Leading Change
Business, Politics, and Cultivating Resilience
MIT SMR’s fall 2024 issue highlights the need for personal and organizational resilience amid global uncertainty.
MIT SMR’s fall 2024 issue highlights the need for personal and organizational resilience amid global uncertainty.
This issue of MIT SMR focuses on the leadership qualities that enable both their businesses and employees to grow.
Stronger ethical leadership at some pharma companies may have meant more equitable access to COVID-19 vaccines.
CEOs can foster a more effective C-suite by better balancing the tension between collaboration and competition.
Taking a strengths-based approach to individual development and team-building can boost innovation and inclusion.
Defining constraints can help large companies foster both employee autonomy and organizational and strategic alignment.
Businesses must thoroughly evaluate the risk of deploying a new technology to avoid reputational and financial damage.
As companies proceed through the business life cycle, they need to adapt their strategies to fit the stage they’re in.
Biometric technologies raise new issues of surveillance and privacy that can put customer trust at risk.
Learn how one bank boosted collaboration and revenue by training leaders in psychological safety and perspective-taking.
When you just don’t get along with a colleague, reset the relationship by focusing on trust.
This short video explains how to build a better team by surfacing each player’s unique powers.
A legal expert weighs in on the possible impact of the FTC’s noncompete rule and whether it will actually take effect.
Presentations are most convincing when they strike the right balance of emotional and intellectual appeal.
Learn to address and prevent both overt and subtle harassment that can hurt your credibility and fuel a toxic culture.
Experts share compelling arguments for and against the creation of a CAIO role to manage AI across an organization.
Learn strategies to improve Gen Z’s satisfaction with hybrid work arrangements in this short video.
To get employees with not-invented-here syndrome to open up to new ideas, companies may have to incentivize or push them.
Companies find greater success with hybrid work schedules when they make in-person time count.
Which allyship actions will help your organization the most? This three-part framework can help you decide.