After Hours

Ein Podcast von TED Audio Collective / Youngme Moon, Mihir Desai, & Felix Oberholzer-Gee - Mittwochs

Mittwochs

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209 Folgen

  1. Quick Takes on Uber, Apple/Qualcomm, Pinterest, Brexit, and More

    Vom: 1.5.2019
  2. Disney+, Notre Dame Donations Spark a Backlash, and Mihir’s New Book!

    Vom: 24.4.2019
  3. Big Tech vs. the EU, and Why Is College So Expensive?

    Vom: 17.4.2019
  4. Has Car Ownership Peaked, and Is Joe Biden Too Physical?

    Vom: 10.4.2019
  5. Apple’s Big Event, Plus Is Corporate Debt at a Crisis Level?

    Vom: 3.4.2019
  6. Peloton and Partisan Political Prejudice

    Vom: 27.3.2019
  7. Food Delivery Wars and Boeing’s Crisis Management

    Vom: 20.3.2019
  8. Airbnb, Plus Lessons from Kraft Heinz and Zero Based Budgeting

    Vom: 13.3.2019
  9. IPO Fever, and Do Bullies Make Good Bosses?

    Vom: 6.3.2019
  10. Walmart’s Strategy to Beat Amazon, and Millennial Socialism

    Vom: 27.2.2019
  11. WeWork, and Can the Government Really Print as Much Money as It Wants?

    Vom: 20.2.2019
  12. Medicare for All, plus Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Amazon HQ2, Marie Kondo, Toys, Spotify and Podcasting, and More

    Vom: 13.2.2019
  13. Fears About Huawei, and Facebook Earnings (What We Learned)

    Vom: 6.2.2019
  14. Taxing the Rich, and the “Woke” Advertising Trend

    Vom: 30.1.2019
  15. High CEO Churn, and the 401(k) Turns 40

    Vom: 23.1.2019
  16. Apple in China, and Payday Lending

    Vom: 16.1.2019
  17. New Year’s Crystal Ball Episode

    Vom: 2.1.2019
  18. 2018 Awards Episode

    Vom: 26.12.2018
  19. Not Everyone Can Build a Digital Ad Business, Plus Debating Radical Transparency

    Vom: 19.12.2018
  20. The Student Debt Crisis, and the FIRE Movement

    Vom: 12.12.2018

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Harvard Business School professors discuss and debate current events that sit at the crossroads of business and culture. Youngme Moon, Mihir Desai, and Felix Oberholzer-Gee engage in a spirited discussion on a range of topics torn from the headlines — from Facebook, to free trade, to the #MeToo movement. Informed by their unique expertise as professors at one of the world’s leading business schools, their takes are always surprising, unconventional, and insightful.

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