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HBR IdeaCast
Description

A weekly podcast featuring the leading thinkers in business and management.

Episodes
  • 2024 / 12 / 24
    Best of IdeaCast: To Build Stronger Teams, Ask Better Questions

    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....

  • 2024 / 12 / 17
    The Case for Selling Products that Adapt

    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...

  • 2024 / 12 / 10
    A Hollywood Producer’s Formula for Taking Bigger Risks

    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...

  • 2024 / 12 / 3
    Boost Your Creativity in Any Job

    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...

  • 2024 / 11 / 26
    Tried-and-True Networking Tips from Decades of Experience

    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...

  • 2024 / 11 / 21
    Future of Business: Palo Alto Networks’ Nikesh Arora on Managing Risk in the Age of AI

    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...

  • 2024 / 11 / 19
    10 Gems from IdeaCast’s First 1,000 Episodes

    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...

  • 2024 / 11 / 14
    Future of Business: Baidu’s Robin Li on the Technology Trends that Will Transform Business

    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...

  • 2024 / 11 / 12
    The Growing Trend of Part-Time Executives

    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...

  • 2024 / 11 / 7
    Future of Business: SAIC’s Toni Townes-Whitley on Leading Strategic Transformation

    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...

  • 2024 / 11 / 5
    Unifying Leadership in a Divided Time

    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...

  • 2024 / 10 / 31
    Future of Business: Reid Hoffman on Managing Technological Change and Innovation

    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...

  • 2024 / 10 / 29
    Turn Employee Feedback into Real Results

    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....

  • 2024 / 10 / 22
    The Real Reasons Employees Quit — and How to Retain Them

    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...

  • 2024 / 10 / 15
    Here’s How Managers Can Rediscover Their Joy at Work

    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...

  • 2024 / 10 / 10
    Malcolm Gladwell’s New Take on Tipping Points

    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...

  • 2024 / 10 / 8
    Why AI Isn’t Enough To Beat The Competition

    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...

  • 2024 / 10 / 1
    How Tribalism Can Actually Strengthen Workplace Culture

    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...

  • 2024 / 9 / 24
    What We Can Learn from Great Political Speakers

    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...

  • 2024 / 9 / 17
    Training Your Brain to Work More Effectively

    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...

  • 2024 / 9 / 10
    The AI Skills You Should Be Building Now

    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,...

  • 2024 / 9 / 3
    Dysfunctional Leadership Teams — and How to Fix Them

    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...

  • 2024 / 8 / 27
    Lessons from a Turnaround Expert

    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...

  • 2024 / 8 / 20
    Is Your Company Reading Data the Wrong Way?

    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...

  • 2024 / 8 / 13
    What to Do When You’re Overlooked

    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...

  • 2024 / 8 / 6
    The Right Way to Manage Emotions on Your Team

    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...

  • 2024 / 7 / 30
    An Astronaut’s Advice on High-Stakes Collaboration

    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...

  • 2024 / 7 / 23
    Trying to Persuade and Other Big Mistakes Marketers Make

    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...

  • 2024 / 7 / 16
    Is People-Pleasing Holding You Back?

    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...

  • 2024 / 7 / 9
    Why We Should Pay More Attention to Departing CEOs

    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...

  • 2024 / 7 / 2
    Darius Rucker on Resilience and Reinvention

    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...

  • 2024 / 6 / 25
    When Your Employee Is Underperforming

    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....

  • 2024 / 6 / 18
    Why Managers Play Favorites – and How They Can Change

    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...

  • 2024 / 6 / 13
    Tech at Work: The Future of Spatial Computing

    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...

  • 2024 / 6 / 11
    Yum! Brands’ Former CEO on Why You Should Never Stop Learning

    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,...

  • 2024 / 6 / 4
    Why You Need to Stress Test Your Strategies (and Tactics)

    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,...

  • 2024 / 5 / 30
    Tech at Work: How to Get the Most Out of Digital Collaboration Tools

    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...

  • 2024 / 5 / 28
    What Venture Capitalists Can Teach Companies About Decision-Making

    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...

  • 2024 / 5 / 21
    How to Navigate Change at Any Career Stage

    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...

  • 2024 / 5 / 16
    Tech at Work: How the End of Cookies Will Transform Digital Marketing

    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...

  • 2024 / 5 / 14
    The Hidden Burden of Long Covid and What Companies Can Do

    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...

  • 2024 / 5 / 7
    Behind the Boom in Celebrity Brands

    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...

  • 2024 / 5 / 2
    Tech at Work: What GenAI Means for Companies Right Now

    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...

  • 2024 / 4 / 30
    How Bad Leaders Get Worse over Time

    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...

  • 2024 / 4 / 25
    Special Series: Tech at Work

    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...

  • 2024 / 4 / 23
    Feeling Unmotivated? Here’s How to Get Out of the Rut

    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...

  • 2024 / 4 / 16
    Are You Asking the Right Questions?

    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...

  • 2024 / 4 / 9
    A Roadmap for Today’s Entrepreneurs

    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...

  • 2024 / 4 / 2
    Treat Email Like Laundry — and Other Tips from Google’s Productivity Expert

    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...

  • 2024 / 3 / 26
    Why the Glass Cliff Persists

    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...

  • 2024 / 3 / 19
    Why Leaders Need to Value Their Retirement-Age Workforce

    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...

  • 2024 / 3 / 12
    What’s Your Interviewing Style?

    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...

  • 2024 / 3 / 5
    To Negotiate Better, Start with Yourself

    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...

  • 2024 / 2 / 27
    Rethinking Growth at All Costs

    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...

  • 2024 / 2 / 20
    Companies Can Win by Reducing Overwork

    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...

  • 2024 / 2 / 13
    When Should Companies Weigh in on Contentious Issues?

    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...

  • 2024 / 2 / 6
    Stuck on a Problem? Try Switching Up Your Approach

    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...

  • 2024 / 1 / 30
    How to Reduce the Friction that Hurts You — and Harness the Friction that Helps

    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...

  • 2024 / 1 / 23
    What the New Freelance Economy Means for Your Talent Strategy

    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...

  • 2024 / 1 / 16
    Making Peace with Your Midlife, Mid-career Self

    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...

  • 2024 / 1 / 9
    Supercharge Your One-on-One Meetings

    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...

  • 2024 / 1 / 2
    The Best Return-to-Office Policies Aren’t One-Size-Fits-All

    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...

  • 2023 / 12 / 26
    Best of IdeaCast: Behaviors of Successful CEOs

    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...

  • 2023 / 12 / 19
    Why More Companies Are Getting in on the Resale Game

    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...

  • 2023 / 12 / 12
    How Hybrid Work Is (And Isn’t) Reshaping Cities

    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...

  • 2023 / 12 / 5
    Setting AI Projects Up for Success

    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...

  • 2023 / 11 / 30
    New Here: Getting a Raise Is a Process, Not a Conversation

    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...

  • 2023 / 11 / 28
    Fast Casual Food Pioneer Ron Shaich Explains How to Find a Niche — and then Scale

    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...

  • 2023 / 11 / 21
    Why Private Equity Needs to Invest More in Talent Development

    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...

  • 2023 / 11 / 14
    Nvidia’s CEO On What It Takes To Run An A.I.-Led Company Now

    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...

  • 2023 / 11 / 7
    A High-Performance Coach on the Key to Achieving Your Full Potential

    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...

  • 2023 / 10 / 31
    How Job Training Must Change in the AI Age

    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...

  • 2023 / 10 / 24
    Getting Feedback Right on Diverse Teams

    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...

  • 2023 / 10 / 17
    Tools for Managers to Help Employees with Their Mental Health Challenges

    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...

  • 2023 / 10 / 10
    Reflecting on What Matters After a Terminal Cancer Diagnosis

    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...

  • 2023 / 10 / 3
    How to Solve Tough Problems Better and Faster

    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...

  • 2023 / 9 / 26
    Improve Your Impromptu Speaking

    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...

  • 2023 / 9 / 19
    How Companies Can Recommit to Their DEI Goals

    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,...

  • 2023 / 9 / 12
    People with Disabilities Are an Untapped Talent Pool

    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,...

  • 2023 / 9 / 5
    If You Want Culture Change, Create New Stories

    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...

  • 2023 / 8 / 29
    Leading a Workforce Empowered by New AI Tools

    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...

  • 2023 / 8 / 22
    How One Ukrainian Company Cultivated Resiliency Amid War

    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...

  • 2023 / 8 / 15
    How to Reinvent a Consumer Brand

    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...

  • 2023 / 8 / 8
    The VC Fund Closing Equity Gaps — and Making Money

    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...

  • 2023 / 8 / 1
    How Companies Can Adapt to More Government Intervention

    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...

  • 2023 / 7 / 25
    How One F-35 Fighter Pilot Makes Decisions Under Pressure

    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...

  • 2023 / 7 / 18
    In Defense of Middle Management

    Middle managers are meant to serve as a go-between for leadership teams and individual contributors. But in large organizations, with many layers of hierarchy, some of these roles feel like bureaucratic...

  • 2023 / 7 / 11
    What the Best Leaders Know — and What Skills They Develop

    If you had the chance to talk to hundreds of business leaders at the top of their game, what habits and patterns would you learn? Adam Bryant has done just that. He's the senior managing director of the...

  • 2023 / 7 / 4
    Best of IdeaCast: Escape Your Comfort Zone

    We know that trying new things, taking risks, and even failing are vital to most success stories. But getting out of areas where you’re comfortable and breaking through to the next level is easier said than...

  • 2023 / 6 / 27
    Why Entrepreneurs Don’t Need Venture Capital to Scale

    With all the hype in the startup world around unicorns and hypergrowth, entrepreneurs feel enormous pressure to raise massive amounts of cash from venture capitalists. But now, as interest rates have risen, a...

  • 2023 / 6 / 20
    NBA Star Chris Paul on Mentorship and Taking a Stand

    Most of us can point to a few key people who have made a real difference in our lives and careers - a family member, a coach, a boss. And many who get that kind of mentoring build on the lessons they learn to...

  • 2023 / 6 / 13
    When Small Stresses Lead to Big Problems

    It's easy to see how big stresses at work or home -- like layoffs, illnesses, or even a complex and important project -- cause anxiety too spike. But sometimes the stresses that cause the most hard are...

  • 2023 / 6 / 6
    Why More Companies Should Have a Sabbatical Policy

    Sabbaticals have long been thought of as an academic privilege, but a growing number of companies offer them, especially since the pandemic. DJ DiDonna, a senior lecturer at Harvard Business School and...

  • 2023 / 5 / 30
    Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai on Leadership, AI, and Big Tech

    The use of artificial intelligence and specifically generative AI is growing rapidly, and tech giants like Google have an important role to play in how that technology gets adopted and developed. Sundar...

  • 2023 / 5 / 25
    How Generative AI Changes Strategy

    Strategy is about making the future happen, not just reacting to it, according to author Gary Hamel. And with generative artificial intelligence, senior leaders suddenly wield an awesome new tool to change...

  • 2023 / 5 / 23
    Stop Looking for the Perfect Job

    One of the first things we learn about people is what they do for a living. But the link between work and identify has moved far beyond that, especially in certain industries, geographies, and cultures. Many...

  • 2023 / 5 / 18
    How Generative AI Changes Organizational Culture

    Read just about any business history and you realize just how much a firm’s success depends on its culture. Without the right culture, you can't have successful innovation. You can't compete...

  • 2023 / 5 / 16
    Breaking Through When You Feel Stuck

    You don’t have to be a famous author to suffer from writer’s block. We all can get stuck in our thought processes and mired in our actions. That's true for leaders and managers as well, explains Adam...

  • 2023 / 5 / 11
    How Generative AI Changes Creativity

    From prehistoric cave paintings to an inventor’s Eureka moment, creativity has always been described as a particularly human trait. But something strange can happen with generative artificial intelligence....

  • 2023 / 5 / 9
    A Marketing Professor and a Matchmaker Talk Personal Branding

    Unless you're famous - or want to be - you might not think of yourself as a brand. But whether you're in a meeting or on social media, interviewing for a job or asking for a promotion, the way you...

  • 2023 / 5 / 4
    How Generative AI Changes Productivity

    How Generative AI Changes Everything is a special series from HBR IdeaCast. Each week, HBR editor in chief Adi Ignatius and HBR editor Amy Bernstein host conversations with experts and business leaders about...

  • 2023 / 5 / 2
    Disruption Isn’t the Only Path to Innovation

    Disruptive innovation has proven such a powerful idea that many people now equate innovation with market disruption. But INSEAD strategy professor Renée Mauborgne says there's a powerful way to create...

  • 2023 / 4 / 27
    Special Series: How Generative AI Changes Everything

    Generative AI seems to be everywhere right now, but what do you actually need to know? HBR IdeaCast is cutting through the noise in the special series How Generative AI Changes Everything. How will this new...

  • 2023 / 4 / 25
    Reid Hoffman on Building AI and Other Tech More Responsibly

    As a founding board member of PayPal, cofounder of LinkedIn, and a partner at Silicon Valley VC firm Greylock, Reid Hoffman has long been at the forefront of the U.S. tech industry, from the early days of...

  • 2023 / 4 / 18
    Stop Neglecting Low-Wage Workers

    Many people blame the shortage of low-wage workers on the enduring impact of the pandemic. But management professor Joseph Fuller and senior researcher Manjari Raman of Harvard Business School say that the...

  • 2023 / 4 / 11
    How Managing Your Anxiety Can Make You a Better Leader

    The business world has increasingly begun to recognize the importance of mental health, but we still have a long way to go in openly acknowledging our challenges with it. Writer, entrepreneur, and podcast...

  • 2023 / 4 / 4
    A Forensic Accountant on How Companies Can Avoid Fraud and Scandal

    From Theranos to Enron, we can't get enough of corporate scandals. We also can't get enough of the intriguing people who perpetrate them. But instigators of fraud are not all Disneyesque villains...

  • 2023 / 3 / 28
    X’s Astro Teller on Managing Moonshot Innovation

    How do you solve the world's toughest problems? Or find the next big thing in tech? Lots organizations fail to explore and take big bets on new ideas because they can't tolerate the mess of...

  • 2023 / 3 / 21
    Brain Tech Is Getting Really Good. Here’s What Managers Need to Know

    What seemed like science fiction for decades is now a reality: companies are selling wearable tech and monitoring devices that can sense people’s brain activity. Neurotechnology opens incredible opportunities...

  • 2023 / 3 / 14
    Why You (and Your Company) Need to Experiment with ChatGPT Now

    The online application ChatGPT and its integration into Microsoft search engines have put generative artificial intelligence technology in the hands of millions of people. Early adopters are using them in...

  • 2023 / 3 / 7
    IBM’s Ginni Rometty on Skill-Building and Success

    For years, employers have used university degrees as a major requirement for hiring. But, for many jobs, success depends more on skills -- and the ability to adapt and learn -- than on piece-of-paper...

  • 2023 / 2 / 28
    The Ins and Outs of the Influencer Industry

    Online influencers are an increasingly important way for companies to find new customers and drive sales. Whether you're a marketer who wants to more effectively use social media or a consumer targeted...

  • 2023 / 2 / 21
    Why Leaders Should Rethink Their Decision-Making Process

    Many people believe that leaders instinctively make the best decisions based on past experience, almost like muscle memory. But Carol Kauffman, assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and the founder of...

  • 2023 / 2 / 14
    The Subtle Art of Disagreeing with Your Boss

    Whether you're someone who enjoys ruffling feathers or the type of person who'd like to challenge the status quo but shies away, you'll benefit from understanding the best, research--backed...

  • 2023 / 2 / 7
    Why Many Companies Get Layoffs Wrong

    From Microsoft to Google to Meta, many of the world's biggest tech companies have been announcing layoffs recently. Their explanation is usually that they overhired and need to cut costs. But Harvard...

  • 2023 / 1 / 31
    A Deeper Understanding of Creativity at Work

    We all know that creativity is the backbone of innovation and, ultimately, business success. But we don't always think deeply about how creative people get their ideas and the steps we might take to do...

  • 2023 / 1 / 24
    Guy Raz on What Great Business Leaders Have in Common

    By hosting the podcasts How I Built This and Wisdom from the Top, Guy Raz has won an inside look at how visionary leaders build their own careers and incredible companies. While many leaders have unique...

  • 2023 / 1 / 17
    Money, Flexibility, Development? Figuring Out What Employees Really Value

    Even in a slowing economy, the battle to attract and retain talent persists. But employers need to look beyond what people are currently demanding — whether it’s higher salaries, more stock options or the...

  • 2023 / 1 / 10
    Work Insights from the World’s Longest Happiness Study

    It's the start of a fresh year, and optimism is in the air. But if you want happiness to extend far beyond your New Year's resolution, Robert Waldinger says you can take some inspiration from the...

  • 2023 / 1 / 3
    Best of IdeaCast 2022

    From incivility for frontline workers to struggles with hybrid work to actual progress made since the murder of George Floyd, HBR IdeaCast spent 2022 sharing impactful management research and exploring the...

  • 2022 / 12 / 27
    LinkedIn’s CEO on Hiring Strategies and the Skills That Matter Most (from The New World of Work)

    In The New World of Work video series, host and HBR Editor in Chief Adi Ignatius explores how top-tier executives see the future and how their companies are trying to set themselves up for success. Each week,...

  • 2022 / 12 / 20
    Ron Howard on Collaborative Leadership and Career Longevity

    For decades, actor-producer-director Ron Howard has made popular and critically acclaimed movies while also maintaining a reputation for being one of the nicest guys in Hollywood. He explains how he turned...

  • 2022 / 12 / 13
    Why Some Start-Ups Fail to Scale

    Managing rapid growth is a huge challenge for young businesses. Even start-ups with glowing reviews and skyrocketing sales can fail. That’s because new ventures and corporate initiatives alike have to sustain...

  • 2022 / 12 / 6
    You’ve Made Some DEI Progress. Don’t Stop Now

    Over the past few years, organizations around the world have invested in diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives with varying results. But to achieve lasting change, they'll need to commit to that...

  • 2022 / 11 / 29
    The Growing “Do Good” Economy

    From corporate social responsibility to ESG to “doing well by doing good,” an increasing number of organizations are pursuing positive social impact, and it’s not just nonprofits and government agencies. But...

  • 2022 / 11 / 22
    Let’s Protect Our Frontline Workers from Rude Customers

    From videos of drunk and disorderly airline passengers to stories of hospital visitors angrily refusing to wear masks, customer-facing work seems to have gotten a lot more difficult – even dangerous -- over...

  • 2022 / 11 / 15
    What We Still Misunderstand About Mentorship and Sponsorship

    Companies offer sponsorship programs to help a more diverse group of high performers and future leaders advance. But the efforts can often misfire. Herminia Ibarra, professor at London Business School, says...

  • 2022 / 11 / 8
    Grit Is Good. But Quitting Can Be, Too.

    From politics to sports to business, we tend to glorify those who persevere, show grit, never give up. But former professional poker player and consultant Annie Duke argues that there is also great value in...

  • 2022 / 11 / 1
    How Women (and Everyone) Can Form Deeper Bonds to Fight Bias at Work

    The number of women—especially women of color—in leadership ranks at the world’s largest companies remains desperately small. Tina Opie, associate professor of management at Babson College, offers a new...

  • 2022 / 10 / 27
    4 Business Ideas That Changed the World: Emotional Intelligence

    In the early 1990s, publishers told science journalist Daniel Goleman not to use the word “emotion” in a business book. The popular conception was that emotions had little role in the workplace. When HBR was...

  • 2022 / 10 / 25
    What Leaders Need to Know About a Looming Recession – and Other Global Threats

    Nouriel Roubini, professor emeritus at NYU’s Stern School of Business, says that a confluence of trends – from skyrocketing public and private debt and bad monetary policies to demographic shifts and the rise...

  • 2022 / 10 / 20
    4 Business Ideas That Changed the World: Shareholder Value

    The idea that maximizing shareholder value takes legal and practical precedence above all else first came to prominence in the 1970s. The person who arguably did the most to advance the idea was the business...

  • 2022 / 10 / 18
    NASA’s Science Head on Leading Space Missions with Risk of Spectacular Failure

    In 2021, the U.S. space agency NASA launched a spacecraft toward a pair of asteroids more than 11 million kilometers away. The target? The smaller of the two asteroids, just 170 meters wide. The success of...

  • 2022 / 10 / 13
    4 Business Ideas That Changed the World: Disruptive Innovation

    In the 1980s, Clayton Christensen cofounded a startup that took over a market niche from DuPont and Alcoa. That experience left Christensen puzzled. How could a small company with few resources beat rich...

  • 2022 / 10 / 11
    What Kara Swisher Has Learned From Decades Covering Tech

    No industry has had more impact than technology over the past few decades. Tech companies have changed the way we live, work, and interact with each other. They’ve helped us in a lot of ways, but they’ve also...

  • 2022 / 10 / 6
    4 Business Ideas That Changed the World: Scientific Management

    In 1878, a machinist at a Pennsylvania steelworks noticed that his crew was producing much less than he thought they could. With stopwatches and time-motion studies, Frederick Winslow Taylor ran experiments...

  • 2022 / 10 / 4
    To Improve AI Outcomes, Think About the Entire System

    Artificial intelligence technology has been advancing, and businesses have been putting it into action. But too many companies are just gathering a bunch of data to kick out insights and not really using AI...

  • 2022 / 9 / 29
    Introducing 4 Business Ideas That Changed the World

    Influential business and management ideas have tremendous influence over us. Like it or not, they shape how organizations are run and how people around the world spend their days. And Harvard Business Review...

  • 2022 / 9 / 27
    Advice from the CEO of an All-Remote Company

    Most organizations have now accepted that the days of all their knowledge workers coming into the office full time are over. So what's next? Sid Sijbrandij, CEO and cofounder of Gitlab, thinks...

  • 2022 / 9 / 20
    It’s Time to Fine-Tune Performance Management

    Measuring a broad set of standards across the organization seems like a fair way to judge employees’ performance year over year. But Heidi Gardner, distinguished fellow at Harvard Law School, says performance...

  • 2022 / 9 / 13
    Rolling Stone’s Jann Wenner on Cultivating Creative Talent

    Rolling Stone launched in 1967 with a mission to not only redefine music journalism but also chronicle important societal changes. Under the leadership of founding editor and publisher Jann Wenner, it...

  • 2022 / 9 / 6
    Work-Life Supports That Truly Help Your Organization

    Work-life support programs have long been known to lower turnover and raise employee loyalty. But new research shows they also have a positive effect on promoting diversity among managers at those firms, an...

  • 2022 / 8 / 30
    What Business Leaders Should Know Now About the Metaverse

    It might still seem like a buzzword, or something that only matters to tech CEOs. But Matthew Ball, CEO of Epyllion and the former global head of strategy for Amazon Studios, says the metaverse is the "new...

  • 2022 / 8 / 23
    Why Companies Decide to Sell on Amazon—or Not

    It's a dilemma facing more and more brands: should you sell your goods on Amazon? It's the most visited e-commerce platform in the U.S. and the dominant retailer in 28 other countries. But that...

  • 2022 / 8 / 16
    Strategies for Dealing with Difficult Coworkers

    Work is challenging for lots of reasons, but most of us have probably come to realize that what makes or break a professional experience is people - and sometimes we encounter a boss, peer, or direct report...

  • 2022 / 8 / 9
    Decisions Don’t Have to Be Either-Or

    Making business decisions often means choosing one path over another. And psychology research shows that our brains are wired to make either-or choices. But Wendy Smith, management professor at the University...

  • 2022 / 8 / 2
    Is Cynicism Ruining Your Organization?

    Around the world, we've become increasingly cynical about other people, public institutions, and corporations. In Edelman's 2022 Trust Barometer, nearly 60% of respondents across 27 countries...

  • 2022 / 7 / 26
    The Case for Embracing Uncertainty

    For many of us, uncertainty is nerve-wracking. However, many of our best achievements and meaningful experiences come from a trying time of ambiguity. INSEAD professor Nathan Furr and entrepreneur Susannah...

  • 2022 / 7 / 19
    How the Unionization Trend is Changing Workplace Dynamics

    For years, union membership has been shrinking in the United States and many other countries. But recently we've seen a resurgence, with employees in sectors like retail, hospitality, and media...

  • 2022 / 7 / 12
    Red Flags You Won’t See on a CEO’s Resume

    For a long time, we have believed that strong corporate governance is enough to prevent CEO malfeasance. However, new research shows that the lifestyle behaviors of executives can spell trouble for companies,...

  • 2022 / 7 / 5
    Sad, Mad, Anxious? How to Work Through Your ‘Big Feelings’

    When things aren't going well -- in our own lives, our community, our country, or the world -- it's hard to be productive at work. Most of us also shy away from sharing what we're feeling with...

  • 2022 / 6 / 28
    Open Digital Platforms to Spur Innovation

    As the novel coronavirus surfaced in Wuhan in 2019, Chinese officials called for mobile isolation wards. Haier Group partnered with suppliers to design and construct units quickly, thanks to the openness of...

  • 2022 / 6 / 21
    A Debate Champion on How to Have More Productive Disagreements at Work

    In an ideal world, professional conflicts are settled with thoughtful discussion and collaborative decision-making. But that’s not usually how it works. More typically, you see leaders - or the loudest voices...

  • 2022 / 6 / 14
    Fighting Bias and Inequality at the Team Level

    Despite the investments made in the last few years, many companies are falling short of their diversity, equity, and inclusion aims. Some firms have faced difficulty spreading their DEI efforts top-down...

  • 2022 / 6 / 7
    The Pros and Cons of Our “Middleman Economy”

    Kathryn Judge, a finance professor at Columbia Law School, is troubled by the rise of intermediary platforms between products and services and the customers who eventually purchase them. Thanks to technology...

  • 2022 / 5 / 31
    Immigration, Upward Mobility, and the U.S. Economy

    In eras past, the United States welcomed immigrant laborers to build and support the country's infrastructure and innovators and entrepreneurs to advance its businesses and technology. And yet...

  • 2022 / 5 / 24
    Leadership Lessons from a Republican Governor in a Blue State

    Underperforming state agencies, a natural disaster, and a pandemic are among the many challenges that faced Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker and his former Chief of Staff Steve Kadish. Looking back during...

  • 2022 / 5 / 17
    How Government and Business Can Tackle Big Global Crises Together

    It feels like a moment of panic for many. While there were some success stories in how public and private sector leaders managed the global pandemic, it isn't over, and many more crises -- from political...

  • 2022 / 5 / 10
    Comedian Sarah Cooper On Bringing Humor to Any Career

    It's a cliche, but they say it's best to write what you know. That was the case for comedian Sarah Cooper, who rose to viral social media fame in the Trump era through her lip sync TikTok videos....

  • 2022 / 5 / 3
    3 Strategies for Dealing with Procrastination

    We’re all prone to procrastinate. We feel guilty about it. And yet, we still do it. Alice Boyes, a former clinical psychologist and author, says breaking the habit is more than simply a matter of discipline....

  • 2022 / 4 / 28
    Find Joy in Any Job: How Do I Get My Team to Love Work?

    Not everyone likes everything about their job all the time. But we know from research that people who are energized by at least parts of their work perform better – and feel a greater sense of well-being. So...

  • 2022 / 4 / 26
    Let’s Redefine the Role of Manager

    Most managers today are overwhelmed. Thanks to rapid technological change, flattening hierarchies, agile work, and new attitudes about talent, they have to do more than ever. Lynda Gratton, professor at...

  • 2022 / 4 / 21
    Find Joy in Any Job: How Do I Improve the Role I Have?

    A lot of us are feeling unhappy and disengaged at work – and that started long before the pandemic. A big part of the problem, says Marcus Buckingham, is that we don’t take the initiative to do more of the...

  • 2022 / 4 / 19
    How Understanding Your Family Dynamics Can Improve Work

    Deborah Ancona, a professor at MIT Sloan School of Management, and Dennis Perkins, CEO of The Syncretics Group, have researched how family dynamics play out in the workplace. They say people often revert to...

  • 2022 / 4 / 14
    Find Joy in Any Job: What Do I Really Love To Do?

    At a time when 41% of us are considering quitting our jobs, it’s time for us to understand why and what we can do about it. In this special series from HBR, we’re looking at how to craft your current job...

  • 2022 / 4 / 12
    How Political Polarization Is Changing Work

    Politics has traditionally been a taboo topic to discuss on the job. But as people get more vocal about their views -- on everything from from climate change to racial justice, elections to invasions --...

  • 2022 / 4 / 7
    Find Joy in Any Job: Why Am I Unhappy at Work?

    There’s been much talk about the Great Resignation and what’s driving it. The pandemic has exacerbated a long-term problem: many of us struggle to find any pleasure in our work. But quitting isn’t the only...

  • 2022 / 4 / 5
    Working with Colleagues: Should You Collaborate or Compete?

    Randall Peterson, founding director of the Leadership Institute at London Business School, studies coworker dynamics. He says lately, the idea of head-to-head competition for advancement has gone out of style...

  • 2022 / 3 / 29
    Filmmaker Ken Burns on Lessons in Innovation and Collaboration

    As the acclaimed documentarian releases a new two-part PBS series about Ben Franklin, he describes how the U.S. founding father transformed himself from teen runaway to newspaperman, then inventor, then...

  • 2022 / 3 / 22
    Breaking Free of the Cult of Productivity

    Madeleine Dore, an author and podcast host, offers a cure for “productivity guilt.” That’s the cycle of dejection she says many of us suffer from when we never reach the end of our lengthy to-do lists (even...

  • 2022 / 3 / 15
    DEI Isn’t Enough; Companies Need Anti-Racist Leadership

    Over the past few years in the United States, we’ve seen some horrific examples of racism seize the public consciousness. Amid all these tragedies – and the protests that followed – U.S. business leaders...

  • 2022 / 3 / 8
    You’re Overlooking a Source of Diversity: Age

    Megan Gerhardt, management professor at Miami University, studies the impact of generational conflict on organizations. She says too many leaders see generational lines as a source of division that hurts...

  • 2022 / 3 / 1
    Regrets Are Inevitable. Start Learning From Them.

    "No regrets" might be a popular modern-day mantra, but it's virtually impossible to live your life without wishing you could do certain things over. Some people try to ignore these feelings; others...

  • 2022 / 2 / 22
    Why Some Companies Thrived During the Pandemic

    Keith Ferrazzi, founder of the consulting firm Ferrazzi Greenlight, led a survey of more than 2,000 executives to study how they reengineered operations during the pandemic. The research identified a kind of...

  • 2022 / 2 / 15
    Inside Companies that Get the Purpose-Profit Balance Right

    Purpose has become a corporate buzzword over the past decade. Leaders are embracing the idea that companies can’t just do well financially; they also have to do good for society. But how many organizations...

  • 2022 / 2 / 8
    The Positives—and Perils—of Storytelling

    Jonathan Gottschall, a distinguished fellow at Washington & Jefferson College, has researched storytelling and its unique power to inspire. But as he spoke at business conferences and grew aware of the...

  • 2022 / 2 / 3
    Need a Reset? Try This One Quick Meditation Session (Bonus)

    You've probably heard about the benefits of mindfulness and how meditation can help you achieve it. But you still can't find the inclination to start or the time to practice regularly. In this short...

  • 2022 / 2 / 1
    No, Tech Start-ups Aren’t Taking Over the World

    Looking at business news and stock market coverage over the past decade (including a few HBR articles), you'd think that just about every traditional, old-economy company has fallen prey -- or will soon...

  • 2022 / 1 / 25
    Why Companies Should Stop Political Spending Now

    A decade ago, the U.S. Supreme Court changed the rules on how businesses could donate to political campaigns. Since then, hundreds of millions of corporate dollars have been spent on local, state, and federal...

  • 2022 / 1 / 18
    How Companies Reckon with Past Wrongdoing

    Sarah Federman, assistant professor at the University of Baltimore, studies how companies handle their historical misdeeds and what that means for employees and customers. From insurance firms that backed...

  • 2022 / 1 / 11
    To Get Ahead, You Need Both Ambition and Humility

    We know that great leadership takes not just intelligence and drive but also the ability to get along well with and learn from others. The key, says Amer Kaissi, is to be both ambitious and humble throughout...

  • 2022 / 1 / 4
    We’re Bad at Measuring Inequality—Here’s Why That Matters

    Stefanie Stantcheva, economist at Harvard University, founded the Social Economics Lab to study inequality, our feelings about it, and how policies influence it. She says when we estimate how much money our...

  • 2021 / 12 / 28
    Best of IdeaCast: What Sets Successful People Apart

    Heidi Grant, a motivational psychologist, has studied successful people and what makes them tick. In this classic episode, she and former host Sarah Green Carmichael discuss the behaviors of high achievers...

  • 2021 / 12 / 21
    There Still Aren’t Enough “Good Jobs”

    Companies around the world are struggling to fill open positions, while millions of unemployed people look for work. What's going on? Zeynep Ton, professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management, says...

  • 2021 / 12 / 14
    Gaslighting at Work—and What to Do About It

    Mita Mallick, head of inclusion, equity, and impact at the firm Carta, says gaslighting at the office is more common than many people realize. That's when a manager or coworker engages in behavior where...

  • 2021 / 12 / 7
    How to Use All Your Vacation — And Really Unplug

    When was the last time you really took a sustained break from work? No emails. No calls. No taking care of that one little thing. For most of us — particularly in the United States -- it's been too...

  • 2021 / 11 / 30
    One Way to Fight the Great Resignation? Re-recruit Your Current Employees

    Debbie Cohen and Kate Roeske-Zummer, cofounders of HumanityWorks, are sounding an alarm bell for employee retention. Record numbers of people are quitting their jobs due to burnout and better opportunities....

  • 2021 / 11 / 23
    Why the Highest Paying Jobs So Rarely Go to Women

    Companies pay disproportionately high salaries to CEOs and other high-powered professionals willing to live and breathe their jobs, on-call 24/7, ready to pick up and travel. It's a phenomenon Harvard...

  • 2021 / 11 / 16
    In a New Role? Here’s How to Hit the Ground Running

    Rob Cross, management professor at Babson College, says people are changing jobs more than ever and too often falling short when they do. Surveys show nearly half of people promoted within their own companies...

  • 2021 / 11 / 9
    The Future of Work Is Projects—So You’ve Got to Get Them Right

    Companies of every size in every industry and part of the world are basing more of their work around projects. And yet research shows that nearly two-thirds of those efforts fail. Antonio Nieto-Rodriguez, who...

  • 2021 / 11 / 2
    Anti-Bias Policies That Really Work in Customer Service

    Alexandra Feldberg and Tami Kim, assistant professors at Harvard Business School and the University of Virginia Darden School of Business, respectively, say companies are overlooking an important place to...

  • 2021 / 10 / 26
    Find Focus in a Chaotic World

    If you're feeling distracted, mentally fogged, and unable to pay attention to (or focus on if attention is in hed) the task at hand, you're not alone. The human brain is highly susceptible to often...

  • 2021 / 10 / 19
    Algorithms Won’t Solve All Your Pricing Problems

    Marco Bertini, marketing professor at Esade Business School, says more and more companies are turning to pricing algorithms to maximize profits. But many are unaware of a big downside. The constant price...

  • 2021 / 10 / 12
    Tech’s Exponential Growth – and How to Solve the Problems It’s Created

    Technological development is happening faster than ever and changing our lives in fundamental ways. The companies behind all these new gadgets and services are no doubt the greatest corporate success stories...

  • 2021 / 10 / 5
    First He Saved Unilever. Now He Wants to Save Capitalism.

    Paul Polman, former CEO of Unilever, led a dazzling career in consumer goods, from Procter & Gamble to Nestlé to the British multinational. His experience fending off a hostile takeover bid taught him...

  • 2021 / 9 / 28
    How to Make Strategic Career Decisions, Even in a Crisis (Back to Work, Better)

    When it comes to work, it's easy to focus on the near term: the next meeting, project, promotion. The global pandemic pushed many of us even further into heads-down mode. But Dorie Clark, author of the...

  • 2021 / 9 / 23
    The Innovation System Behind Moderna’s Covid-19 Vaccine

    Noubar Afeyan, cofounder and chair of Moderna Therapeutics and CEO of Flagship Pioneering, says that the breakthrough innovation behind the company’s Covid-19 vaccine came not as a stroke of luck, but from a...

  • 2021 / 9 / 14
    Can Big Tech Reform Itself?

    Mehran Sahami, a Stanford professor and former Google employee, wants to see a reset from the technology industry. For the past few decades, the world's technologists (many of whom become its corporate...

  • 2021 / 9 / 7
    Why Companies Need Returnship Programs (Back to Work, Better)

    Carol Fishman Cohen, human resource consultant and CEO of iRelaunch, says that extended career breaks have always been common. Now the pandemic has made them even more widespread. So, companies are...

  • 2021 / 8 / 31
    How the Pandemic Changed Talent Management (Back to Work, Better)

    Johnny C. Taylor Jr., CEO and President of the Society for Human Resource Management, says that this is a reset moment for organizations that want to finally get human resources right. The crisis has taught...

  • 2021 / 8 / 26
    Best of IdeaCast: Saying No to More Work

    When the work keeps piling on, there comes a time when everyone needs to say no. But how do you do so without offending your coworkers or hurting your career? Former host Sarah Green Carmichael, and Karen...

  • 2021 / 8 / 24
    What We Still Need to Learn about AI in Marketing — and Beyond

    Eva Ascarza, professor at Harvard Business School, studies customer analytics and finds that many companies investing in artificial intelligence fail to improve their marketing decisions. Why is AI falling...

  • 2021 / 8 / 17
    Rethinking Our Relationship with Work (Back to Work, Better)

    Emily Esfahani Smith, author of “The Power of Meaning,” has long studied how people find fulfillment. As the ongoing pandemic causes many of us to rethink how and why we do our jobs, she offers advice on how...

  • 2021 / 8 / 10
    When Entrepreneurs Distort the Truth

    Kyle Jensen, associate dean at the Yale School of Management, has seen firsthand just how tempting it is for entrepreneurs to lie. As a startup founder himself, he says they have to be always "on" and ready...

  • 2021 / 8 / 3
    Moving the Needle on DEI

    Shelly McNamara, head of equality and inclusion at Procter & Gamble, knows just how valuable it is to work at an inclusive company. Back in 2012, as a VP at P&G, she came out publicly as LGBTQ, and...

  • 2021 / 7 / 27
    Building Successful Hybrid Teams (Back to Work, Better)

    Tsedal Neeley, professor at Harvard Business School, has been studying remote work and global teams for years. In episode 732 early in the pandemic, she shared how managers could lead their teams while many...

  • 2021 / 7 / 20
    Lessons in Innovation from Bowie, Beyoncé, and More

    Panos Panay, incoming co-president of the Recording Academy, which presents the Grammys, and R. Michael Hendrix, partner at the innovation consultancy IDEO, argue that the music world offers myriad lessons...

  • 2021 / 7 / 13
    Stop Networking, Start Connecting

    Susan McPherson, communications consultant, says many people feel strange reconnecting in person with colleagues after an extended period working in physical isolation. To help shake off the rust, she offers...

  • 2021 / 7 / 6
    Best Buy’s Hubert Joly on Walking the Talk of Stakeholder Capitalism

    Hubert Joly, former chairman and CEO of Best Buy, says that now is the time for companies to get serious about operating to benefit not just shareholders but also employees, customers and broader society. In...

  • 2021 / 6 / 29
    Hybrid Work Is Here To Stay. Now What? (Back to Work, Better)

    Nicholas Bloom, economics professor at Stanford University, has been studying remote work and hybrid (a mix of remote and onsite) work for years. Then the pandemic made these modes widespread and lasting. He...

  • 2021 / 6 / 24
    The Rise and Fall of Carlos Ghosn: Part 4

    Suddenly powerless in Tokyo prison after his arrest, Carlos Ghosn plans an audacious escape and flees Japan while out on bail. Out of reach of Japanese authorities, the once celebrated CEO of Nissan and...

  • 2021 / 6 / 22
    What Anthropologists Can Teach Us About Work Culture

    Greg Urban, anthropologist at the University of Pennsylvania, used to study indigenous tribes in Brazil. Now he hangs out in break rooms and boardrooms analyzing how people interact — and create and change...

  • 2021 / 6 / 17
    The Rise and Fall of Carlos Ghosn: Part 3

    A decade into Ghosn’s tenure, Nissan starts missing his goals for growth, profits, and electric vehicle sales. Then a devastating earthquake and tsunami in Japan and a self-made crisis at Renault in France...

  • 2021 / 6 / 15
    Former Washington Post Top Editor on Leading Through Change

    Martin Baron, former executive editor of the Washington Post, managed the newsroom during a decade of incredible change and shifting views about the media and truth. Baron led his team through a tumultuous...

  • 2021 / 6 / 10
    The Rise and Fall of Carlos Ghosn: Part 2

    After Carlos Ghosn’s dramatic turnaround at Nissan, profits soar and Ghosnmania sweeps Japan. But signs of trouble emerge as Ghosn takes over as the CEO of both Renault and Nissan in 2005. Then Ghosn’s high...

  • 2021 / 6 / 8
    What Business Leaders Need to Know About China Now

    Elsbeth Johnson, senior lecturer at MIT’s Sloan School of Management, and Rana Mitter, professor of history at Oxford, argue that there's a lot about the Chinese political system and economy that...

  • 2021 / 6 / 3
    The Rise and Fall of Carlos Ghosn: Part 1

    When Japan's most famous CEO is suddenly arrested, conflicts are revealed in the Renault-Nissan Alliance he led for two decades. Then Carlos Ghosn jumps bail by stowing away in a private jet to Lebanon....

  • 2021 / 6 / 1
    How Leaders Can Encourage Imagination

    Martin Reeves, managing director and senior partner at Boston Consulting Group’s Henderson Institute, has looked at how companies reinvent themselves to achieve success. And he has found that an essential...

  • 2021 / 5 / 27
    CEO Series: Ursula Burns on Leading with Authenticity at Xerox

    Ursula Burns, CEO of Xerox from 2009 to 2016, rose from humble beginnings to become the first Black woman to lead a Fortune 500 company. In this interview with HBR editor-in-chief Adi Ignatius, she talks...

  • 2021 / 5 / 25
    Why Smart People (Sometimes) Make Bad Decisions

    Daniel Kahneman, Nobel Prize winner and emeritus professor at Princeton University, and Olivier Sibony, professor of strategy at HEC, say that bias isn't the only thing that prevents people and...

  • 2021 / 5 / 20
    CEO Series: 23andMe’s Anne Wojcicki on Scientific Breakthroughs and Public Trust

    Anne Wojcicki, CEO of 23andMe, spent a decade in healthcare and biotechnology before launching the DNA testing and analysis company in 2006. Her goal was twofold: to help individuals learn more about their...

  • 2021 / 5 / 18
    Understanding the Venture Capital Gender Gap

    Jenny Lefcourt, partner at Freestyle VC and cofounder of All Raise, says that even as a serial entrepreneur herself, she long underestimated how little venture capital funding goes to female startup founders...

  • 2021 / 5 / 13
    CEO Series: Mastercard’s Ajay Banga on Promoting Financial Inclusion

    Ajay Banga, the executive chairman and former CEO of Mastercard, has spearheaded a strategy focused on serving the previously unbanked via new technologies. During his 11-year tenure as president and chief...

  • 2021 / 5 / 11
    How To Talk Yourself Up (Without Turning People Off)

    Leslie John, associate professor at Harvard Business School, has done some deep research into the ways that people self-promote in their professional lives and identified what works and what doesn't. She...

  • 2021 / 5 / 6
    CEO Series: Mary Barra of General Motors on Committing to an Eco-Friendly Future

    Mary Barra, chair and CEO of General Motors, says that electric vehicles are the future for the company and the automobile industry. GM has said it will phase out vehicles using internal combustion engines by...

  • 2021 / 5 / 4
    How Tech Adoption Fuels China’s Innovation Boom

    Zak Dychtwald, founder of the advisory firm Young China Group, believes that the perception of China as a copycat and not an innovator is outdated. Instead, he argues the willingness of Chinese consumers to...

  • 2021 / 4 / 27
    Quit Overthinking Things

    Ethan Kross, professor of psychology at the University of Michigan, has spent years studying how people talk to themselves and the effect that this "chatter" has on our performance. From professional athletes...

  • 2021 / 4 / 20
    Streamlining Your Company’s Strategy

    Felix Oberholzer-Gee, professor at Harvard Business School, says many organizations spend so much energy on strategy that it overwhelms with conflicting priorities. Instead, he argues companies should...

  • 2021 / 4 / 13
    The Career Rules You Didn’t Learn at School

    Gorick Ng, career advisor at Harvard, tried to learn about the world of work at an early age, helping his mother search job listings and send out resumes. To launch his own career, he studied hard in school,...

  • 2021 / 4 / 6
    How the Creative Economy is Changing with Covid-19

    Scott Belsky, chief product officer at Adobe, says that creative workers are a bigger part of the economy than ever, thanks to new technologies, more gig work, and shifting norms following the pandemic. He...

  • 2021 / 3 / 30
    Building a Company While Battling Depression

    Melissa Bernstein, cofounder of the toy company Melissa & Doug, spent decades hiding her struggles with depression even as she launched and led a booming business focused on bringing joy to children and...

  • 2021 / 3 / 23
    The Competitive Advantage of an Offboarding Program

    Alison Dachner, management professor at John Carroll University, and Erin Makarius, management professor at the University of Akron, say that an organization can become more competitive by implementing a...

  • 2021 / 3 / 16
    Workplace Design, Post-Pandemic (Back to Work, Better)

    Anne-Laure Fayard, associate professor at NYU’s Tandon School of Engineering, was studying the effects of workplace design on employees long before the Covid-19 crisis. Now, she says, the trend of flexible...

  • 2021 / 3 / 9
    New Recruiting Strategies for a Post-Covid World (Back to Work, Better)

    Lauren Smith, vice president at Gartner Research, says the pandemic is accelerating several key recruitment trends. She led a survey of thousands of job candidates and hiring managers that details the shift...

  • 2021 / 3 / 2
    What Black Leaders Bring to the Table

    Chad Sanders, a former tech executive and entrepreneur, says that people of color, especially Black men like him, often feel the need to assimilate to white corporate culture. They learn to code switch and...

  • 2021 / 2 / 23
    How CEOs Can Drive Sales — or Kill Deals

    Christoph Senn, marketing professor at INSEAD, has spent years studying how top executives involve themselves in B2B sales. Some are very hands-off. Others make only social calls. Still others sit at the...

  • 2021 / 2 / 16
    Bill Gates on How Business Leaders Can Fight Climate Change

    Bill Gates, philanthropist and founder of Microsoft, argues that, even as we work to end the global pandemic, we can't lose sight of another existential threat: climate change. He says that we need to...

  • 2021 / 2 / 9
    Taking on a Senior Leadership Role Remotely

    Muriel Wilkins, cofounder of the executive coaching firm Paravis Partners, says that starting a leadership role at a new company or via internal promotion is demanding. Doing so remotely during the Covid-19...

  • 2021 / 2 / 2
    How Many Managers Does It Take to Change a Lightbulb?

    Jennifer Aaker, a Stanford professor, and Naomi Bagdonas, an executive coach, say that, even in times of stress and crisis, leaders should use and encourage good humor and levity at work as a way of building...

  • 2021 / 1 / 26
    What Sets Family Businesses Apart

    Josh Baron and Rob Lachenauer, cofounders of BanyanGlobal Family Business Advisors, say that a family-run company has more flexibility than its publicly-traded counterpart to build a legacy and grow...

  • 2021 / 1 / 19
    Goodbye Bureaucracy, Hello Common Sense

    Martin Lindstrom, founder and chairman of Lindstrom Company, says that many companies are still held back by doing things the way they've always done them, or failing to break down bureaucracy. For...

  • 2021 / 1 / 12
    How Empathy Helps Bridge Generational Differences

    Mimi Nicklin, a business coach and executive, has seen many leaders blame poor performance and communication on generational differences. But she argues managers should spend less time forcing Millennial and...

  • 2021 / 1 / 5
    What Kind of Networker Are You?

    Marissa King, professor at Yale School of Management, has studied the strengths and weaknesses of different types of social networks. She argues that most of us have a natural style of networking: we favor...

  • 2020 / 12 / 29
    Stop Micromanaging and Give People the Help They Really Need

    Colin Fisher, associate professor at University College London's School of Management, conducted in-depth studies at several companies to determine how managers can effectively help employees who need...

  • 2020 / 12 / 22
    Better Ways to Manage Up and Out

    Nashater Deu Solheim, a forensic psychologist and leadership coach, says many people struggle to gain influence with those in their organization who don't report directly to them. That has only become...

  • 2020 / 12 / 15
    Why Burnout Happens — and How Bosses Can Help

    Christina Maslach, professor of psychology at the University of California, Berkeley, has been studying the causes of burnout, and its impact, for decades. She says that, in a year when everyone feels...

  • 2020 / 12 / 8
    When to Team Up with Your Competition

    Barry Nalebuff, professor at Yale School of Management and cofounder of Honest Tea, says too many companies shy away from cooperating with a competitor, and they’re leaving value on the table. He says even...

  • 2020 / 12 / 3
    Race at Work: Lessons in Diversity and Culture from Mastercard

    Race at Work is an HBR Presents podcast hosted by Porter Braswell about the role race plays in our careers and lives. In this episode, he speaks with Donna Johnson, former chief diversity officer at...

  • 2020 / 12 / 1
    What Business Leaders Should Know About Cryptocurrency

    Jeff John Roberts, an author and journalist, dug deep into the world of cryptocurrency to figure out what the rest of us really need to know about it. He acknowledges that the proliferation and volatility of...

  • 2020 / 11 / 24
    Why Companies and Skilled Workers Are Turning to On-Demand Work

    Joseph Fuller, professor at Harvard Business School, and Allison Bailey, senior partner at Boston Consulting Group, say that the Covid-19 pandemic is only accelerating a recent trend of companies turning to...

  • 2020 / 11 / 23
    Women at Work: Too Shy to Be a Leader

    Women at Work is a podcast from Harvard Business Review that looks at the struggles and successes of women in the workplace, hosted by HBR's Amy Bernstein, Amy Gallo, and Emily Caulfield. In this...

  • 2020 / 11 / 17
    How Jeff Bezos Built One of the World’s Most Valuable Companies

    Sunil Gupta, Harvard Business School professor, has spent years studying successful digital strategies, companies, and leaders, and he's made Amazon and its legendary CEO Jeff Bezos a particular areas of...

  • 2020 / 11 / 10
    Managing Working Parents During the Pandemic

    Ellen Ernst Kossek, management professor at Purdue University, is researching how the pandemic is putting an enormous strain on working parents and the new challenge that poses for their managers. She shares...

  • 2020 / 11 / 6
    Defining and Adapting Your Leadership Style

    Suzanne Peterson, associate professor at Thunderbird School of Global Management, says many talented professionals get held back from leadership roles because of relatively intangible reasons. She argues...

  • 2020 / 10 / 27
    How Those With Power and Privilege Can Help Others Advance

    Tsedale Melaku, sociologist at The Graduate Center, City University of New York, and David Smith, professor at the U.S. Naval War College, have been looking at the ways people with the most power in society...

  • 2020 / 10 / 20
    Why Work-From-Anywhere Is Here to Stay

    Prithwiraj (Raj) Choudhury, associate professor at Harvard Business School, was studying the growing work-from-anywhere movement long before the Covid-19 pandemic forced many more of us into virtual work. He...

  • 2020 / 10 / 13
    The Fundamental Human Relationship with Work

    James Suzman, an anthropologist and former executive, says one way to better understand the future of work is to learn from the history of it. He has studied an ancient hunter-gatherer society in Namibia and...

  • 2020 / 10 / 6
    How to Build Workplaces That Protect Employee Health

    John Macomber, senior lecturer at Harvard Business School and a veteran of the real estate industry, was studying ways to make workplaces safer for employees long before the Covid-19 crisis hit. Now that...

  • 2020 / 9 / 29
    When Efficiency Goes Too Far

    Roger Martin, professor emeritus at the University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management, says that for decades the U.S. corporate system has been obsessed with eliminating inefficiencies....

  • 2020 / 9 / 22
    The Subtle Art of Saying No

    Bruce Tulgan, founder of the management training firm RainmakerThinking, says that the key to career success isn't only embracing opportunities; it's also declining projects, tasks, and requests for...

  • 2020 / 9 / 15
    Cultivate a Trans-Inclusive Workplace

    Katina Sawyer, assistant professor at the George Washington University, says transgender workers continue to be overlooked even as organizational diversity initiatives become more widespread. Her research...

  • 2020 / 9 / 8
    Creating More Resilient Supply Chains

    Willy Shih, professor at Harvard Business School, says that the complex, global, and just-in-time manufacturing processes we've developed in recent decades are highly susceptible to breakdowns,...

  • 2020 / 9 / 1
    To Build Grit, Go Back to Basics

    Shannon Huffman Polson, a consultant and former military pilot, experienced early on how to build grit. At 19, she was the youngest woman to summit Denali, North America’s highest peak. Then she overcame many...

  • 2020 / 8 / 25
    Why Work Friends are Worth It

    Shasta Nelson, relationship expert and author, says that work friendships are critical to individual and organizational success but acknowledges that it's not always easy to build these personal -- but...

  • 2020 / 8 / 18
    Breaking Down Bureaucracy and Building Up Workers

    Gary Hamel and Michele Zanini, cofounders of the consultancy Management Lab, say that even though we all lament how rigid, parochial, and time sucking bureaucracies can be, they still seem inescapable. The...

  • 2020 / 8 / 11
    Mastering the Art of Persuasion

    Jonah Berger, professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, says that most of us aren’t approaching persuasion the right way. Pushing people to behave how you’d like them to or believe...

  • 2020 / 8 / 4
    Adapting Negotiations to a Remote World

    Leigh Thompson, professor at Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, studies negotiations to understand the path to the "sweet spot" where all sides of the table come away happy. And she says...

  • 2020 / 7 / 28
    Future-Proofing Your Strategy with Scenario Planning

    Peter Scoblic, cofounder and principal of the consultancy Event Horizon Strategies, says that too many companies are short-sighted in their strategy-making and don't effectively plan for different...

  • 2020 / 7 / 21
    Every Business Can Be a Subscription Business

    Robbie Kellman Baxter, a strategy consultant, says that subscriptions aren’t just for newspapers and Netflix. She says they can help companies from local retailers to giant industrial manufacturers earn more...

  • 2020 / 7 / 14
    Helping People Move from Trauma to Growth

    Richard Tedeschi, a psychology professor and distinguished chair of the Boulder Crest Institute, says that crises like the Covid-19 pandemic and its economic fallout as well as the recent racial violence and...

  • 2020 / 7 / 7
    Pricing Strategies for Uncertain Times

    Rafi Mohammed, founder of the consulting firm Culture of Profit, says a crisis or recession is not the time to panic and slash prices. He says leaders should instead reevaluate their price strategy — or...

  • 2020 / 6 / 30
    AB InBev CEO on Adapting in the Face of Crisis

    Carlos Brito, the CEO of Anheuser-Busch InBev since 2008, has worked to build a culture of adaptability and customer centricity at the global brewer. Many of his leadership principles are paying off during...

  • 2020 / 6 / 23
    Applying Porter’s Five Forces to Fix U.S. Politics

    Katherine Gehl, a former CEO and the founder of the Institute for Political Innovation, and Michael Porter, a professor at Harvard Business School, apply his Five Forces framework to explain why U.S. politics...

  • 2020 / 6 / 16
    Megan Rapinoe on Leading — On and Off the Field

    Megan Rapinoe, U.S. women's soccer star and World Cup champion, knows how to perform under pressure, motivate her teammates, and advocate for the causes she believes in. In addition to her stellar play...

  • 2020 / 6 / 9
    Corporate America’s Work in Fighting Racism is Just Beginning

    Ella Washington, an organizational psychologist at Georgetown University, argues that private sector American organizations have a big role to play in sustaining the fight for racial justice that has gained...

  • 2020 / 6 / 2
    Great Leaders Use Tough Love to Improve Performance

    Frances Frei, professor at Harvard Business School, says that trust, empathy - and even a bit of tough love - are all essential ingredients to strong leadership in today's world. Successful managers...

  • 2020 / 5 / 26
    Staying Agile Beyond a Crisis

    Darrell Rigby, partner at Bain & Company, says many firms have rapidly adopted agile principles to react to the coronavirus crisis. Namely, they’ve been ditching bureaucratic planning processes and...

  • 2020 / 5 / 19
    Smarter Side Gigs

    Ken Banta, founder of the Vanguard Network, and Orlan Boston, partner at Ernst & Young, argue that every aspiring leader needs to have a side gig -- not to pursue a crazy dream or earn some extra cash...

  • 2020 / 5 / 12
    To Build Strategy, Start with the Future

    Mark Johnson, cofounder of the consulting firm Innosight, says that too many managers develop strategy while focusing on problems in the present, and that’s especially true during a crisis. Instead, he...

  • 2020 / 5 / 5
    How Marketers Can Drive Social Change and Profits

    Myriam Sidibe, senior fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School, says that brands are uniquely positioned to encourage shifts in consumer behavior that benefit individuals, communities, and the environment. A...

  • 2020 / 4 / 28
    Digital Transformation, One Discovery at a Time

    Rita McGrath, professor at Columbia Business School, says the need for organizations to adopt digital business models is more important than ever. Change is accelerating as startups tackle incumbents. And...

  • 2020 / 4 / 21
    Another Workplace Crisis: Loneliness

    Vivek Murthy, former U.S. Surgeon General, says that, even before the Covid-19 pandemic, we were facing another health crisis: loneliness. Studies show that, around the world, more people have been feeling a...

  • 2020 / 4 / 14
    Managing Crises in the Short and Long Term

    Eric McNulty, associate director of Harvard’s National Preparedness Leadership Initiative, studies how managers successfully lead their companies through crises such as the Deepwater Horizon oil disaster and...

  • 2020 / 4 / 7
    How Entrepreneurs Succeed Outside Silicon Valley

    Alex Lazarow, venture capitalist at Cathay Innovation, says that start-ups in cities around the U.S. and the world are creating their own rules for success. While Silicon Valley companies have sparked key...

  • 2020 / 3 / 31
    Working Parents, Let Go of the Idea of Balance

    Stewart Friedman, organizational psychologist at The Wharton School, and Alyssa Westring, associate professor at DePaul University’s Driehaus College of Business, say it’s a mistake for a working parent to...

  • 2020 / 3 / 26
    Real Leaders: Oprah Winfrey and the Power of Empathy

    In 1976, broadcast journalist Oprah Winfrey moved to Baltimore to coanchor the evening newscast at a local TV station. But she struggled in that spot and was moved to the morning talk show. That demotion led...

  • 2020 / 3 / 24
    Adjusting to Remote Work During the Coronavirus Crisis

    Tsedal Neeley, a professor at Harvard Business School, says that there are simple ways leaders can help their employees stay productive, focused, and psychologically healthy as they work from home during the...

  • 2020 / 3 / 19
    Real Leaders: Abraham Lincoln and the Power of Emotional Discipline

    In 1863, U.S. President Abraham Lincoln wrote a scathing letter to his top Union general, who had squandered a chance to end the Civil War. Then Lincoln folded it up and tucked it away in his desk. He never...

  • 2020 / 3 / 17
    Square’s Cofounder on Discovering — and Defending — Innovations

    Jim McKelvey, entrepreneur and cofounder of Square, says that most companies that think of themselves as innovative are really just copycats. True innovation, he argues, is about fearlessly exploring novel...

  • 2020 / 3 / 12
    Real Leaders: Rachel Carson Seeds the Environmental Movement

    In 1958, writer Rachel Carson began her exhaustive research on the effects of widespread pesticide use for her next book, Silent Spring. Over the next four years, she built up an airtight case showing how the...

  • 2020 / 3 / 10
    Why Capitalists Need to Save Democracy

    Rebecca Henderson, professor at Harvard Business School, says that both capitalism and democracy are failing us. She argues that it will take public and private leaders working together to simultaneously fix...

  • 2020 / 3 / 5
    Real Leaders: Ernest Shackleton Leads a Harrowing Expedition

    In 1915, polar explorer Ernest Shackleton’s ship became trapped in ice, north of Antarctica. For the next two years, he kept his crew of 27 men alive on a drifting ice cap, then led them in their escape. How...

  • 2020 / 3 / 3
    How Workplaces — Not Women — Need to Change to Improve Equality

    Michelle King, director of inclusion at Netflix, says it’s time to stop telling women to adapt to the male-dominated workplace and time for the workplace itself to change. Her prior academic research shows...

  • 2020 / 2 / 25
    Rules for Effective Hiring — and Firing

    Joel Peterson, chairman of JetBlue Airways, has spent a career leading teams, building businesses, and managing people at every level. Along the way, he's learned valuable lessons about the best ways to...

  • 2020 / 2 / 18
    Defining Radical Candor – and How to Do It

    Kim Scott, a cofounder of the executive coaching firm Radical Candor, says that too many managers give meaningless positive feedback, while many others are highly critical without showing any understanding....

  • 2020 / 2 / 11
    How People Succeed By Defying Expectations

    Laura Huang, associate professor at Harvard Business School, has studied groups that face bias in the workplace, from entrepreneurs with accents to women and people of color. She says that the best way for...

  • 2020 / 2 / 4
    How to Set Up — and Learn — from Experiments

    Stefan Thomke, professor at Harvard Business School, says running experiments can give companies tremendous value, but too often business leaders make decisions based on intuition. While A/B testing on large...

  • 2020 / 1 / 28
    How to Capture All the Advantages of Open Innovation

    Henry Chesbrough, adjunct professor at the University of California Berkeley Haas School of Business, coined the term "open innovation" over a decade ago. This is the practice of sourcing ideas outside your...

  • 2020 / 1 / 27
    Revisiting “Jobs To Be Done” with Clayton Christensen

    In this repeat episode, we honor the legacy of HBS professor Clayton Christensen, who passed away on January 23, 2020. The legendary management thinker was best known for his influential theory of “disruptive...

  • 2020 / 1 / 21
    Why Business Leaders Should Solve Problems Beyond Their Companies

    Rosabeth Moss Kanter, professor at Harvard Business School, believes the world demands a new kind of business leader. She says so-called “advanced leaders” work inside and outside their companies to tackle...

  • 2020 / 1 / 14
    A New Way to Combat Bias at Work

    Joan Williams, professor and the founding director of the Center for WorkLife Law at the University of California’s Hastings College of the Law, says that it's extremely difficult for organizations...

  • 2020 / 1 / 7
    Setting a High Bar for Your Customer Service

    Horst Schulze, cofounder of The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company, started out cleaning ashtrays as a busboy before working his way up through some of the world's best hotels and becoming COO of Ritz-Carlton...

  • 2019 / 12 / 31
    The Right Way to Form New Habits

    James Clear, entrepreneur and author, says that the way we go about trying to form new habits and break bad ones — at work or home — is all wrong. Many people, he says, focus on big goals without...

  • 2019 / 12 / 24
    How One CEO Successfully Led a Digital Transformation

    Nancy McKinstry, CEO of Wolters Kluwer, has successfully shifted her company’s business to digital products over 15 years. The Dutch multinational started in the 1830s as a publishing house and now earns more...

  • 2019 / 12 / 17
    The Art of Asking for (and Getting) Help

    Wayne Baker, professor at the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan, has spent much of his career researching the best way to effectively ask for help at work. Whether you're soliciting...

  • 2019 / 12 / 10
    The Tipping Point Between Failure and Success

    Dashun Wang, associate professor at Kellogg School of Management, crunched big datasets of entrepreneurs, scientists, and even terrorist organizations to better understand the fine line between failure and...

  • 2019 / 12 / 3
    Why Cybersecurity Isn’t Only a Tech Problem

    Thomas Parenty and Jack Domet, cofounders of the cybersecurity firm Archefact Group, say that most organizations are approaching cybersecurity all wrong. Whether they're running small companies or...

  • 2019 / 11 / 26
    A Nobel Prize Winner on Rethinking Poverty (and Business)

    Esther Duflo, an MIT economist, won the 2019 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences for her experimental approach to alleviating global poverty. Duflo’s early life working at a non-governmental organization...

  • 2019 / 11 / 19
    To Truly Delight Customers, You Need Aesthetic Intelligence

    Pauline Brown, former chairman of North America for the luxury goods company LVMH, argues that in additional to traditional and emotional intelligence, great leaders also need to develop what she calls...

  • 2019 / 11 / 12
    Why “Connector” Managers Build Better Talent

    Sari Wilde, a managing vice president at Gartner, studied 5,000 managers and identified four different types of leaders. The surprising result is that the “always on” manager is less effective at...

  • 2019 / 11 / 5
    Why Meetings Go Wrong (And How to Fix Them)

    Steven Rogelberg, a professor at UNC Charlotte, has spent decades researching workplace meetings and reports that many of them are a waste of time. Why? Because the vast majority of managers aren't...

  • 2019 / 10 / 29
    Why Open Offices Aren’t Working — and How to Fix Them

    Ethan Bernstein, associate professor at Harvard Business School, studied how coworkers interacted before and after their company moved to an open office plan. The research shows why open workspaces often fail...

  • 2019 / 10 / 22
    Accelerate Learning to Boost Your Career

    Scott Young, who gained fame for teaching himself the four-year MIT computer science curriculum in just 12 months, says that the type of fast, focused learning he employed is possible for all of us -- whether...

  • 2019 / 10 / 17
    HBR Presents: The Anxious Achiever with Morra Aarons-Mele

    On The Anxious Achiever, Morra Aarons-Mele explores the way anxiety, depression, and other mental health issues affect people at work – for better or worse. In this episode, she speaks with clinical...

  • 2019 / 10 / 15
    How to Have a Relationship and a Career

    Jennifer Petriglieri, associate professor at INSEAD, studied more than 100 couples where both partners have big professional goals. She finds that being successful in your careers and your relationship...

  • 2019 / 10 / 8
    The CEO of Dick’s Sporting Goods on Becoming a Gun Control Advocate

    Ed Stack, the chief executive of Dick's Sporting Goods, decided after the Parkland school shooting to pull assault rifles and high-capacity magazines from all of his company’s stores. The...

  • 2019 / 10 / 4
    Melinda Gates on Fighting for Gender Equality

    Melinda Gates, cochair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and founder of Pivotal Ventures, is committing $1 billion over the next ten years to advance gender equality. She says evidence shows...

  • 2019 / 10 / 1
    How Companies Like Google and Alibaba Respond to Fast-Moving Markets

    Dave Ulrich, professor at the University of Michigan Ross School of Business, argues today's companies need to replace old hierarchical models with he calls a “market-oriented ecosystem.”...

  • 2019 / 9 / 24
    How to Be Less Distracted at Work — and in Life

    Nir Eyal, an expert on technology and psychology, says that we all need to learn to be less distracted into activities that don't help us achieve what we want to each day. Unwelcome behaviors can range...

  • 2019 / 9 / 17
    Dematerialization and What It Means for the Economy — and Climate Change

    Andrew McAfee, co-director of the MIT Initiative on the Digital Economy, explains how the U.S. economy is growing and actually using less and less stuff to do so. Thanks to new technologies, many advanced...

  • 2019 / 9 / 10
    What Great Coaching Looks Like

    Richard Boyatzis, professor at Case Western Reserve University, says that every professional can benefit from having a coach — and serving as one for someone else. He says that a coaching relationship...

  • 2019 / 9 / 3
    The Inherent Failures of Long-Term Contracts — and How to Fix Them

    Oliver Hart, Nobel-winning Harvard economist, and Kate Vitasek, faculty at the University of Tennessee, argue that many business contracts are imperfect, no matter how bulletproof you try to make them....

  • 2019 / 8 / 27
    How African-Americans Advance at Work — And What Organizations Can Do to Help

    Laura Morgan Roberts, professor at the University of Virginia's Darden School of Business, says that organizations are still falling short on promoting racial diversity, particularly in their most senior...

  • 2019 / 8 / 20
    The Challenges (and Triumphs) of a Young Manager

    Julie Zhuo, Facebook’s VP of product design, started at the company as its first intern and became a manager at the age of 25. Like many first-time bosses, she made many missteps and acted how she...

  • 2019 / 8 / 13
    How to Thrive as a Working Parent

    Daisy Dowling, founder and CEO of Workparent, says that moms and dads with jobs outside the home don't have to feel stressed or guilty about trying to balance their professional and personal lives. The...

  • 2019 / 8 / 6
    How Robots and AI Are Changing Job Training

    Matt Beane, assistant professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara, finds that robots, machine learning, and AI are changing how we train for our jobs — not just how we do them. His study...

  • 2019 / 7 / 30
    Finding (and Keeping) Your Company’s Soul

    Ranjay Gulati, professor at Harvard Business School, says the most successful organizations tend to have one thing in common: a soul. Moving beyond culture, the "soul" of a growing start-up -- or a more...

  • 2019 / 7 / 23
    Improve Your Critical Thinking at Work

    Helen Lee Bouygues, founder of the Reboot Foundation, believes that a lack of critical thinking is responsible for many business failures. She says organizational leaders often rely too heavily on expertise...

  • 2019 / 7 / 16
    Business Lessons from How Marvel Makes Movies

    Spencer Harrison, an associate professor at INSEAD, says that managers in any industry can learn from the success of the Marvel movie franchise. While some sequels lack creativity, Marvel manages to make each...

  • 2019 / 7 / 9
    The 3 Types of Leaders of Innovative Companies

    Deborah Ancona and Kate Isaacs, researchers at MIT Sloan School of Management, say many companies struggle to be nimble with a command-and-control leadership culture. They studied Xerox’s R&D...

  • 2019 / 7 / 2
    Stopping White-Collar Crime at Your Company

    Eugene Soltes, associate professor at Harvard Business School, studies white-collar crime and has even interviewed convicts behind bars. While most people think of high-profile scandals like Enron, he says...

  • 2019 / 6 / 25
    How to Fix Your Hiring Process

    Peter Cappelli, professor at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business and director of its Center for Human Resources, says managers at companies large and small are doing hiring all...

  • 2019 / 6 / 18
    The Surprising Benefits of Sponsoring Others at Work

    Sylvia Ann Hewlett, an economist and the founder of the Center for Talent Innovation, has studied the difference between mentoring and sponsorship and what leaders have to gain from the latter. She says...

  • 2019 / 6 / 11
    Why You Need Innovation Capital — And How to Get It

    Nathan Furr, assistant professor of strategy at INSEAD, researches what makes great innovative leaders, and he reveals how they develop and spend “innovation capital.” Like social or political...

  • 2019 / 6 / 4
    Advice for Entrepreneurs from a Leading Venture Capitalist

    Scott Kupor, managing partner at Andreessen Horowitz, says there's a lot about navigating the venture capital world that entrepreneurs don't understand. Some can't figure out how to get in the...

  • 2019 / 5 / 28
    Understanding the Space Economy

    Sinéad O'Sullivan, entrepreneurship fellow at Harvard Business School, discusses how space is much more important to modern business than most people realize. It plays a role in making food, pricing...

  • 2019 / 5 / 21
    Why It’s Time to Finally Worry about ESG

    Robert Eccles, a visiting professor of management practice at Saïd Business School at the University of Oxford, says that the global investment community's interest in environmental, social, and...

  • 2019 / 5 / 14
    How Having a Rival Improves Performance

    Adam Grant, organizational psychologist at The Wharton School, argues that individuals and companies alike can benefit from having rivals. He has studied sports and business rivalries and believes they often...

  • 2019 / 5 / 7
    Global Workers Are Ready for Retraining

    Joseph Fuller, professor at Harvard Business School, says that the story we hear about workers being afraid for the future of their jobs might not be right. In surveying 11,000 people in lower-income and...

  • 2019 / 5 / 2
    HBR Presents: Cold Call

    Harvard Business School's Brian Kenny is joined by professors to distill the school's legendary case studies into podcast form, giving listeners important takeaways they can use in their own...

  • 2019 / 4 / 30
    How China Is Upending Western Marketing Practices

    Kimberly Whitler, assistant professor at the University of Virginia Darden School of Business, believes the days of transplanting well-worn Western marketing practices into national markets may be numbered....

  • 2019 / 4 / 23
    What Managers Get Wrong About Feedback

    Marcus Buckingham, head of people and performance research at the ADP Research Institute, and Ashley Goodall, senior vice president of leadership and team intelligence at Cisco Systems, say that managers and...

  • 2019 / 4 / 18
    HBR Presents: Exponential View with Azeem Azhar

    Entrepreneur, investor, and podcast host Azeem Azhar looks at some of the biggest issues at the intersection of technology and society, with a focus this season on artificial intelligence. In this episode, he...

  • 2019 / 4 / 16
    Avoiding the Expertise Trap

    Sydney Finkelstein, professor at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College, says that being the most knowledgeable and experienced person on your team isn't always a good thing. Expertise can...

  • 2019 / 4 / 11
    HBR Presents: After Hours

    Harvard Business School professors and hosts Youngme Moon, Mihir Desai, and Felix Oberholzer-Gee discuss news at the crossroads of business and culture. In this episode, they analyze the current food delivery...

  • 2019 / 4 / 9
    Why People — and Companies — Need Purpose

    Nicholas Pearce, clinical associate professor at Kellogg School of Management, says too many companies and individuals go about their daily business without a strong sense of purpose. He argues that companies...

  • 2019 / 4 / 2
    The Right Way to Get Your First 1,000 Customers

    Thales Teixeira, associate professor at Harvard Business School, believes many startups fail precisely because they try to emulate successful disruptive businesses. He says by focusing too early on technology...

  • 2019 / 3 / 26
    Why U.S. Working Moms Are So Stressed – And What To Do About It

    Caitlyn Collins, a sociologist at Washington University in St. Louis, conducted interviews with mothers in four countries -- the United States, Italy, Germany, and Sweden -- who have jobs outside the home to...

  • 2019 / 3 / 19
    A Theoretical Physicist (and Entrepreneur) on Why Companies Stop Innovating

    Safi Bahcall, a former biotech CEO, began his career as a theoretical physicist before joining the business world. He compares the moment that innovative companies become complacent ones to a glass of water...

  • 2019 / 3 / 12
    Why Are We Still Promoting Incompetent Men?

    Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, a psychologist and chief talent scientist at ManpowerGroup, says we're not picking leaders in the right way. While we should be promoting people based on their competence and...

  • 2019 / 3 / 5
    Make Customers Happier with Operational Transparency

    Ryan Buell, associate professor at Harvard Business School, says the never-ending quest for operational efficiency is having unintended consequences. When customers don’t see the work that’s being...

  • 2019 / 2 / 26
    Fixing Tech’s Gender Gap

    Reshma Saujani, founder of Girls Who Code, is on a mission to get more young women into computer science. She says the problem isn't lack of interest. Her non-profit organization has trained thousands of...

  • 2019 / 2 / 19
    How Innovative Companies Help Frontier Markets Grow

    Efosa Ojomo, global prosperity lead at the Clayton Christensen Institute, argues that international aid is not the best way to develop poor countries, nor are investments in natural resource extraction,...

  • 2019 / 2 / 12
    How to Cope With a Mid-Career Crisis

    Kieran Setiya, a philosophy professor at MIT, says many people experience a mid-career crisis. Some have regrets about paths not taken or serious professional missteps; others feel a sense of boredom or...

  • 2019 / 2 / 5
    Why Business Jargon Isn’t All Bad

    Anne Curzan, English professor at the University of Michigan, studies the evolution of language. While many of us roll our eyes at bizspeak — from synergy to value-add to operationalize — Curzan...

  • 2019 / 1 / 29
    Use Your Money to Buy Happier Time

    Ashley Whillans, professor at Harvard Business School, researches time-money trade-offs. She argues more people would be happier if they spent more of their hard-earned money to buy themselves out of negative...

  • 2019 / 1 / 22
    Creating Psychological Safety in the Workplace

    Amy Edmondson, professor at Harvard Business School, first identified the concept of psychological safety in work teams in 1999. Since then, she has observed how companies with a trusting workplace perform...

  • 2019 / 1 / 15
    How Retirement Changes Your Identity

    Teresa Amabile, professor at Harvard Business School, is approaching her own retirement by researching how ending your work career affects your sense of self. She says important psychological shifts take...

  • 2019 / 1 / 8
    The Harsh Reality of Innovative Companies

    Gary Pisano, professor at Harvard Business School, studies innovation at companies large and small. He says there’s too much focus on the positive, fun side of innovative cultures and too little...

  • 2019 / 1 / 2
    How One Google Engineer Turned Tragedy into a Moonshot

    Mo Gawdat, founder of One Billion Happy and former Chief Business Officer at Google's X, spent years working in technological innovation. At Google's so-called "dream factory," he learned how to...

  • 2018 / 12 / 26
    Improving Civility in the Workplace

    Krista Tippett, host of "On Being," believes we are in the middle of a big shift in the workplace. For a long time, she says, we were taught to keep all of our personal opinions and problems out of the office...

  • 2018 / 12 / 18
    How One CEO Creates Joy at Work

    Richard Sheridan, CEO of Menlo Innovations, says it took him years to learn what really mattered at work and how to create that kind of workplace culture. As a company leader today, he works hard to make sure...

  • 2018 / 12 / 11
    Why It’s So Hard to Sell New Products

    Thomas Steenburgh, a marketing professor at the University of Virginia Darden School of Business, was inspired by his early career at Xerox to discover why firms with stellar sales and R&D departments...

  • 2018 / 12 / 4
    The Right Way to Solve Complex Business Problems

    Corey Phelps, a strategy professor at McGill University, says great problem solvers are hard to find. Even seasoned professionals at the highest levels of organizations regularly fail to identify the real...

  • 2018 / 11 / 27
    Speak Out Successfully

    James Detert, a professor at the University of Virginia Darden School of Business, studies acts of courage in the workplace. His most surprising finding? Most people describe everyday actions — not big...

  • 2018 / 11 / 20
    How Your Identity Changes When You Change Jobs

    Herminia Ibarra, a professor at the London Business School, argues that job transitions — even exciting ones that you've chosen — can come with all kinds of unexpected emotions. Going from a...

  • 2018 / 11 / 13
    Why Management History Needs to Reckon with Slavery

    Caitlin Rosenthal, assistant professor of history at UC Berkeley, argues there are strong parallels between the accounting practices used by slaveholders and modern business practices. While we know...

  • 2018 / 11 / 6
    Avoiding Miscommunication in a Digital World

    Nick Morgan, a communications expert and speaking coach, says that while email, texting, and Slack might seem like they make communication easier, they actually make things less efficient. When we are...

  • 2018 / 10 / 30
    Stop Initiative Overload

    Rose Hollister and Michael Watkins, consultants at Genesis Advisers, argue that many companies today are taking on too many initiatives. Each manager might have their own pet projects they want to focus on,...

  • 2018 / 10 / 23
    When Men Mentor Women

    David Smith, associate professor of sociology at the U.S. Naval War College, and Brad Johnson, professor of psychology at the United States Naval Academy, argue that it is vital for more men to mentor women...

  • 2018 / 10 / 16
    John Kerry on Leadership, Compromise, and Change

    John Kerry, former U.S. Secretary of State, shares management and leadership lessons from his long career in public service. He discusses how to win people over to your side, bounce back from defeats, and...

  • 2018 / 10 / 9
    The Power of Curiosity

    Francesca Gino, a professor at Harvard Business School, shares a compelling business case for curiosity. Her research shows allowing employees to exercise their curiosity can lead to fewer conflicts and...

  • 2018 / 10 / 2
    How Companies Can Tap Into Talent Clusters

    Bill Kerr, a professor at Harvard Business School, studies the increasing importance of talent clusters in our age of rapid technological advances. He argues that while talent and industries have always had a...

  • 2018 / 9 / 25
    A Hollywood Executive On Negotiation, Talent, and Risk

    Mike Ovitz, a cofounder of Creative Artists Agency and former president of The Walt Disney Company, says there are many parallels between the movie and music industry of the 1970s and 1980s and Silicon Valley...

  • 2018 / 9 / 18
    How Companies Get Creativity Right (and Wrong)

    Beth Comstock, the first female vice chair at General Electric, thinks companies large and small often approach innovation the wrong way. They either try to throw money at the problem before it has a clear...

  • 2018 / 9 / 11
    How Alibaba Is Leading Digital Innovation in China

    Ming Zeng, the chief strategy officer at Alibaba, talks about how the China-based e-commerce company was able to create the biggest online shopping site in the world. He credits Alibaba’s retail and...

  • 2018 / 9 / 4
    The Science Behind Sleep and High Performance

    Marc Effron, president of the Talent Strategy Group, looked at the scientific literature behind high performance at work and identified eight steps we can all take to get an edge. Among those steps is taking...

  • 2018 / 8 / 28
    Understanding Digital Strategy

    Sunil Gupta, a professor at Harvard Business School, argues that many companies are still doing digital strategy wrong. Their leaders think of "going digital" as either a way to cut costs or to attract...

  • 2018 / 8 / 21
    Managing Someone Who’s Too Collaborative

    Rebecca Shambaugh, a leadership coach, says being too collaborative can actually hold you back at work. Instead of showing how well you build consensus and work with others, it can look like indecision or...

  • 2018 / 8 / 14
    Networking Myths Dispelled

    David Burkus, a professor at Oral Roberts University and author of the book “Friend of a Friend,” explains common misconceptions about networking. First, trading business cards at a networking...

  • 2018 / 8 / 10
    Designing AI to Make Decisions

    Kathryn Hume, VP of integrate.ai, discusses the current boundaries between artificially intelligent machines, and humans. While the power of A.I. can conjure up some of our darkest fears, she says the reality...

  • 2018 / 8 / 7
    Why Opening Up at Work Is Harder for Minorities

    Katherine Phillips, a professor at Columbia Business School, discusses research showing that African-Americans are often reluctant to tell their white colleagues about their personal lives — and that it...

  • 2018 / 7 / 31
    Learning from GE’s Stumbles

    Roger Martin, a professor at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management, offers two main reasons General Electric has lost its competitiveness. GE’s stock has been removed from the...

  • 2018 / 7 / 24
    Turning Purpose Into Performance

    Gerry Anderson, the CEO of DTE Energy, and Robert Quinn and Anjan Thakor, professors at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business and the Olin Business School at Washington University,...

  • 2018 / 7 / 17
    The 2 Types of Respect Leaders Must Show

    Kristie Rogers, an assistant professor of management at Marquette University, has identified a free and abundant resource most leaders aren’t giving employees enough of: respect. She explains the two...

  • 2018 / 7 / 10
    How Some Companies Beat the Competition… For Centuries

    Howard Yu, Lego Professor of Management and Innovation at IMD Business School in Switzerland, discusses how the industrial cluster in the Swiss city of Basel is a unique example of enduring competitive...

  • 2018 / 7 / 3
    Architect Daniel Libeskind on Working Unconventionally

    Daniel Libeskind, a former academic turned architect and urban designer, discusses his unorthodox career path and repeat success at high-profile, emotionally charged projects. He also talks about his unusual...

  • 2018 / 6 / 27
    When India Killed Off Cash Overnight

    Bhaskar Chakravorti, the dean of global business at The Fletcher School at Tufts University, analyzes the economic impact of India’s unprecedented demonetization move in 2016. With no advance warning,...

  • 2018 / 6 / 19
    Getting People to Help You

    Heidi Grant, a social psychologist, explains the right ways and wrong ways to ask colleagues for help. She says people are much more likely to lend us a hand than we think they are; they just want it to be a...

  • 2018 / 6 / 12
    How to Become More Self-Aware

    Tasha Eurich, an organizational psychologist and executive coach, talks about why we all should be working on self-awareness. Few people are truly self-aware, she says, and those who are don’t get there...

  • 2018 / 6 / 5
    Bill Clinton and James Patterson on Collaboration and Cybersecurity

    Former U.S. President Bill Clinton and author James Patterson discuss their new novel, The President is Missing, in which a fictional president fights a cybersecurity attack amid intense political...

  • 2018 / 5 / 29
    Ask Better Questions

    Leslie K. John and Alison Wood Brooks, professors at Harvard Business School, say people in business can be more successful by asking more and better questions. They talk through what makes for a great...

  • 2018 / 5 / 22
    How AI Is Making Prediction Cheaper

    Avi Goldfarb, a professor at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management, explains the economics of machine learning, a branch of artificial intelligence that makes predictions. He says as...

  • 2018 / 5 / 15
    Dual-Career Couples Are Forcing Firms to Rethink Talent Management

    Jennifer Petriglieri, an assistant professor of organizational behavior at INSEAD, asks company leaders to consider whether they really need to relocate their high-potential employees or make them travel so...

  • 2018 / 5 / 8
    Choosing a Strategy for Your Startup

    Joshua Gans, a professor at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management, advises against trying to commercialize a new technology or product before considering all the strategic options. He...

  • 2018 / 5 / 1
    Use Learning to Engage Your Team

    Whitney Johnson, an executive coach, argues that on-the-job learning is the key to keeping people motivated. When managers understand that, and understand where the people they manage are on their individual...

  • 2018 / 4 / 24
    Why Technical Experts Make Great Leaders

    Amanda Goodall, a senior lecturer at Cass Business School in London, argues that the best leaders are technical experts, not general managers. She discusses her research findings about doctors who head up...

  • 2018 / 4 / 17
    How AI Can Improve How We Work

    Paul Daugherty and James Wilson, senior technology leaders at Accenture, argue that robots and smarter computers aren't coming for our jobs. They talk about companies that are already giving employees...

  • 2018 / 4 / 11
    You May Be a Workaholic If

    Nancy Rothbard, a professor of management at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, draws a distinction between workaholism and working long hours. She explains the health consequences of...

  • 2018 / 4 / 3
    Make Work Engaging Again

    Dan Cable, a professor of organizational behavior at London Business School, explains why people often lose their enthusiasm for their work and how leaders can help them get it back. He says we...

  • 2018 / 3 / 27
    Why CEOs Are Taking a Stand

    Professors Michael Toffel, of Harvard Business School, and Aaron Chatterji, of Duke’s Fuqua School of Business, discuss the emerging phenomenon of CEO activism. They explain how political polarization...

  • 2018 / 3 / 21
    Leading with Less Ego

    Rasmus Hougaard and Jacqueline Carter, of the global consulting firm Potential Project, make their case for mindfulness, selflessness, and compassion in leadership. Their survey of 30,000 leaders showed those...

  • 2018 / 3 / 13
    McKinsey’s Head on Why Corporate Sustainability Efforts Are Falling Short

    Dominic Barton, the global managing partner of McKinsey&Company, discusses the firm’s sustainability efforts. He talks about the wake-up call he got about sustainability and how he tries to...

  • 2018 / 3 / 7
    Harvard’s President on Leading During a Time of Change

    Drew Gilpin Faust, the president of Harvard University, talks about leading the institution through a decade of change, from the financial crisis to the Trump era. Faust discusses how communicating as a...

  • 2018 / 2 / 27
    Make Tools Like Slack Work for Your Company

    Tsedal Neeley, a professor at Harvard Business School, and Paul Leonardi, a management professor at UC Santa Barbara, talk about the potential that applications such as Slack, Yammer, and Microsoft Teams have...

  • 2018 / 2 / 19
    The CEO of Merck on Race, Leadership, and High Drug Prices

    Kenneth Frazier, the CEO of the pharmaceutical company known as MSD outside of North America, discusses his upbringing and how it influences his leadership as chief executive. He is one of the few...

  • 2018 / 2 / 14
    The Future of MBA Education

    Scott DeRue, the dean of University of Michigan's Ross School of Business, says the old model of business school education is gone. It's no longer good enough to sequester yourself on campus for two...

  • 2018 / 2 / 9
    Introducing Dear HBR:

    What should you do when you become the boss? HBR's new advice podcast Dear HBR: has the answers. In this bonus episode, Dear HBR: co-hosts Alison Beard and Dan McGinn answer your questions with the help...

  • 2018 / 2 / 6
    Does Your Firm See You as a High Potential?

    Jay Conger, a leadership professor at Claremont McKenna College, goes behind the scenes to show how you can get on, and stay on, your company's fast track. He demystifies how companies (often very...

  • 2018 / 1 / 30
    Women at Work: Make Yourself Heard

    In this special episode, HBR IdeaCast host Sarah Green Carmichael introduces Harvard Business Review’s new podcast “Women at Work,” about women’s experiences in the workplace. This...

  • 2018 / 1 / 23
    Controlling Your Emotions During a Negotiation

    Moshe Cohen, a senior lecturer at Boston University's Questrom School of Business, says you can't take the emotion out of a negotiation. After all, negotiations revolve around conflict, risk, and...

  • 2018 / 1 / 16
    For Better Customer Service, Offer Options, Not Apologies

    Jagdip Singh, a professor of marketing at the Weatherhead School of Management at Case Western Reserve University, explains his research team’s new findings about customer satisfaction. He says...

  • 2018 / 1 / 9
    Why Leaders Should Make a Habit of Teaching

    Sydney Finkelstein, a professor of management at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College, encourages leaders to approach their direct reports like teachers. As Finkelstein explains, being a...

  • 2018 / 1 / 2
    Hiring the Best People

    Patty McCord, Netflix’s former Chief Talent Officer, sees hiring as constant matchmaking. Building a team of people that gets amazing work done, she says, requires managers to really know what they...

  • 2017 / 12 / 26
    Breaking Down the New U.S. Corporate Tax Law

    Mihir Desai, a professor of finance at Harvard Business School, breaks down the brand-new U.S. tax law. He says it will affect everything from how corporate assets are financed to how business are structured....

  • 2017 / 12 / 20
    Making Unlimited Vacation Time Work

    Aron Ain, the CEO of Kronos Incorporated, explains why unlimited vacation can be in the best interests of employees and the organization. He describes how his software company tracks requests for time off and...

  • 2017 / 12 / 12
    How Technology Tests Our Trust

    Rachel Botsman, the author of “Who Can You Trust?", talks about how trust works, whether in relation to robots, companies, or other people. Technology, she says, speeds up the development of trust and...

  • 2017 / 12 / 5
    Box’s CEO on Pivoting to the Enterprise Market

    Aaron Levie, the CEO of Box, reflects on the cloud storage company’s entry into the enterprise market. He was skeptical about pivoting away from consumers, and it was challenging. But by staying...

  • 2017 / 11 / 28
    Why More CEOs Should Be Hired from Within

    Claudio Fernández-Aráoz, a senior adviser at the global executive search firm Egon Zehnder, makes the case for finding a company’s next CEO inside the firm. But to find the best contenders,...

  • 2017 / 11 / 21
    Dow Chemical’s CEO on Running an Environmentally Friendly Multinational

    Andrew Liveris, the CEO of Dow Chemical, discusses the 120-year-old company’s ambitious sustainability agenda. He says an environmentally driven business model is good for the earth—and the bottom...

  • 2017 / 11 / 14
    When ‘Best Practices’ Backfire

    Freek Vermeulen, an associate professor of strategy and entrepreneurship at the London Business School, argues that too many companies are following so-called best practices that are actually holding them...

  • 2017 / 11 / 7
    The Hardscrabble Business of Chinese Manufacturing in Africa

    Irene Yuan Sun, a consultant at McKinsey, explains why so many Chinese entrepreneurs are setting up factories in Africa. She describes what it’s like inside these factories, who works there, what...

  • 2017 / 10 / 31
    Astronaut Scott Kelly on Working in Space

    Scott Kelly, a retired U.S. astronaut, spent 520 days in space over four missions. Working in outer space is a lot like working on earth, but with different challenges and in closer quarters. Kelly looks back...

  • 2017 / 10 / 24
    2017’s Top-Performing CEO on Getting Product Right

    Pablo Isla, the CEO of Inditex, is No. 1 on Harvard Business Review’s list of “The Best-Performing CEOs in the World 2017.” He opens up about his management style and reflects on his tenure leading the...

  • 2017 / 10 / 19
    Everyday People Who Led Momentous Change

    Nancy Koehn, a Harvard Business School historian, tells the life stories of three influential leaders: the abolitionist Frederick Douglass, the pacifist Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and the ecologist Rachel Carson....

  • 2017 / 10 / 12
    So, You Want to Join a Startup

    Jeff Bussgang, a venture capitalist who teaches entrepreneurship at Harvard Business School, knows from personal experience and having funded many startups that there’s more than one way into that...

  • 2017 / 10 / 5
    How Successful Solopreneurs Make Money

    Dorie Clark, a marketing strategy consultant, answers a burning question: how do people make money off of what they know? She outlines the options for experts who want to monetize their knowledge. Clark...

  • 2017 / 9 / 28
    Microsoft’s CEO on Rediscovering the Company’s Soul

    Satya Nadella, Microsoft’s third CEO, opens up about his effort to refresh the culture of the company and renew its focus on the future. He reflects on important life lessons he learned growing up in...

  • 2017 / 9 / 21
    Transcending Either-Or Decision Making

    Jennifer Riel, an adjunct professor at the Rotman School of Management, presents a model way to solve problems: integrative thinking. It’s taking the best from two inadequate options to come up with a...

  • 2017 / 9 / 14
    Find Your Happy Place at Work

    Annie McKee, a senior fellow at the University of Pennsylvania and author of the book “How to Be Happy at Work,” tells the story of her journey to happiness—starting with her early job as a...

  • 2017 / 9 / 8
    How to Fix “Team Creep”

    Mark Mortensen, an associate professor of organizational behavior at INSEAD, discusses the research on "multiteaming"—when employees work not only across multiple projects, but multiple teams. It has...

  • 2017 / 8 / 31
    Why Everyone Should See Themselves as a Leader

    Sue Ashford, a professor at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business, breaks down her decades of research on leadership—who achieves it, and how a group grants it. She explains that...

  • 2017 / 8 / 24
    Basic Competence Can Be a Strategy

    Raffaella Sadun, a professor at Harvard Business School, explains why seemingly common-sensical management practices are so hard to implement. After surveying thousands of organizations across the world, she...

  • 2017 / 8 / 18
    How the U.S. Navy is Responding to Climate Change

    Forest Reinhardt and Michael Toffel, Harvard Business School professors, talk about how a giant, global enterprise that operates and owns assets at sea level is fighting climate change—and adapting to...

  • 2017 / 8 / 10
    When to Listen to a Dire Warning

    Richard Clarke, former counterterrorism adviser to U.S. presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, has made a career of investigating disaster warnings. The way he sees it, catastrophes can happen at any...

  • 2017 / 8 / 3
    When Startups Scrapped the Business Plan

    Steve Blank, entrepreneurship lecturer at Stanford, UC Berkeley, and Columbia, talks about his experience of coming to Silicon Valley and building companies from the ground up. He shares how he learned to...

  • 2017 / 7 / 27
    Build Your Portfolio Career

    Kabir Sehgal, a corporate strategist, Grammy-winning producer, investment banker, bestselling author, and military reserve officer, talks about building and thriving in a portfolio career. He discusses the...

  • 2017 / 7 / 20
    How AI Is Already Changing Business

    Erik Brynjolfsson, MIT Sloan School professor, explains how rapid advances in machine learning are presenting new opportunities for businesses. He breaks down how the technology works and what it can and...

  • 2017 / 7 / 13
    Nike’s Co-founder on Innovation, Culture, and Succession

    Phil Knight, former chair and CEO of Nike, tells the story of starting the sports apparel and equipment giant after taking an entrepreneurship class at Stanford and teaming up with his former track coach,...

  • 2017 / 7 / 6
    How Authority and Decision-Making Differ Across Cultures

    Erin Meyer, professor at INSEAD, discusses management hierarchy and decision-making across cultures. Turns out, these two things don’t always track together. Sometimes top-down cultures still have...

  • 2017 / 6 / 29
    Mental Preparation Secrets of Top Athletes, Entertainers, and Surgeons

    Dan McGinn, senior editor at Harvard Business Review, talks about what businesspeople can learn from how top performers and athletes prepare for their big moments. In business, a big sales meeting,...

  • 2017 / 6 / 22
    The Talent Pool Your Company Probably Overlooks

    Robert Austin, a professor at Ivey Business School, and Gary Pisano, a professor at Harvard Business School, talk about the growing number of pioneering firms that are actively identifying and hiring more...

  • 2017 / 6 / 15
    Blockchain — What You Need to Know

    Karim Lakhani, Harvard Business School professor and co-founder of the HBS Digital Initiative, discusses blockchain, an online record-keeping technology that many believe will revolutionize commerce. Lakhani...

  • 2017 / 6 / 8
    Which Type of Entrepreneur Are You?

    Chris Kuenne, entrepreneurship lecturer at Princeton, and John Danner, senior fellow at the Lester Center for Entrepreneurship at UC Berkeley’s Haas School of Business talk about one of the least...

  • 2017 / 6 / 1
    Why Finance Needs More Humanity, and Why Humanity Needs Finance

    Mihir Desai, professor at Harvard Business School and Harvard Law School, argues for re-humanizing finance. He says the practice of finance, with increasing quantification, has lost touch with its...

  • 2017 / 5 / 26
    4 Behaviors of Top-Performing CEOs

    Elena Botelho, partner at leadership advisory firm ghSmart, talks about the disconnect between the stereotype of the CEO and what research shows actually leads to high performance at that level. She says the...

  • 2017 / 5 / 18
    Why Doesn’t More of the Working Class Move for Jobs?

    Joan C. Williams, director of the Center for WorkLife Law at the University of California Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco, discusses serious misconceptions that the U.S. managerial and...

  • 2017 / 5 / 11
    How to Survive Being Labeled a Star

    Jennifer Petriglieri, professor at INSEAD, discusses how talented employees can avoid being crushed by lofty expectations -- whether their own, or others'. She has researched how people seen as "high...

  • 2017 / 5 / 4
    Low-Risk, High-Reward Innovation

    Wharton professor David Robertson discusses a "third way" to innovate besides disruptive and sustaining innovations. He outlines this approach through the examples of companies including LEGO, GoPro,...

  • 2017 / 4 / 27
    Sheryl Sandberg and Adam Grant on Resilience

    Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg talks about returning to work after her husband’s death, and Wharton management and psychology professor Adam Grant discusses what the research says about resilience. In...

  • 2017 / 4 / 20
    Our Delusions About Talent

    Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, professor of business psychology at University College London, dispels some of the myths that have persisted in the 20 years since McKinsey coined the phrase “war for...

  • 2017 / 4 / 13
    To Reinvent Your Firm, Do Two Things at the Same Time

    Scott D. Anthony, Innosight managing partner, discusses why established corporations should be better at handling disruptive threats. He lays out a practical approach to transform a company’s existing...

  • 2017 / 4 / 6
    Dealing with Conflict Avoiders and Seekers

    Amy Gallo, HBR contributing editor, discusses a useful tactic to more effectively deal with conflict in the workplace: understanding whether you generally seek or avoid conflict. Each personality style...

  • 2017 / 3 / 30
    How Personalities Affect Team Chemistry

    Deloitte national managing director Kim Christfort talks about the different personality styles in an organization and the challenges of bringing them together. Her firm has developed a classification system...

  • 2017 / 3 / 23
    The Rise of Corporate Inequality

    Stanford economist Nicholas Bloom discusses the research he's conducted showing what’s really driving the growth of income inequality: a widening gap between the most successful companies and the...

  • 2017 / 3 / 16
    Break Out of Your Managerial Bubble

    Hal Gregersen, executive director of the MIT Leadership Center at Sloan School of Management, says too many CEOs and executives are in a bubble, one that shields them from the reality of what’s...

  • 2017 / 3 / 10
    Making Intel More Diverse

    Danielle Brown, Intel Chief Diversity & Inclusion Officer, talks about the corporation’s $300 million initiative to increase diversity, the largest such investment yet by a technology company. The...

  • 2017 / 3 / 2
    Reduce Organizational Drag

    Michael Mankins, Bain & Company partner and head of the firm's Organization practice, explains how organizations unintentionally fail to manage their employees' time and energy. He also lays...

  • 2017 / 2 / 24
    Globalization: Myth and Reality

    Pankaj Ghemawat, professor at NYU Stern and IESE business schools, debunks common misconceptions about the current state and extent of globalization. (Hint: the world is not nearly as globalized as people...

  • 2017 / 2 / 16
    Why You Should Buy a Business (and How to Do It)

    Richard S. Ruback and Royce Yudkoff, professors at Harvard Business School, spell out an overlooked career path: buying a business and running it as CEO. Purchasing a small company lets you become your own...

  • 2017 / 2 / 9
    Escape Your Comfort Zone

    Andy Molinsky, professor of organizational behavior at Brandeis International Business School, discusses practical techniques for getting outside of your comfort zone, and how that can develop new...

  • 2017 / 2 / 2
    Business Leadership Under President Trump

    Larry Summers, former U.S. treasury secretary, is calling on American business leaders to stand up to President Donald Trump. Summers sharply criticizes the administration’s protectionist agenda, and he...

  • 2017 / 1 / 28
    Generosity Burnout

    Senior leaders Brad Feld, Sarah Robb O’Hagan, Mike Ghaffary, Heidi Roizen, and John Rogers Jr. discuss burning out on giving, the techniques they use to avoid it, and how they recognize it in their...

  • 2017 / 1 / 19
    Stopping and Starting With Success

    Jerry Seinfeld shares his insights into innovation, self-criticism, and how to know when to quit. The U.S. comedian conquered 1990s television with his sitcom and is now finding a new audience for his online...

  • 2017 / 1 / 13
    Voices from the January-February 2017 Issue

    Roger Martin of Rotman School of Management, Paul Zak of Claremont Graduate University, Clayton Christensen of Harvard Business School, comedian Jerry Seinfeld, and HBR Editor-in-Chief Adi Ignatius...

  • 2017 / 1 / 5
    Collaborating Better Across Silos

    Harvard Law School lecturer Heidi K. Gardner discusses how firms gain a competitive edge when specialists collaborate across functional boundaries. But it’s often difficult, expensive, and messy. The...

  • 2016 / 12 / 29
    Restoring Sanity to the Office

    Basecamp CEO Jason Fried says too many people find it difficult to get work done at the workplace. His company enforces quiet offices, fewer meetings, and different collaboration and communication practices....

  • 2016 / 12 / 22
    The Secret to Better Problem Solving

    Thomas Wedell-Wedellsborg discusses a nimbler approach to diagnosing problems than existing frameworks: reframing. He’s the author of “Are You Solving the Right Problems?” in the...

  • 2016 / 12 / 15
    What Superconsumers Can Teach You

    Eddie Yoon, author of "Superconsumers" and growth strategy expert at The Cambridge Group, explains how companies can find their most passionate customers and use their invaluable insights to improve products...

  • 2016 / 12 / 8
    The “Jobs to be Done” Theory of Innovation

    Clayton Christensen, professor at Harvard Business School, builds upon the theory of disruptive innovation for which he is well-known. He speaks about his new book examining how successful companies know how...

  • 2016 / 12 / 1
    Handling Stress in the Moment

    HBR contributing editor Amy Gallo discusses the best tactics to recognize, react to, and recover from stressful situations. She's a contributor to the "HBR Guide to Managing Stress at Work."

  • 2016 / 11 / 23
    How Focusing on Content Leads the Media Astray

    Bharat Anand, author of The Content Trap and professor at Harvard Business School, talks about the strategic challenges facing digital businesses, and explains how he and his colleagues wrestled with them...

  • 2016 / 11 / 18
    Why the White Working Class Voted for Trump

    Joan C. Williams, distinguished professor and director of the Center for WorkLife Law at UC Hastings, discusses the white working class voters who helped elect Republican Donald Trump as U.S. President, and...

  • 2016 / 11 / 10
    A Leadership Historian on the U.S. Presidential Election

    Harvard Business School professor Nancy Koehn talks about the surprising election of businessman Donald Trump as U.S. president, and what leaders throughout history can tell us about bridging divides and...

  • 2016 / 11 / 3
    Re-Orgs Are Emotional

    Stephen Heidari-Robinson and Suzanne Heywood, authors of "ReOrg: How to Get It Right" explain how good planning and communication can help employees adapt.

  • 2016 / 10 / 27
    The 10 People Who Globalized the World

    Jeffrey Garten of Yale School of Management discusses how Genghis Khan, Mayer Amschel Rothschild, Margaret Thatcher, and others made the world more integrated. Garten is the author of "From Silk to Silicon:...

  • 2016 / 10 / 20
    What the World’s Best CEOs Have in Common

    Long-term thinking, short-term savvy, and relentless focus on employees.

  • 2016 / 10 / 13
    Power Corrupts, But It Doesn’t Have To

    Authority changes us all. Berkeley's Dacher Keltner, author of the HBR article "Don't Let Power Corrupt You" and the book "The Power Paradox" explains how to avoid succumbing to power's...

  • 2016 / 10 / 6
    When Not to Trust the Algorithm

    Cathy O'Neil, author of "Weapons of Math Destruction" on how data can lead us astray–from HR to Wall Street.

  • 2016 / 9 / 29
    Macromanagement Is Just as Bad as Micromanagement

    Tanya Menon, associate professor at Fisher College of Management, Ohio State University, explains how to recognize if your management style is too hands off. She's the co-author of "Stop Spending, Start...

  • 2016 / 9 / 22
    Building Emotional Agility

    Susan David, author of "Emotional Agility" and psychologist at Harvard Medical School, on learning to unhook from strong feelings.

  • 2016 / 9 / 15
    Excessive Collaboration

    Rob Cross, professor at the University of Virginia’s McIntire School of Commerce, explains how work became an exhausting marathon of group projects. He's the coauthor of the HBR article...

  • 2016 / 9 / 8
    Making the Toughest Calls

    Joseph Badaracco, Harvard Business School professor, explains what to do when no decision feels like a good decision. He is the author of "Managing in the Gray: Five Timeless Questions for Resolving Your...

  • 2016 / 9 / 1
    Email: Is It Time to Just Ban It?

    David Burkus, author of "Under New Management", explains why some companies are taking extreme measures to limit electronic communication. Burkus is also a professor at Oral Roberts University and host of the...

  • 2016 / 8 / 25
    The Connection Between Speed and Charisma

    Bill von Hippel, professor at the University of Queensland, on how the ability to think and respond quickly makes someone seem more charismatic.

  • 2016 / 8 / 18
    How Work Changed Love

    Moira Weigel explains how the changing nature of work has reshaped the way we meet, date, and fall in love. She's the author of "Labor of Love: The Invention of Dating" and is completing a Ph.D. at Yale...

  • 2016 / 8 / 11
    Negotiating with a Liar

    Leslie John, Harvard Business School professor, explains why you shouldn't waste time trying to detect your counterpart's lies; instead, use tactics drawn from psychology to get them to divulge the...

  • 2016 / 8 / 4
    In Praise of Dissenters and Non-Conformists

    Adam Grant, Wharton professor and author of "Originals", on the science of standing out.

  • 2016 / 7 / 29
    The Zappos Holacracy Experiment

    Ethan Bernstein, Harvard Business School professor, and John Bunch, holacracy implementation lead at Zappos, discuss the online retailer's transition to a flat, self-managed organization. They are the...

  • 2016 / 7 / 21
    The Era of Agile Talent

    More of us are working in organizations employing a mix of freelancers, contractors, consultants, and full-timers, explains Jonathan Younger, coauthor with Norm Smallwood of "Agile Talent: How to Source and...

  • 2016 / 7 / 14
    We Can’t Work All the Time

    Anne-Marie Slaughter on (finally) bringing sanity to the work/life struggle.

  • 2016 / 7 / 7
    Teaching Creativity to Leaders

    Tim Brown, CEO and president of IDEO, on breakthrough problem-solving.

  • 2016 / 6 / 30
    Brexit and the Leadership Equivalent of Empty Calories

    Mark Blyth of Brown University and Gianpiero Petriglieri of INSEAD discuss Britain's vote to leave the European Union.

  • 2016 / 6 / 23
    A Brief History of 21st Century Economics

    Tim Sullivan, co-author with Ray Fisman of "The Inner Lives of Markets," on how we shape economic theory -- and how it shapes us.

  • 2016 / 6 / 16
    Greg Louganis on How to Achieve Peak Performance

    The champion diver explains how visualization and ambitious goal-setting helped him achieve double gold medals in back-to-back Olympic Games and why he now serves as a mentor to younger athletes and a...

  • 2016 / 6 / 9
    Getting Growth Back at Your Company

    Chris Zook of Bain explains the predictable crises of growth and how to overcome them. His new book is "The Founder's Mentality," coauthored with James Allen.

  • 2016 / 6 / 2
    Asking for Advice Makes People Think You’re Smarter

    The research shows we shouldn't be afraid to ask for help. Francesca Gino and Alison Wood Brooks, both of Harvard Business School, explain.

  • 2016 / 5 / 26
    Yo-Yo Ma on Successful Creative Collaboration

    The acclaimed cellist explains how he chooses and works with partners and shares advice on honing one's talent.

  • 2016 / 5 / 19
    Be a Work/Life-Friendly Boss

    Managers play a huge role in their employees' personal lives, which in turn affects productivity, morale, and turnover at work. Professor Scott Behson, author of "The Working Dad's Survival Guide,"...

  • 2016 / 5 / 12
    Make Better Decisions

    Therese Huston, Ph.D. and author of "How Women Decide," offers research-based tips for both men and women on how to make high quality, defensible decisions -- and sell them to your team.

  • 2016 / 5 / 5
    Let Employees Be People

    Robert Kegan and Lisa Lahey, both of Harvard, discuss what they've learned from studying radically transparent organizations where people at all levels of the hierarchy get candid feedback, show...

  • 2016 / 4 / 28
    Isabel Allende on Fiction and Feminism

    The bestselling author describes her creative process and explains why she was always determined to have a career.

  • 2016 / 4 / 22
    The Condensed May 2016 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2016 / 4 / 15
    Understanding Agile Management

    Darrell Rigby of Bain and Jeff Sutherland of Scrum explain the rise of lean, iterative management tactics, and how to implement them yourself.

  • 2016 / 4 / 7
    Smart Managers Don’t Compare People to the “Average”

    Todd Rose, the Director of the Mind, Brain, & Education program at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and the author of "The End of Average: How to Succeed in a World That Values Sameness,"...

  • 2016 / 3 / 31
    Life’s Work: Dr. Ruth Westheimer

    Iconic relationship expert Dr. Ruth discusses what she's learned over a long career.

  • 2016 / 3 / 24
    How to Say No to More Work

    Karen Dillon, author of the "HBR Guide to Office Politics", explains how to gracefully decline excessive projects–and thankless tasks.

  • 2016 / 3 / 22
    The Condensed April 2016 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2016 / 3 / 17
    Are Leaders Getting Too Emotional?

    There's a lot of crying and shouting both in politics and at the office. Gautam Mukunda of Harvard Business School and Gianpiero Petriglieri of INSEAD help us try to make sense of it all.

  • 2016 / 3 / 10
    Your Coworkers Should Know Your Salary

    Pay transparency is actually a way better system than pay secrecy. David Burkus, professor at Oral Roberts University and author of "Under New Management," explains why.

  • 2016 / 3 / 3
    Talking About Race at Work

    Kira Hudson Banks, Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor in the department of psychology at Saint Louis University, and a principal at consulting firm the Mouse and the Elephant. We spoke with her about why...

  • 2016 / 2 / 25
    The Art of the Interview

    Job interviews can feel more like a stylized ritual than a normal conversation. Esquire writer and journalist Cal Fussman, who's interviewed scores of people from Mikhail Gorbachev to Jeff Bezos to Dr....

  • 2016 / 2 / 19
    The Condensed March 2016 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2016 / 2 / 18
    Closing the Strategy-Execution Gap

    Paul Leinwand, co-author of the book "Strategy That Works," explains how successful companies solve this thorny problem.

  • 2016 / 2 / 11
    Be a Superboss

    Lorne Michaels, Bill Walsh, Alice Waters–all have had a disproportionate impact in their respective industries through their knack for collecting and inspiring great talent. We hear how they do it from...

  • 2016 / 2 / 5
    How to Give Constructive Feedback

    Jack Zenger and Joseph Folkman have administered thousands of 360-degree assessments through their consulting firm, Zenger/Folkman. This has given them a wealth of information about who benefits from...

  • 2016 / 1 / 28
    Being Happier at Work

    Emma Seppälä, Stanford researcher and author of "The Happiness Track," explains the proven benefits of a positive outlook; simple ways to increase your sense of well-being; and why it's not...

  • 2016 / 1 / 21
    Stop Focusing on Your Strengths

    Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, professor at University College London and Columbia University and CEO of Hogan Assessments, explains how the fad for strengths-based coaching may actually be weakening us.

  • 2016 / 1 / 14
    Make Peace with Your Inner Critic

    Tara Mohr, author of Playing Big, explains how to deal with self-doubt (or help someone else manage theirs).

  • 2016 / 1 / 8
    Achieve Your Goals (Finally)

    Heidi Grant Halvorson, author of "No One Understands You and What to Do About It" and "9 Things Successful People Do Differently," explains how to actually stick to your resolutions this year.'

  • 2015 / 12 / 30
    Marketing Lessons for Companies Big and Small

    Denise Lee Yohn, author of "Extraordinary Experiences" and "What Great Brands Do," explains what we can learn from retail and restaurant brands

  • 2015 / 12 / 23
    The Condensed January-February 2016 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2015 / 12 / 17
    Life’s Work: Neil deGrasse Tyson

    In every issue, we feature a conversation with someone who's been wildly successful outside the traditional business world. This time, it's an astrophysicist.

  • 2015 / 12 / 10
    Becoming a More Authentic Leader

    Bill George, Harvard Business School professor and author of "Discover Your True North," gives advice to both new and experienced leaders.

  • 2015 / 12 / 3
    Accenture’s CEO on Leading Change

    Pierre Nanterme discusses the forces changing consulting, and other knowledge-intensive industries.

  • 2015 / 11 / 25
    4 Types of Conflict and How to Manage Them

    Amy Gallo, author of the "HBR Guide to Managing Conflict at Work," explains the options.

  • 2015 / 11 / 24
    The Condensed December 2015 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2015 / 11 / 19
    Katie Couric on the Shifting Landscape of News

    The renowned American journalist talks with HBR senior editor Dan McGinn.

  • 2015 / 11 / 14
    Slide Deck Presentations Don’t Have to Be Terrible

    Evan Loomis and Evan Baehr, coauthors of "Get Backed," on how to win someone over with PowerPoint.

  • 2015 / 11 / 5
    Simple Rules for Creating Great Places to Work

    Gareth Jones, author of "Why Should Anyone Work Here?", explains the things managers know, but struggle to do.

  • 2015 / 10 / 31
    The Man Behind Siri Explains How to Start a Company

    Norman Winarsky, coauthor of "If You Really Want to Change the World," on ventures that scale.

  • 2015 / 10 / 22
    China and the Biggest Startup You’ve Probably Never Heard of

    Clay Shirky talks about Xiaomi, the subject of his new book, "Little Rice."

  • 2015 / 10 / 17
    What Makes Social Entrepreneurs Successful?

    Sally Osberg, president and CEO of the Skoll Foundation and author of "Getting Beyond Better" with Roger Martin.

  • 2015 / 10 / 14
    The Condensed November 2015 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2015 / 10 / 8
    Disrupt Your Career, and Yourself

    Whitney Johnson, author of "Disrupt Yourself," on taking the big risks we secretly want to.

  • 2015 / 10 / 2
    Why the Term “Thought Leader” Isn’t Gross

    Dorie Clark, author of "Stand Out," on having more influence.

  • 2015 / 9 / 24
    Your Office’s Hidden Artists and How to Work with Them

    Kimberly Elsbach, author of the HBR article "Collaborating with Creative Peers," on collaborating better with a certain type of colleague.

  • 2015 / 9 / 17
    Build Your Character (at Least for a Day)

    Tiffany Shlain, filmmaker, on why we need more time to develop our inner selves.

  • 2015 / 9 / 11
    The Creator of WordPress

    Matt Mullenweg, founder and CEO of Automattic, on growth, leadership, and mindfulness.

  • 2015 / 9 / 9
    The Condensed October 2015 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2015 / 9 / 3
    What’s Your Digital Quotient?

    Kate Smaje of McKinsey explains how it's about more than being tech-savvy.

  • 2015 / 8 / 27
    PepsiCo CEO Indra Nooyi on Design Thinking

    How PepsiCo is harnessing the power of design.

  • 2015 / 8 / 20
    Salman Rushdie on Creativity and Criticism

    The acclaimed writer describes how he develops his novels, what he expects from reviewers, and why business people should still read fiction.

  • 2015 / 8 / 13
    Become a Better Listener

    Mark Goulston, psychiatrist and author of "Just Listen," explains how.

  • 2015 / 8 / 12
    The Condensed September 2015 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2015 / 8 / 6
    Building Healthy Teams

    Mary Shapiro, author of the "HBR Guide to Leading Teams" and professor at Simmons, on dealing with conflict and other issues.

  • 2015 / 7 / 30
    How Science and Tech Are Changing the Human Body

    Juan Enriquez and Steve Gullans explain how we're "evolving ourselves."

  • 2015 / 7 / 23
    The CEO of YP on Leading Digital Transformation

    David Krantz, the CEO of YP (formerly the Yellow Pages), explains how they've reinvented their business.

  • 2015 / 7 / 16
    “Social Media-Savvy CEO” Is No Oxymoron

    Charlene Li, author of "The Engaged Leader," on why and how senior executives are diving into online networks.

  • 2015 / 7 / 9
    Test-Taking Comes to the Office

    Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, author of the HBR article "Ace the Assessment," explores the rising practice of using tests in hiring and promotion decisions.

  • 2015 / 7 / 2
    Can HR Be Saved?

    Peter Cappelli, author of the HBR article, "Why We Love to Hate HR...and What HR Can Do About It," on perhaps the least popular function in business.

  • 2015 / 6 / 25
    Michael Lynton on Surviving the Biggest Corporate Hack in History

    The CEO of Sony Pictures Entertainment discusses the crisis with editor-in-chief Adi Ignatius.

  • 2015 / 6 / 23
    The Condensed July-August 2015 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2015 / 6 / 18
    Beating Digital Overload with Digital Tools

    Alexandra Samuel, online engagement expert and author of "Work Smarter with Social Media," on the tools you should use--and the ones you could be ignoring.

  • 2015 / 6 / 11
    Are Robots Really Coming for Our Jobs?

    James Bessen, economist and former software executive, on what we can learn from 19th century mill workers about innovation, wages, and technology.

  • 2015 / 6 / 4
    George Mitchell on Effective Negotiation

    The former U.S. Senate majority leader and U.S. envoy to Northern Ireland and the Middle East describes his approach to resolving disputes and fostering bipartisan compromise.

  • 2015 / 5 / 28
    Evernote’s CEO on the New Ways We Work

    Phil Libin discusses the impact of technology--from Microsoft Word to wearables--on our collaboration and productivity.

  • 2015 / 5 / 21
    Making Sense of Digital Disruption

    R. "Ray" Wang, author of "Disrupting Digital Business" on how business is transforming.

  • 2015 / 5 / 20
    The Condensed June 2015 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2015 / 5 / 14
    Consumer Privacy in the Digital Age

    Timothy Morey and Allison Schoop, both of frog, on designing customer data systems that promote transparency and trust.

  • 2015 / 5 / 7
    Why We Pretend to Be Workaholics

    Erin Reid of Boston University on why men (but not women) feign long working hours.

  • 2015 / 4 / 30
    Ethical CEOs Finish First

    Fred Kiel, author of "Return on Character," explains his research on why being good benefits the bottom line.

  • 2015 / 4 / 23
    Brian Grazer on the Power of Curiosity

    The Oscar-winning producer explains why a passion for learning--about other people and pursuits--has been the key to his success.

  • 2015 / 4 / 16
    Understand How People See You

    Heidi Grant Halvorson, author of "No One Understands You and What to Do About It," explains the science of perception.

  • 2015 / 4 / 14
    The Condensed May 2015 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2015 / 4 / 9
    Making Health Care More Consumer-Driven

    Regina Herzlinger, Harvard Business School professor, talks about how to dismantle the barriers to innovation in care delivery.

  • 2015 / 4 / 2
    Case Study: Reinvent This Retailer

    Hear this story based on real events at J.C. Penney. A discussion with contributor Jill Avery and editor Andy O'Connell follows.

  • 2015 / 3 / 26
    Your Brain’s Ideal Schedule

    Ron Friedman, Ph.D., author of "The Best Place to Work," on how to structure your day to get the most done.

  • 2015 / 3 / 19
    Blue Ocean Strategy and Red Ocean Traps

    Renée Mauborgne of INSEAD explains how a landmark idea is evolving. She is coauthor, along with W. Chan Kim, of "Blue Ocean Strategy, Expanded Edition (2015)."

  • 2015 / 3 / 17
    The Condensed April 2015 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2015 / 3 / 12
    Set Habits You’ll Actually Keep

    Gretchen Rubin, author of "Better than Before: Mastering the Habits of Our Everyday Lives," explains that you've got to know your habit-setting style.

  • 2015 / 3 / 5
    Goldie Hawn on Female Leadership

    The Hollywood icon explains why she moved from acting to producing and directing, then launched a foundation that teaches mindfulness to kids.

  • 2015 / 2 / 26
    Be Less Reactive and More Proactive

    Peter Bregman, author of "Four Seconds," on changing the way you lead.

  • 2015 / 2 / 20
    Marissa Mayer’s Yahoo

    Nicholas Carlson, author of "Marissa Mayer and the Fight to Save Yahoo," on the CEO's management style.

  • 2015 / 2 / 13
    Why Leadership Feels Awkward

    Herminia Ibarra, author of "Act Like a Leader, Think Like a Leader" and professor at INSEAD, on moving forward, even when it's not comfortable.

  • 2015 / 2 / 12
    The Condensed March 2015 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2015 / 2 / 5
    GoDaddy’s CEO on Leading Change

    Blake Irving talks about the company's renewed focus on small businesses and bringing on a new leadership team.

  • 2015 / 1 / 29
    Signs You’re Secretly Annoying Your Colleagues

    Muriel Maignan Wilkins, coauthor of "Own the Room," on the flaws everyone's too polite to point out.

  • 2015 / 1 / 22
    Innovation Needs a System

    David Duncan, senior partner at Innosight and coauthor of "Build an Innovation Engine in 90 Days," explains how to organize corporate creativity.

  • 2015 / 1 / 15
    What Still Stifles Ambitious Women

    Pamela Stone, professor at Hunter College, on the surprising findings from a massive study of MBAs.

  • 2015 / 1 / 8
    How to Negotiate Better

    Jeff Weiss, author of the "HBR Guide to Negotiating" and partner at Vantage Partners, explains how to prepare to be persuasive.

  • 2014 / 12 / 30
    Skills We Can Learn from Games

    Andrew Innes, game designer, product manager, and author of "What Board Games Can Teach Business."

  • 2014 / 12 / 19
    The Condensed January-February 2015 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2014 / 12 / 18
    What Makes Teams Smart (or Dumb)

    Cass Sunstein, Harvard professor and author of "Wiser: Getting Beyond Groupthink to Make Groups Smarter."

  • 2014 / 12 / 11
    Communicate Better with Your Global Team

    Tsedal Neeley, Harvard Business School professor, explains how globally distributed teams can collaborate better together.

  • 2014 / 12 / 4
    Explaining Silicon Valley’s Success

    AnnaLee Saxenian, author of the classic book "Regional Advantage," still thinks the area's future is bright.

  • 2014 / 11 / 25
    Learning What Wiser Workers Know

    Dorothy Leonard, author of "Critical Knowledge Transfer" ​and Harvard Business School professor, on retaining organizational expertise.

  • 2014 / 11 / 20
    Making Good Decisions

    Stanford's Ron Howard, one of the fathers of decision analysis, explains how it's done.

  • 2014 / 11 / 18
    The Condensed December 2014 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2014 / 11 / 13
    Boris Johnson on Influence and Ambition

    The mayor of London explains why Churchill is a role model and whether his aspirations include the Prime Minister's office.

  • 2014 / 11 / 6
    How to Change Someone’s Behavior with Minimal Effort

    Steve J. Martin, coauthor of "The Small Big: Small Changes That Spark Big Influence," on the little things that persuade.

  • 2014 / 10 / 30
    Is the Corporate Campus Dying?

    Jennifer Magnolfi, Founder & Principal Investigator at Programmable Habitats LLC, on how digital work, and the Internet of Things will fundamentally change the how we use the buildings and neighborhoods...

  • 2014 / 10 / 23
    Myths About Entrepreneurship

    Linda Rottenberg, author of "Crazy Is a Compliment," on what it really takes to start a business.

  • 2014 / 10 / 16
    Disrupting TV’s Status Quo

    Famed producer Norman Lear on developing groundbreaking sitcoms, managing creative partnerships and the lessons he wants to pass on to the next generation.

  • 2014 / 10 / 14
    The Condensed November 2014 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2014 / 10 / 9
    Focus More on Value Capture

    Stefan Michel, professor at IMD, says your business should rethink how it captures value, not just how it creates it.

  • 2014 / 10 / 2
    Does Your Sales Team Know Your Strategy?

    Frank Cespedes, HBS professor and author of "Aligning Strategy and Sales," explains how to get the front line on board.

  • 2014 / 9 / 26
    How Google Manages Talent

    Eric Schmidt, executive chairman, and Jonathan Rosenberg, former SVP of products, explain how the company manages their smart, creative team.

  • 2014 / 9 / 18
    Fixing the College Grad Hiring Process

    Sanjeev Agrawal, Collegefeed cofounder and CEO, explains what recruiters, new graduates, and college career centers need to do differently.

  • 2014 / 9 / 11
    How Silicon Valley Became Uncool

    Walter Frick, HBR editor, explains why we valorize tech heroes from the past, but scoff at today's entrepreneurs.

  • 2014 / 9 / 9
    The Condensed October 2014 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2014 / 9 / 4
    The Fall of the Talent Economy?

    Roger Martin, former dean of the Rotman School of Management, on why talent's powerful economic position is unsustainable.​

  • 2014 / 8 / 28
    Privacy’s Shrinking Future

    Scott Berinato, senior editor at Harvard Business Review, on how companies benefit from transparency about customer data.

  • 2014 / 8 / 21
    How to Stop Corporate Inversions

    Bill George and Mihir Desai, professors at Harvard Business School, explain why our corporate tax code is driving American business overseas.

  • 2014 / 8 / 14
    Prevent Employees from Leaking Data

    David Upton and Sadie Creese, both of Oxford, explain why the scariest threats are from insiders.

  • 2014 / 8 / 12
    The Condensed September 2014 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2014 / 8 / 7
    The Art of Managing Science

    J. Craig Venter, the biologist who led the effort to sequence human DNA, on unlocking the human genome and the importance of building extraordinary teams for long-term results.

  • 2014 / 7 / 31
    The Dangers of Confidence

    Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, professor at University College London, on how confidence masks incompetence.

  • 2014 / 7 / 24
    The Future of Talent Is Potential

    Linda Hill, Harvard Business School professor, and Claudio Fernández-Aráoz, senior adviser at Egon Zehnder, on the talent strategies that set up a company for long-term success.

  • 2014 / 7 / 17
    To Do Things Better, Stop Doing So Much

    Greg McKeown, author of "Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less," on the importance of being "absurdly selective" in how we use our time.

  • 2014 / 7 / 10
    Marc Andreessen and Jim Barksdale on How to Make Money

    The tech luminaries on bundling and unbundling in the digital age.

  • 2014 / 7 / 3
    The Fukushima Meltdown That Didn’t Happen

    Charles Casto, recently retired from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, on how smart leadership saved the second Fukushima power plant.

  • 2014 / 6 / 26
    Yang Yuanqing: The HBR Interview

    Lenovo's CEO on how the PC leader is poised to win in the "PC plus" world.

  • 2014 / 6 / 25
    The Condensed July-August 2014 Issue

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2014 / 6 / 19
    When to Go with Your Gut

    Gerd Gigerenzer, director of the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, on how to know when simple rules and snap decisions will outperform analytical models.

  • 2014 / 6 / 12
    Succeeding Quietly in Our Recognition-Obsessed Culture

    David Zweig, author of "Invisibles," on employees who value good work over self-promotion.

  • 2014 / 6 / 5
    The Secret History of White-Collar Offices

    Nikil Saval, editor at n+1, on how gender, politics, and unions have affected the American workplace since the Civil War.

  • 2014 / 5 / 29
    Cross-Culture Work in a Global Economy

    Erin Meyer, affiliate professor at INSEAD and author of "The Culture Map," on why memorizing a list of etiquette rules doesn't work.

  • 2014 / 5 / 23
    How to Manage Wall Street

    Sam Palmisano, former CEO of IBM, on striking a balance between running a company for the long term and keeping investors happy.

  • 2014 / 5 / 15
    Taking Business Back from Wall Street

    Gautam Mukunda, HBS professor, on the dangers of managing companies for shareholders.

  • 2014 / 5 / 8
    Time Is a Company’s Most Valuable Resource

    Michael Mankins, partner at Bain & Company, on how to get the most out of meetings.

  • 2014 / 5 / 2
    Ruth Reichl on Challenging Career Moves

    The renowned author and former editor of Gourmet talks about the magazine's closure and her recent transition to fiction writing.

  • 2014 / 4 / 25
    Social Physics Can Change Your Company (and the World)

    Sandy Pentland, MIT professor, on how big data is revealing the science behind how we work together, based on his book "Social Physics: How Good Ideas Spread."

  • 2014 / 4 / 18
    Best of the IdeaCast

    Featuring Jeff Bezos, Howard Schultz, Francis Ford Coppola, Maya Angelou, Nancy Koehn, Rob Goffee, Gareth Jones, Cathy Davidson, and Mark Blyth.

  • 2014 / 4 / 10
    How Companies Can Embrace Speed

    John Kotter, author of "Accelerate," on how slow-footed organizations can get faster.

  • 2014 / 4 / 3
    How Unusual CEOs Drive Value

    William Thorndike, investor and author of "The Outsiders," looks at some less-known but more effective executives.

  • 2014 / 3 / 27
    Are You the “Real You” in the Office?

    Harvard's Robert Kegan on companies that do really personal development.

  • 2014 / 3 / 20
    Identify Your Primary Customer

    Robert Simons, Harvard Business School professor, says companies still struggle to choose the right customer.

  • 2014 / 3 / 13
    Our Bizarre Fascination with Stories of Doom

    Andrew O'Connell, HBR editor, explains why we find tales of disaster so compelling.

  • 2014 / 3 / 6
    Is Work-Family Conflict Reaching a Tipping Point?

    Stewart D. Friedman, Wharton professor and author of "Baby Bust," presents new research.

  • 2014 / 2 / 27
    Why So Many Emerging Giants Flame Out

    John Jullens of Booz & Company says multinationals from China and other emerging markets must learn to innovate and manage quality while remaining nimble.

  • 2014 / 2 / 20
    We Need Economic Forecasters Even Though We Can’t Trust Them

    Walter Friedman, director of the Business History Initiative at Harvard Business School, on the pioneers of market prediction.

  • 2014 / 2 / 13
    How the U.S. Can Regain its Edge

    Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, says the U.S. can remain a global leader only if it addresses issues at home.

  • 2014 / 2 / 6
    John Cleese Has a Serious Side

    The iconic comedian speaks with HBR's Adi Ignatius about work, life, and, yes, comedy.

  • 2014 / 1 / 30
    Getting Excellence to Spread

    Bob Sutton, Stanford University professor, talks about his book, "Scaling Up Excellence: Getting to More Without Settling for Less" (coauthored by Huggy Rao).

  • 2014 / 1 / 23
    Building the Agile Workforce

    Jeffrey Joerres, CEO of ManpowerGroup, on finding the talent you need in an unpredictable world.

  • 2014 / 1 / 16
    Salman Khan on the Online Learning Revolution

    The founder of the Khan Academy talks with HBR senior editor Alison Beard.

  • 2014 / 1 / 13
    The Management Style of Robert Gates

    The former Secretary of Defense talks with HBR editor-in-chief Adi Ignatius about his new book, "Duty: Memoirs of a Secretary at War."

  • 2014 / 1 / 2
    Nomadic Leaders Need Roots

    Gianpiero Petriglieri, professor at INSEAD, on the new global elite.

  • 2013 / 12 / 26
    The Condensed January-February 2014 Magazine

    Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.

  • 2013 / 12 / 19
    The Management Myths Hurting Your Business

    Freek Vermeulen of London Business School explains how best practices become bad practices.

  • 2013 / 12 / 12
    The Economics of Online Dating

    Paul Oyer, Stanford economist and the author of "Everything I Ever Needed to Know About Economics I Learned from Online Dating," explains the marketplace of online love.

  • 2013 / 12 / 5
    Reduce Stress with Mindfulness

    Maria Gonzalez, author of "Mindful Leadership," explains how to minimize stress -- not just manage it. Contains a brief guided breathing exercise.

  • 2013 / 11 / 27
    The Big Benefits of a Little Thanks

    Francesca Gino and Adam Grant, of Harvard Business School and Wharton, respectively, discuss their research on gratitude and generosity.

  • 2013 / 11 / 21
    Improving Management at Google

    Eric Clayberg, Google software-engineering manager, talks with Harvard Business School professor David Garvin about the feedback and training that he and others at the company receive through Project...

  • 2013 / 11 / 14
    Get a Dysfunctional Team Back on Track

    Roger Schwarz, author of "Smart Leaders, Smarter Teams," explains how to build trust and accountability on your team.

  • 2013 / 11 / 7
    Editors’ Picks of the Week

    HBR editors read top posts from HBR.org.

  • 2013 / 10 / 31
    Feeling Conflicted? Get Out of Your Own Way

    Erica Ariel Fox, who teaches negotiation at Harvard Law School, discusses how to resolve inner conflict to lead wisely and live well.

  • 2013 / 10 / 24
    What the Best Decision Makers Do

    Ram Charan, coauthor of "Boards that Lead," talks about what he's learned in three decades of helping executives make tough decisions.

  • 2013 / 10 / 17
    Scott Adams on Whether Management Really Matters

    The Dilbert creator talks with HBR senior editor Dan McGinn.

  • 2013 / 10 / 11
    Christine Lagarde on the World Economy and the IMF’s Future

    The managing director of the International Monetary Fund talks with HBR editor in chief Adi Ignatius.

  • 2013 / 10 / 3
    How Goldman Sachs Drifted

    Steven G. Mandis of Columbia Business School discusses his book, "What Happened to Goldman Sachs: An Insider's Story of Organizational Drift and Its Unintended Consequences."

  • 2013 / 9 / 26
    Lead Authentically, Without Oversharing

    Lisa Rosh, assistant professor of management at the Sy Syms School of Business at Yeshiva University, explains how to build trust through skillful self-disclosure.

  • 2013 / 9 / 19
    Clay Christensen and Dominic Barton on Consulting’s Disruption

    The HBS sage and McKinsey head discuss how to stay on top in a rapidly changing industry.

  • 2013 / 9 / 13
    Leading Across Sectors

    William D. Eggers and Paul Macmillan, authors of "The Solution Revolution," discuss why "triple-strength" leaders are the best problem solvers.

  • 2013 / 9 / 5
    How CEOs Are Succeeding in Africa

    Jonathan Berman, author of "Success in Africa," busts media myths about the continent.

  • 2013 / 8 / 29
    Office Politics for the Pros

    Karen Dillon, author of the "HBR Guide to Office Politics," talks with Dorie Clark, author of "Reinventing You."

  • 2013 / 8 / 22
    The Rise of the Megacorporation

    Richard Adelstein, professor of economics at Wesleyan University and author of "The Rise of Planning in Industrial America, 1864-1914."

  • 2013 / 8 / 15
    Why We Love to Hate Consultants

    Dan McGinn, HBR senior editor.

  • 2013 / 8 / 8
    Working Fathers Need Balance, Too

    Joan C. Williams, Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of California and coauthor of the forthcoming book, "What Works for Women at Work."

  • 2013 / 8 / 2
    How to Schedule Time for Meaningful Work

    Julian Birkinshaw and Jordan Cohen, coauthors of the HBR article "Make Time for the Work that Matters."

  • 2013 / 7 / 25
    The Women Who Become Board Members

    Boris Groysberg and Deborah Bell, authors of the HBR article "Dysfunction in the Boardroom."

  • 2013 / 7 / 18
    Big Brain Theory

    Adam Waytz and Malia Mason, authors of the HBR article "Your Brain at Work."

  • 2013 / 7 / 11
    The Booming Business of Craft Cocktails

    Thomas Mooney, co-owner and CEO of House Spirits Distillery.

  • 2013 / 7 / 2
    Attacking the Sleep Conspiracy

    Russell Sanna, executive director of the Division of Sleep Medicine at Harvard Medical School.

  • 2013 / 6 / 27
    IT in the Cloud Era

    Aaron Levie, cofounder and CEO of Box.

  • 2013 / 6 / 20
    Read Fiction and Be a Better Leader

    Joseph Badaracco, Harvard Business School professor.

  • 2013 / 6 / 13
    Why We Need to Redefine Intelligence

    Scott Barry Kaufman, adjunct assistant professor of psychology at New York University and author of "Ungifted: Intelligence Redefined."

  • 2013 / 6 / 6
    Pricing Strategies People Love

    Sandeep Baliga and Jeff Ely, professors at the Kellogg School of Management and Northwestern University.

  • 2013 / 5 / 30
    The Science of Sharing (and Oversharing)

    Jonah Berger, Wharton School professor and author of "Contagious: Why Things Catch On."

  • 2013 / 5 / 23
    Why Some Companies Last and Others Don’t

    Michael Raynor, director at Deloitte Services LP and coauthor of the HBR article "Three Rules for Making a Company Truly Great."

  • 2013 / 5 / 16
    Talent Strategies for the Post-Loyalty World

    Ben Casnocha and Chris Yeh, coauthors of the HBR article "Tours of Duty: The New Employer-Employee Compact."

  • 2013 / 5 / 9
    The Secret to Effective Motivation

    Heidi Grant Halvorson and E. Tory Higgins, authors of "Focus: Use Different Ways of Seeing the World to Power Success and Influence."

  • 2013 / 5 / 2
    Maya Angelou on Courage and Creativity

    Dr. Maya Angelou, renowned author.

  • 2013 / 4 / 25
    Yes, Business Relies on Nature

    Mark Tercek, CEO of The Nature Conservancy and author of "Nature's Fortune: How Business and Society Thrive by Investing in Nature."

  • 2013 / 4 / 18
    Building a Company Everyone Loves

    Rob Goffee and Gareth Jones, authors of the HBR article "Creating the Best Workplace on Earth."

  • 2013 / 4 / 11
    Austerity’s Big Bait-and-Switch

    Mark Blyth, professor at Brown University and author of "Austerity: The History of a Dangerous Idea."

  • 2013 / 4 / 4
    The Truth About Creative Teams

    Leigh Thompson, professor at Kellogg School of Management and author of "Creative Conspiracy: The New Rules of Breakthrough Collaboration."

  • 2013 / 3 / 28
    Can You “Manage” Your Family?

    Bruce Feiler, New York Times columnist and author of "The Secrets of Happy Families."

  • 2013 / 3 / 21
    Take Control of Your Time

    Elizabeth Grace Saunders, founder and CEO of Real Life E and author of "The 3 Secrets to Effective Time Investment."

  • 2013 / 3 / 14
    Sheryl Sandberg: The HBR Interview

    Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook COO and author of "Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead."

  • 2013 / 3 / 7
    Solving America’s Innovation Crisis

    Bruce Nussbaum, professor at Parsons The New School of Design and author of "Creative Intelligence: Harnessing the Power to Create, Connect, and Inspire."

  • 2013 / 2 / 28
    Improve Your Business Writing

    Bryan Garner, editor in chief of Black's Law Dictionary and author of the "HBR Guide to Better Business Writing."

  • 2013 / 2 / 21
    Mary Robinson on Influence Without Authority

    Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland.

  • 2013 / 2 / 14
    Why We’re All in Sales

    Daniel Pink, author of "To Sell Is Human" and the HBR article "A Radical Prescription for Sales."

  • 2013 / 2 / 7
    Encyclopaedia Britannica’s Transformation

    Jorge Cauz, president of Encyclopaedia Britannica.

  • 2013 / 1 / 31
    Manage Up and Across with Your Mentor

    Jeanne Meister, partner at Future Workplace and contributor to the "HBR Guide to Managing Up and Across."

  • 2013 / 1 / 24
    The High Cost of Rudeness at Work

    Christine Porath, associate professor at Georgetown University's McDonough School of Business and coauthor of the HBR article "The Price of Incivility."

  • 2013 / 1 / 17
    Whole Foods’ John Mackey on Capitalism’s Moral Code

    John Mackey, co-CEO of Whole Foods Market and coauthor of "Conscious Capitalism: Liberating the Heroic Spirit of Business."

  • 2013 / 1 / 10
    Why Organizations Are the Way They Are

    Tim Sullivan, editorial director of Harvard Business Review Press and coauthor of "The Org: The Underlying Logic of the Office."

  • 2013 / 1 / 3
    Jeff Bezos on Leading for the Long-Term at Amazon

    Jeff Bezos, CEO of Amazon.com.

  • 2012 / 12 / 20
    Boost Your Productivity With Social Media

    Alexandra Samuel, vice president of social media at Vision Critical.

  • 2012 / 12 / 13
    The Rise of the Global Super-Rich

    Chrystia Freeland, editor of Thomson Reuters Digital and author of "Plutocrats: The Rise of the New Global Super-Rich and the Fall of Everyone Else."

  • 2012 / 12 / 6
    Find the Next Disruptor Before it Finds You

    Maxwell Wessel, fellow at the Forum for Growth and Innovation and coauthor of the HBR article "Surviving Disruption."

  • 2012 / 11 / 29
    The Indispensable, Unlikely Leadership of Abraham Lincoln

    Gautam Mukunda, Harvard Business School assistant professor and author of "Indispensable: When Leaders Really Matter."

  • 2012 / 11 / 21
    Why You Should Cannibalize Your Company

    James Allworth, regular contributor to HBR and coauthor of the Nieman Reports article "Breaking News: Mastering the Art of Disruptive Innovation in Journalism."

  • 2012 / 11 / 15
    The Four Fears Blocking You from Great Ideas

    Tom and David Kelley, leaders of IDEO and authors of the forthcoming HBR article "Reclaim Your Creative Confidence."

  • 2012 / 11 / 8
    Ernest Shackleton’s Lessons for Leaders in Harsh Climates

    Nancy Koehn, Harvard Business School historian and editor of "The Story of American Business."

  • 2012 / 11 / 1
    How to Get the Right Job

    Jodi Glickman, founder of the communication training firm Great on the Job and contributor to the "HBR Guide to Getting a Job."

  • 2012 / 10 / 25
    Has America Outsourced Too Much?

    Gary Pisano, Harvard Business School professor and coauthor of "Producing Prosperity: Why America Needs a Manufacturing Renaissance."

  • 2012 / 10 / 19
    Nate Silver on Predicting the Unpredictable

    Nate Silver, statistician and founder of The New York Times political blog FiveThirtyEight.com.

  • 2012 / 10 / 11
    Big Data Solves Big Problems

    Kevin Boudreau, London Business School professor.

  • 2012 / 10 / 4
    Campaign for Your Career

    Dorie Clark, strategy consultant and author of the HBR article "A Campaign Strategy for Your Career."

  • 2012 / 9 / 27
    China and India Are an Opportunity, Not a Threat

    Michael Silverstein, cofounder of The Boston Consulting Group's global consumer practice and coauthor of "The $10 Trillion Prize."

  • 2012 / 9 / 20
    How a Culture of Accountability Can Deteriorate

    Tom Ricks, journalist and author of the HBR article "What Ever Happened to Accountability?"

  • 2012 / 9 / 13
    Reinventing Strategy for the Social Era

    Nilofer Merchant, author of "11 Rules for Creating Value in the Social Era."

  • 2012 / 9 / 6
    How Campaign Finance Reform Could Help Business

    Russ Feingold, former US senator from Wisconsin and founder of Progressives United.

  • 2012 / 8 / 29
    What Leaders Can Learn from Jazz

    Frank Barrett, jazz pianist and author of "Yes to the Mess: Surprising Leadership Lessons from Jazz."