Whose Ideas Count? The Silent Bias Shaping Modern Innovation
New research from London Business School and INSEAD reveals that women’s ideas are cited far less often in patents and papers - a silent bias distorting who gets credit, who gets funded, and which innovations shape our future.
The Dangers Of Having A HiPPO In The Boardroom
When a company bases its decision making on the Highest Paid Person’s Opinion, the HiPPO is born. When one starts throwing its weight around in the boardroom, it can cause catastrophic damage...
Why Trump’s Tariffs Threaten Sustainable Development
Sustainable trade is possible if nations align their policies, empower disadvantaged communities, and share responsibility for meeting SDGs.
Beyond Salary and Careers: Why Research Matters in the FT Business School Rankings
If you ask a group of MBA, MiM or exec ed candidates what matters most to them when choosing a business school, the answers come quickly: post-graduation salary, career progression, international mobility, perhaps achieving the specific goals they’ve set for themselves. But how often does a prospective student, or even an alumnus say, “I’m choosing this school because of its research output”? Almost never.
If you Studied With Other Women, Chances Are You’re Enjoying More Career Success
The old boys' network has long been an influencing presence, from business schools and boardrooms. But, it turns out, such a network exists for women too. More to the point, when it comes to women getting ahead, it works.
Can Dressing For Success Make You Better At Your Job?
Love it or hate it, Melania Trump's fluorescent yellow dress made headlines in UK press. But does what you wear to work actually matter?
Which Is More Important: Human Or AI Skills?
In the age of AI, is human capability still enough to guarantee professional success, or are students now better to face the machine head-on, developing technical skills that may be replaceable in the near future?
How Ryanair’s Edgy Online Humour Helped The Company Grow
Ryanair's irreverent tone helped it mitigate its flaws and carve a popular niche for itself online, according to a new study Vienna University of Economics and Business. But was it a good move?
