Business Models
The Best of This Week
Winning back the gig economy, competing with revenue models, and managing teams in uncertain times.
Winning back the gig economy, competing with revenue models, and managing teams in uncertain times.
Risk mitigation is an important new priority for business operations during the pandemic.
Four team management practices have been key to navigating the initial pivot to virtual workplaces.
Universities worldwide scramble to create new learning environments in response to COVID-19.
Artificial intelligence can give businesses a competitive advantage during (and despite) the COVID-19 pandemic.
Digitalization can’t deliver agility or reliability unless you first determine data access, quality, and lineage.
Pivoting in the pandemic, assessing supplier diversity initiatives, and creating a framework for discussing race.
Often dismissed as a “feel good” option, B2B supplier diversity initiatives can reap financial rewards.
Identifying postcrisis opportunities, marketing to nonbinary genders, and prioritizing during supply chain disruption.
Past disruptions reveal how both ends of the supply chain can best handle product shortages.
MIT researcher Kristine Dery shares how to make remote work an opportunity for employees to excel.
Computer scientists typically lead AI development, but teams with diverse expertise can build better systems.
It’s time to rethink resilience, in the context of sustainability and the current COVID-19 pandemic.
Our panel of academic experts discusses whether COVID-19 may push companies to migrate out of cities.
To compete digitally, leaders must attack the complexity that comes from layers of legacy systems.
The world’s unbanked populations represent a compelling social need and a tremendous economic opportunity.
A webinar describes how to develop AI customer service chatbots that meet customer expectations.
Adjusting business strategies and plotting comebacks in the face of uncertainty.
What leaders can learn from near-real-time disaster monitoring data.
The business climate remains unpredictable, but supply chain leaders should plot their comebacks.