockchain — What You Need to Know
2017/06/15
Which Type of Entrepreneur Are You?
2017/06/08
Why Finance Needs More Humanity, and Why Humanity Needs Finance
2017/06/01
4 Behaviors of Top-Performing CEOs
2017/05/26
Why Doesn’t More of the Working Class Move for Jobs?
2017/05/18
How to Survive Being Labeled a Star
2017/05/11
Low-Risk, High-Reward Innovation
2017/05/04
Sheryl Sandberg and Adam Grant on Resilience
2017/04/27
Our Delusions About Talent
2017/04/20
To Reinvent Your Firm, Do Two Things at the Same Time
2017/04/13
Dealing with Conflict Avoiders and Seekers
2017/04/06
How Personalities Affect Team Chemistry
2017/03/30
The Rise of Corporate Inequality
2017/03/23
Break Out of Your Managerial Bubble
2017/03/16
Making Intel More Diverse
2017/03/09
Reduce Organizational Drag
2017/03/02
Globalization: Myth and Reality
2017/02/23
Why You Should Buy a Business (and How to Do It)
2017/02/16
Escape Your Comfort Zone
2017/02/09
Business Leadership Under President Trump
2017/02/02
Generosity Burnout
2017/01/27
Stopping and Starting With Success
2017/01/19
Voices from the January-February 2017 Issue
2017/01/12
Collaborating Better Across Silos
2017/01/05
Restoring Sanity to the Office
2016/12/29
The Secret to Better Problem Solving
2016/12/22
What Superconsumers Can Teach You
2016/12/15
The “Jobs to be Done” Theory of Innovation
2016/12/08
Handling Stress in the Moment
2016/12/01
How Focusing on Content Leads the Media Astray
2016/11/23
Why the White Working Class Voted for Trump
2016/11/17
A Leadership Historian on the U.S. Presidential Election
2016/11/10
Re-Orgs Are Emotional
2016/11/03
The 10 People Who Globalized the World
2016/10/27
What the World’s Best CEOs Have in Common
2016/10/20
Power Corrupts, But It Doesn’t Have To
2016/10/13
When Not to Trust the Algorithm
2016/10/06
Macromanagement Is Just as Bad as Micromanagement
2016/09/29
Building Emotional Agility
2016/09/22
Excessive Collaboration
2016/09/15
Making the Toughest Calls
2016/09/08
Email: Is It Time to Just Ban It?
2016/09/01
The Connection Between Speed and Charisma
2016/08/25
How Work Changed Love
2016/08/18
Negotiating with a Liar
2016/08/11
In Praise of Dissenters and Non-Conformists
2016/08/04
The Zappos Holacracy Experiment
2016/07/28
The Era of Agile Talent
2016/07/21
We Can’t Work All the Time
2016/07/14
Teaching Creativity to Leaders
2016/07/07
Brexit and the Leadership Equivalent of Empty Calories
2016/06/30
A Brief History of 21st Century Economics
2016/06/23
Greg Louganis on How to Achieve Peak Performance
2016/06/16
Getting Growth Back at Your Company
2016/06/09
Asking for Advice Makes People Think You’re Smarter
2016/06/02
Yo-Yo Ma on Successful Creative Collaboration
2016/05/26
Be a Work/Life-Friendly Boss
2016/05/19
Make Better Decisions
2016/05/12
Let Employees Be People
2016/05/05
Isabel Allende on Fiction and Feminism
2016/04/28
The Condensed May 2016 Issue
2016/04/22
Understanding Agile Management
2016/04/15
Smart Managers Don’t Compare People to the “Average”
2016/04/07
Life’s Work: Dr. Ruth Westheimer
2016/03/31
How to Say No to More Work
2016/03/24
The Condensed April 2016 Issue
2016/03/22
Are Leaders Getting Too Emotional?
2016/03/17
Your Coworkers Should Know Your Salary
2016/03/10
Talking About Race at Work
2016/03/03
The Art of the Interview
2016/02/25
The Condensed March 2016 Issue
2016/02/19
Closing the Strategy-Execution Gap
2016/02/18
Be a Superboss
2016/02/11
How to Give Constructive Feedback
2016/02/05
Being Happier at Work
2016/01/28
Stop Focusing on Your Strengths
2016/01/21
Make Peace with Your Inner Critic
2016/01/14
Achieve Your Goals (Finally)
2016/01/08
Marketing Lessons for Companies Big and Small
2015/12/30
The Condensed January-February 2016 Issue
2015/12/23
Life’s Work: Neil deGrasse Tyson
2015/12/17
Becoming a More Authentic Leader
2015/12/10
Accenture’s CEO on Leading Change
2015/12/03
4 Types of Conflict and How to Manage Them
2015/11/25
The Condensed December 2015 Issue
2015/11/24
Katie Couric on the Shifting Landscape of News
2015/11/19
Slide Deck Presentations Don’t Have to Be Terrible
2015/11/13
Simple Rules for Creating Great Places to Work
2015/11/05
The Man Behind Siri Explains How to Start a Company
2015/10/30
China and the Biggest Startup You’ve Probably Never Heard of
2015/10/22
What Makes Social Entrepreneurs Successful?
2015/10/16
The Condensed November 2015 Issue
2015/10/13
Disrupt Your Career, and Yourself
2015/10/07
Why the Term “Thought Leader” Isn’t Gross
2015/10/01
Your Office’s Hidden Artists and How to Work with Them
2015/09/24
Build Your Character (at Least for a Day)
2015/09/17
The Creator of WordPress
2015/09/10
The Condensed October 2015 Issue
2015/09/09
What’s Your Digital Quotient?
2015/09/03
PepsiCo CEO Indra Nooyi on Design Thinking
2015/08/27
Salman Rushdie on Creativity and Criticism
2015/08/20
Become a Better Listener
2015/08/13
The Condensed September 2015 Issue
2015/08/12
Building Healthy Teams
2015/08/06
How Science and Tech Are Changing the Human Body
2015/07/30
The CEO of YP on Leading Digital Transformation
2015/07/23
“Social Media-Savvy CEO” Is No Oxymoron
2015/07/16
Test-Taking Comes to the Office
2015/07/09
Can HR Be Saved?
2015/07/02
Michael Lynton on Surviving the Biggest Corporate Hack in History
2015/06/25
The Condensed July-August 2015 Issue
2015/06/23
Beating Digital Overload with Digital Tools
2015/06/18
Are Robots Really Coming for Our Jobs?
2015/06/11
George Mitchell on Effective Negotiation
2015/06/04
Evernote’s CEO on the New Ways We Work
2015/05/28
Making Sense of Digital Disruption
2015/05/21
The Condensed June 2015 Issue
2015/05/19
Consumer Privacy in the Digital Age
2015/05/14
Why We Pretend to Be Workaholics
2015/05/07
Ethical CEOs Finish First
2015/04/30
Brian Grazer on the Power of Curiosity
2015/04/23
Understand How People See You
2015/04/16
The Condensed May 2015 Issue
2015/04/14
Making Health Care More Consumer-Driven
2015/04/09
Case Study: Reinvent This Retailer
2015/04/02
Your Brain’s Ideal Schedule
2015/03/26
Blue Ocean Strategy and Red Ocean Traps
2015/03/19
The Condensed April 2015 Issue
2015/03/17
Set Habits You’ll Actually Keep
2015/03/12
Goldie Hawn on Female Leadership
2015/03/05
Be Less Reactive and More Proactive
2015/02/26
Marissa Mayer’s Yahoo
2015/02/19
Why Leadership Feels Awkward
2015/02/12
The Condensed March 2015 Issue
2015/02/11
GoDaddy’s CEO on Leading Change
2015/02/05
Signs You’re Secretly Annoying Your Colleagues
2015/01/29
Innovation Needs a System
2015/01/22
What Still Stifles Ambitious Women
2015/01/15
How to Negotiate Better
2015/01/08
Skills We Can Learn from Games
2014/12/30
The Condensed January-February 2015 Issue
2014/12/19
What Makes Teams Smart (or Dumb)
2014/12/18
Communicate Better with Your Global Team
2014/12/11
Explaining Silicon Valley’s Success
2014/12/04
Learning What Wiser Workers Know
2014/11/25
Making Good Decisions
2014/11/20
The Condensed December 2014 Issue
2014/11/18
Boris Johnson on Influence and Ambition
2014/11/13
How to Change Someone’s Behavior with Minimal Effort
2014/11/06
Is the Corporate Campus Dying?
2014/10/30
Myths About Entrepreneurship
2014/10/23
Disrupting TV’s Status Quo
2014/10/16
The Condensed November 2014 Issue
2014/10/14
Focus More on Value Capture
2014/10/09
Does Your Sales Team Know Your Strategy?
2014/10/02
How Google Manages Talent
2014/09/25
Fixing the College Grad Hiring Process
2014/09/18
How Silicon Valley Became Uncool
2014/09/11
The Condensed October 2014 Issue
2014/09/09
The Fall of the Talent Economy?
2014/09/04
Privacy’s Shrinking Future
2014/08/28
How to Stop Corporate Inversions
2014/08/21
Prevent Employees from Leaking Data
2014/08/14
The Condensed September 2014 Issue
2014/08/12
The Art of Managing Science
2014/08/07
The Dangers of Confidence
2014/07/31
The Future of Talent Is Potential
2014/07/24
To Do Things Better, Stop Doing So Much
2014/07/17
Marc Andreessen and Jim Barksdale on How to Make Money
2014/07/10
The Fukushima Meltdown That Didn’t Happen
2014/07/03
Yang Yuanqing: The HBR Interview
2014/06/26
The Condensed July-August 2014 Issue
2014/06/24
When to Go with Your Gut
2014/06/19
Succeeding Quietly in Our Recognition-Obsessed Culture
2014/06/12
The Secret History of White-Collar Offices
2014/06/05
Cross-Culture Work in a Global Economy
2014/05/29
How to Manage Wall Street
2014/05/22
Taking Business Back from Wall Street
2014/05/15
Time Is a Company’s Most Valuable Resource
2014/05/08
Ruth Reichl on Challenging Career Moves
2014/05/01
Social Physics Can Change Your Company (and the World)
2014/04/24
Best of the IdeaCast
2014/04/17
How Companies Can Embrace Speed
2014/04/10
How Unusual CEOs Drive Value
2014/04/03
HBR IdeaCast
https://hbr.org/podcasts/ideacast
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