Firms are increasingly turning to partnerships to develop innovative products and strategies. New Wharton research looks at the optimal mix of partners for achieving breakthroughs.
Firms are increasingly turning to partnerships to develop innovative products and strategies. New Wharton research looks at the optimal mix of partners for achieving breakthroughs.
Five years on, has the Dodd-Frank Act achieved or failed to meet its goal of overhauling U.S. financial regulations? So far, its legacy is mixed, experts say.
Employees increasingly expect the user experience at work to be as user-friendly as software at home, so CIOs today must provide a better user experience.
With Puerto Rico likely to default on its debt, protection under U.S. bankruptcy laws could help contain the resulting chaos while work begins on longer-term reforms.
Some sports analytics experts parse data looking for ways to help a team win on the field. But baseball is a business, too, and data analyst Diny Hurwitz’s job is to help his team win where it really counts — at the ticket sales office.
Mergers and acquisitions activity is hitting records — especially multibillion-dollar deals, with companies scrambling to combine as the Fed prepares to raise interest rates this year.
The newest book from Gretchen Rubin, best-selling author of The Happiness Project, examines how we can change our habits.
Wearable fitness monitors are suddenly everywhere. But how accurately do they really count our steps? And more important, how well do they help us overcome our own inertia?
Cultural fit plays a legitimate role in the workplace. But how can managers keep it from “going rogue”?
While a Greek exit from the eurozone has been staved off — at least for now — several questions remain. Two experts weigh in on what the latest deal means for Greece and the European Union.
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