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Jul 31, 2018

Religious Spending, Taking Risks, and More – Boston News

Religious Spending

Let’s explore some of the most interesting stories that have emerged from Boston business schools this week.


Shoppers with Strong Religious Beliefs Spend Less and Make Fewer Impulse PurchasesHarvard Business Review

The Harvard Business School recently published an article in the Harvard Business Review that illuminates a fascinating correlation between grocery spending and religiosity—as the latter rises, the former falls.

The researchers write, “We found that for each 20 percent increase in the number of religious adherents in a county, annual grocery sales per store decreases, on average, by about $125,000. [Our] results showed that shoppers living in more religious U.S. counties spent less money on groceries and also made fewer impulse purchases than those living in less religious U.S. counties.”

The implications of the research are vast and wide reaching, particularly for retailers. They explain further:

“Because being reminded about God increases shoppers’ frugality, they may be more sensitive to price discounts and promotions (such as “buy one, get one free”) around the time of religious holidays and observances. Getting a good deal, particularly on an impulse buy, is likely to alleviate shoppers’ heightened frugality.”

The researchers also speculate that “retailers may also allay religious shoppers’ concerns about being frugal by offering deals that demonstrate respect for their values, such as promising to donate a percentage of revenue from a particular product to a local charity.”

You can check out the full article here.

When Regulation Doesn’t Throttle Risk-TakingQuestrom School of Business Blog

New Management Science research from Questrom School of Business Accounting Professor Ana Albuquerque and Fudan University’s Julie Lei Zhu finds the positive impacts of the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX), which required companies to implement internal controls on financial reporting.

According to the article, “not only did filing firms not decrease their investment activities, some measures suggested that firms actually increased their investments after the reporting requirements were put into place. Filing firms also appeared to benefit in other ways. Banks typically offered filing firms larger loans with lower collateral requirements compared to non-filing firms.”

Albuquerque writes, “Credit terms improved [for filing firms], because they were disclosing more information. The benefit was higher than the cost of compliance.”

You can read more here.

These 12 startups are Re-Imagining the Latin American Workplace and WorkforceMIT Sloan Newsroom 

MIT Sloan recently announced the 12 Latin American finalists of the its global Inclusive Innovation Challenge, all of which will travel to São Paulo, Brazil in just a few weeks “where they will pitch their ideas at the IIC Latin America Celebration.”

According to the article, “the winner of each category then goes on to compete in November during the Global Grand Prize Gala at MIT. The gala includes four $250,000 prizes, one for each category.”

Initiative Director Erik Brynjolfsson writes, “If we employ inclusive innovation globally, it could be the best thing that ever happened to humanity. We can have more wealth, better health, and widely held prosperity.”

Here’s a quick overview of each of the 12 Latin American finalists:

  • Interacpedia “connects university student teams with organizations to generate the development of new skills/jobs and opportunities.”
  • Signa is a “platform that provides deaf people with online digital economy courses.”
  • Sumá is a “fair marketing platform that connects family farmers with food buyers.”
  • Alò Bodega is a “mobile app for Latin American and Asian corner stores.”
  • Apli is an “artificial intelligence-enabled jobs marketplace.”
  • Incluyeme is an “online job portal for people in Latin America with disabilities.”
  • Grupo Nueva Economía is “developing new digital channels for small businesses and entrepreneurs.”
  • Outbound Initiative “connects innovators from underrepresented regions — in this case Brazil — with business opportunities using data-combing artificial intelligence.”
  • RedeDots is a “social network of more than 220,000 people engaged in the fair trade and sustainable business market.”
  • LEVEE “uses machine learning, geolocation, and mobile messages to connect people with job opportunities.”
  • Trocafone “aims to reduce e-waste by creating a marketplace for used electronics.”
  • UnDosTres “offers Mexico residents mobile payment for services like prepaid cellphone recharging, movie ticket purchases, electricity, and phone bills.”

You can read more about the startups here. 

Posted in: Boston, Featured Home, Featured Region, News, Start Ups | Comments Off on Religious Spending, Taking Risks, and More – Boston News

Jul 16, 2018

Managing a Personal Crisis, and More – Boston News

personal crisis

What’s going on in Boston this week?


How to Manage an Employee Who’s Having a Personal CrisisHarvard Business Review

The Harvard Business Review recently explored how managers can best support employees to “take care of themselves emotionally while also making sure they are doing their work.”

Annie McKee, author of How to Be Happy at Work and a senior fellow at Penn’s Graduate School of Education, offers three helpful suggestions:

  • Set a tone of compassion in the office. It will not only give your employees confidence to approach you with struggles, but also give you the ability to spot warnings signs.
  • Be creative with solutions. A flexible schedule may allow a person to maintain their output without much disruption.
  • Check in from time to time, both to reassure the employee and to make sure that further adjustments or accommodations aren’t needed.

You can read the full article over at HBR.

Agile at Scale, ExplainedMIT Sloan Newsroom

MIT Center for Information Systems Research’s Kristine Dery is currently studying how agile management—the increasingly popular management methodology adopted by the likes of Microsoft, Ericsson, and Spotify—relates to the employee experience.

MIT Sloan School of Management senior lecturer and industry liaison Carine Simon writes, “The traditional method of managing, the waterfall method, which is very inflexible, planned-in-advance, linear, and not iterative at all, wasn’t lending itself at all to the flexibility and the adjustments that were necessary to make great software.”

Simon adds, “[Agile is] iterating with customer feedback, prototypes, and tests, versus taking some requirements and issuing the product maybe a year later, when the customer’s requirements have changed or technology has evolved.”

Many companies have taken note of agile’s prevalence and begun to “ask whether the method’s practices and philosophies could be scaled up to apply with equal success to other projects or even entire business functions,” according to Simon and Dery.

Simon continues, “In customer-centric processes where customer input is key, and in that sense it’s quite uncertain or fast-changing, then those would be the types of areas in a firm that lend themselves to agile.”

Check out the full article here.

Questrom Professor Named 2018-19 Batten FellowQuestrom Blog

BU Questrom School of Business‘ Siobhan O’Mahony was recently awarded a 2018-19 Batten Fellowship by the Batten Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation at University of Virginia Darden School of Business.

The Batten Fellows program, according to Darden, “provides support for prominent thought leaders and high-potential scholars who seek to generate new knowledge about entrepreneurship and innovation.”

O’Mahony, an Associate Professor of Strategy & Innovation and Academic Director of Research and Curriculum for Innovate@BU, explores how “technical and creative projects organize for innovation.”

O’Mahony plans to use her fellowship to “research entrepreneurial ecosystems and how those systems influence entrepreneurs and their efforts around venture creation.”

Read all about O’Mahony’s fellowship as part of the full article here.

Posted in: Boston, Featured Home, Featured Region, News | Comments Off on Managing a Personal Crisis, and More – Boston News

Jun 26, 2018

Look Out for These Boston Internships

Boston Internships

If you’ve read MetroMBA’s look at how summer internships play a crucial role for MBA students, you’re probably already familiar with the many benefits of interning during your MBA career. Between forging professional connections, gaining hands-on experience, and top tier salaries, MBA students have lot to gain from seeking out these opportunities. Boston internships manage to stand out, in particular, because of a wealth of excellent business school options.

Of course, the internship model is a win-win for all participants: students get the opportunity for professional experience, and companies get to work alongside emerging talent in the business world. Companies across the U.S. actively search for and recruit this talent. The need and capacity for interns, however, can vary from organization to organization. As students begin their search for the perfect internship, and can be important to take note of what companies are the biggest internship employers in their area.

Boston Internships for MBAs

Anheuser-Busch InBev (AB InBev), created ten years ago through the merger of Anheuser-Busch and InBev, is one of top hirers for MBA students in the Boston region. A Belgian-Brazilian beverage and brewing company, AB InBev has offices throughout the world, currently employing around 183,000 people. Given the global nature of their product, the company sponsors MBA and internship opportunities with a focus on global business. Each summer, the company offers a 10-12 week summer internship at their New York office, which often results in getting hired into the company’s Global MBA program—a one year high potential leadership program that prepares participants for quick career growth.

Anheuser-Busch InBev was one of the top hirers for MBA internships at both the Harvard Business School and the Sloan School of Management at MIT, two of the most highly ranked business programs in the world. At MIT Sloan, AB InBev employed nine members of the Class of 2017 as summer interns.

Founded 173 years ago in London, Deloitte remains one of the world’s top professional services networks today, providing tax, consulting, enterprise risk and financial advisory services throughout the world. As of 2016, Deloitte was recognized as the 6th largest privately owned organization in the United States.

With roughly 263,900 employees worldwide, it’s probably no surprise that Deloitte offers plenty of Boston internships. Deloitte Consulting hired six MBA interns from MIT Sloan for the summer of 2017, and also made the lists of top employers for F.W. Olin, Harvard, and Suffolk University’s Sawyer Business School.

The vast number of student interns employed at Deloitte may be a reflection of their vast internship program, which include programs like the Deloitte Consulting Immersion Program, Deloitte Women’s Leadership Launch, and the Advanced Degree Veterans’ Forum.

At Boston University’s Questrom School of Business, 108 different companies hired 140 students for internships in 2018. CVS Health, also an employer for MBAs from Harvard Business School and Babson College’s F.W. Olin Graduate School of Business, hired five students from Questrom for summer internships, making it the number one employer for that school.

CVS Health Corporation, headquartered in Woonsocket, Rhode Island, has grown since 1964 into a top Fortune 500 company with more than 246,000 employees and $177 billion in annual revenue. In December 2017, the retail and health care company also made headlines when it acquired health insurance mega-company Aetna for $69 billion.

CVS Health offers a number of MBA internship programs for MBA students, depending on their interest within the field. Among them are the CVS Year-round internship, Spanish Immersion Summer Internship, and Specialty Clinical Innovation Internship. CVS also believes in students growing their careers with the organization, which likely means greater opportunity for an internship to turn into a long term career.

With the growing popularity of jobs within the healthcare administration field, it should come as no surprise that one of the top employers for MBA internships in Boston is the Boston Children’s Hospital. The hospital, founded in 1869, has been ranked by the U.S. News & World Report #1 in eight of ten clinical specialties. For 2018-19, it was named the country’s number one pediatric hospital.

The hospital is affiliated with Harvard Medical School, so it’s likely no surprise that they are a top employer of MBA students as well, learning about the other side of health care. They are also one of the top employers for MBA students at Northeastern’s D’Amore-McKim School of Business, which requires students to pursue a corporate residency for six months of its 24-month full-time MBA program.

Posted in: Advice, Boston, Career, Deloitte, Featured Home, Featured Region, MBA Internship, MBA Jobs, News | Comments Off on Look Out for These Boston Internships

Jun 19, 2018

Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg Arrives at MIT, and More – Boston News

Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg

What’s happening at the best Boston business schools this week?


Asia Is Ripe For Investments. Here’s How U.S. Companies Can Capitalize D’Amore-McKim Blog

The Northeastern University D’Amore-McKim School of Business recently published an overview of the recent Emerging Markets’ Symposium, in which Ravi Ramamurti, University Distinguished Professor of international business and strategy brought together seven CEOs and corporate executives to unpack the discussion topic, “On the Rise of Asia: How Should U.S. Companies Respond.”

Jimmy Weng, DMSB’07, and Credit Suisse’s current head of offshore investment strategies, told the audience via conference call that he believed “Asia’s economy is entering a “supercycle” of market boom.”

Symposium organizer Ramamurti said, “China is leading the way to a new era in globalization. The headroom for growth in Asia is very significant.”

You can read more about the symposium here.

Sheryl Sandberg On Facebook’s Missteps and What Comes NextMIT Sloan Newsroom

Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg delivered MIT’s 2018 commencement address last week and used her speech as an opportunity to come clean and share the lessons learned from her company’s recent Cambridge Analytica data mining imbroglio.

She told the audience, “It’s painful when you miss something — when you make the mistake of believing so much in the good you are seeing that you don’t see the bad. It’s hard when you know that you let people down.”

sheryl_sandberg_commencement

Sandberg speaking at the 2018 MIT commencement / Photo via Dominick Reuter

“The larger challenge is one all of us here today must face. The role of technology in our lives is growing — and that means our relationship with technology is changing. We have to change, too. We have to recognize the full weight of our responsibilities.”

You can read more Sandberg’s commencement speech and check out footage of the event here.

A Big Problem with Big ProblemsQuestrom Blog

Boston University Questrom School of Business associate professors Stine Grodal and Siobhan O’Mahony recently published a new study that explores how “competing and misaligned goals—combined with a lack of oversight—can derail an ambitious vision.”

In their paper “How does a Grand Challenge Become Displaced? Explaining the Duality of Field Mobilization,” Grodal explains how common “interest misalignment” can be when it comes to tackling big problems.

“The academic community might agree to focus on a grand challenge, but [individual] professors are also interested in publishing in top journals and funding graduate students, which can create misalignment between a grand challenge and a community’s existing goals.”

It’s also much easier to “develop advances in existing areas” rather than explore uncharted terrain. “People graft on to the grand challenge but are rewarded by the status quo, and end up pursuing goals that are closer to their existing work.”

Oversight is key to keeping researchers on track. Grodal notes, “With little overarching supervision, it shouldn’t be a surprise that communities found plenty of reasons to support their own missions more robustly than the mission of the grand challenge.”

Read the complete article and study here.

Posted in: Boston, Featured Home, Featured Region, News | Comments Off on Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg Arrives at MIT, and More – Boston News

Apr 6, 2018

What They’re Saying: Spring Break is Sadly Almost Over

spring break

While the East Coast of the U.S. is catching up with another pleasant April storm cyclone, the rest of the business school community is back at work, shedding off the sunburned skin of a spring break well had. With the end of the formal academic year drawing near, students are preparing for the home stretch.

Check out some of the things business schools around the U.S., Canada, and UK are saying about the end of spring break and what you need to know before the academic year closes out.


Posted in: Featured Home, News | Comments Off on What They’re Saying: Spring Break is Sadly Almost Over

Mar 21, 2018

MIT Explores Happiness, and More – Boston News

what makes people happy

Let’s explore some of the most interesting stories that have emerged from Boston business schools this week.


Probing the Origins of HappinessMIT Newsroom

On the #InternationalDayofHappiness, Kara Baskin at the MIT Sloan School of Management explored the new book “The Origins of Happiness: The Science of Well-Being over the Life Course,” which was co-authored by MIT Sloan Ph.D. student George Ward. Talking about his work, Ward explains how global governments have been attempting to tap into the data of happiness in hopes of shaping future policies.

“We wanted to bring together this body of work in a systematic, quantitative way,” he explains. “Often, these are single studies that say ‘x’ is important for happiness; ‘y’ is important for happiness. In this book we try to provide an overarching framework that documents what makes for a satisfying life.”

“On the policy side,” he continues, “more and more countries are using well-being data in the real world. As we speak to policymakers, they often ask the question: ‘Look, we’re measuring this now and we have the impetus to improve these figures, move up these tables of happiness, and make our citizens enjoy their lives more. What can we do?'”

You can read the rest of the Ward interview here, and grab a copy of “The Origins of Happiness: The Science of Well-Being over the Life Course” today.

The Supply Chain Economy and the Future of Good Jobs in AmericaHarvard Business Review

The Harvard Business Review recently published an article from Mercedes Delgado and Karen Mills that outlines the increased role service suppliers will play in what some have dubbed the “supply chain economy.” Supply chain industries are simply “businesses that manufacture parts to be used in a final good,” like plastic injection molders and metal stampers.

These industries “have a crucial role in driving innovation and creating well-paying jobs,” in part because they “have downstream linkages to multiple industries, which allows the innovations they create to cascade and diffuse across the economy, potentially increasing the value of those innovations.”

Read more about HBS’ policy suggestions to emphasize “suppliers’ access to skilled labor, buyers, and capital” here.

BU Grad Schools Among Nation’s BestBU Today

Several schools in the Boston metro saw a nice rankings boost in the recently release U.S. News & World Report Best Business Schools 2019 list, with the Questrom School of Business at Boston University leaping up two spots overall from last year, up to 42nd overall. The school’s part-time program also finished 10 spots better than last year, coming in 32nd overall.

In a release, Kenneth Freeman, Allen Questrom Professor and Dean in Management, said, “Rankings are inherently imperfect, but we appreciate the acknowledgement of the quality and reputation of our students, program, and alumni. Each year, we adjust our curricular content in response to student needs and our increasingly engaged corporate partners to create experiential opportunities to bridge the classroom and industry.”

You can catch up on the rest of BU’s graduate schools in the new ranking here.

Posted in: Boston, Featured Home, Featured Region, News | Comments Off on MIT Explores Happiness, and More – Boston News


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