MIT Sloan Management Review The New Business of Innovation
- AI Trends in 2026: Key Insights for Leaderspor MIT Sloan Management Review. el enero 22, 2026 a las 12:00 pm
AI investment continues to fuel the U.S. economy, but many expect it to slow down dramatically in 2026. Agentic AI was the hot topic of 2025, but it remains an expensive early-stage experiment that’s not quite ready for mainstream use. What does this mean for leaders looking to guide their teams? In this video, MIT
- What AI Can Teach Us About Designing Better KPIspor Balázs Kovács. <p>Balázs Kovács is a professor of organizational behavior at the Yale School of Management. His research focuses on innovation, organizational design, social networks, and the use of AI in organizations.</p> el enero 21, 2026 a las 12:00 pm
Gary Waters/Ikon Images In 2016, Wells Fargo found itself embroiled in scandal when headlines revealed that its employees, under pressure to meet aggressive sales targets, had opened millions of unauthorized customer accounts. The root cause wasn’t just unethical behavior but a flawed approach to performance measurement. When Wells Fargo’s leadership incentivized employees to sell eight
- Connecting Language and (Artificial) Intelligence: Princeton’s Tom Griffithspor Sam Ransbotham. <p><cite>Me, Myself, and AI</cite> is a podcast produced by <cite>MIT Sloan Management Review</cite> and hosted by Sam Ransbotham. It is engineered by David Lishansky and produced by Allison Ryder.</p> <p><a href="https://sloanreview.mit.edu/sam-ransbotham/">Sam Ransbotham</a> is a professor in the information systems department at the Carroll School of Management at Boston College, as well as guest editor for <cite>MIT Sloan Management Review</cite>’s Artificial Intelligence and Business Strategy Big Ideas initiative.</p> el enero 20, 2026 a las 12:00 pm
In this bonus episode of the Me, Myself, and AI podcast, Princeton University professor and artificial intelligence researcher Tom Griffiths joins host Sam Ransbotham to unpack The Laws of Thought, his new book exploring how math has been used for centuries to understand how minds — human and machine — actually work. Tom walks through
- Turn Customer Complaints Into Innovation Blueprintspor Lohyd Terrier and Béatrice Schaad Noble. <p><a href="https://www.ehl.edu/en/faculty-research/our-faculty/terrier-lohyd" target="_blank">Lohyd Terrier</a> is an associate professor at EHL Hospitality Business School in Lausanne, Switzerland. <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/b%C3%A9atrice-schaad-50994622" target="_blank">Béatrice Schaad Noble</a> is a professor in hospital relationships at the University of Lausanne and at the Institute of the Humanities in Medicine of the Vaud University Hospital (CHUV) in Lausanne.</p> el enero 19, 2026 a las 12:00 pm
Carolyn Geason-Beissel/MIT SMR | Getty Images Most organizations treat customer complaints as a source of frustration to be contained, apologized for, and moved off the books as swiftly as possible. But what if those complaints are actually a practical source of innovation? In other words, what about treating complaints as an early-warning system and a
- Leaders at All Levels: 7 Strategies to Give Your Team Real Powerpor MIT Sloan Management Review. el enero 15, 2026 a las 12:00 pm
If you’re lucky, your team has talent. What they may lack is the freedom to use it fully. Distributed leadership can unlock employee potential that has been stifled by a traditional workplace hierarchy, by giving teams the autonomy to react quickly and innovate rapidly. This is what the MIT Sloan Management Review video series Leaders
