The official fan page for Harvard Business Review on Facebook. Please keep your postings on our Wall related to HBR. Follow us on Twitter at http://twitter.com/harvard biz. Thanks!
Informations
- Création :
- 1922

Jared Welkin
Harvard Business Review :
LEVERAGE ACADEMY, LLC
http://leverageacademy.com
http://leverageacademy.com/blog
Please join FBook Group!
Search Leverage Academy!
Current offices in Boston, NY & Philadelphia.
Opening offices in the UAE, St. Peterburg, Bombay, and Dallas.
Learn analyst and associate level skills that you can only pick up on Wall Street. (In...vestment Banking, Private Equity, Hedge Funds, Leveraged Finance, Restructuring, Strategic Consulting, Corporate Law)
LA,LLC is the only program on Wall Street that trains young professionals in excel modeling, capital structure enhancement, restructuring, sales & trading, underwriting, and industry analysis. The curriculum offers training in energy, telecom, and industrials banking as well,giving a competitive edge to young professionals eager to differentiate themselves in the recruiting process.
leverageacademy.comhttp

Harvard Business Review Do you believe in “the wisdom of crowds?” Andrew McAfee , author of Enterprise 2.0, explores how our collective knowledge can create more accurate predictions — from stocks to securities to hangovers. When have you seen the wisdom of crowds in action?
blogs.harvardbusiness.org
A couple weeks back I taught sessions on Enterprise 2.0 to executives from a very large corporation. I emphasized that one of the benefits of E2.0 is the ability to harness collective intelligence, or the wisdom of crowds . ...

Harvard Business Review HBR Question of the Week: Which of Kotter's eight steps to successful transformation is most challenging for your company? Click the link below to take the poll and download a free copy of "Leading Change: Why Transformation Efforts Fail" by John Kotter.

Harvard Business Review World-class athlete Tiger Woods is famous for spending hours reviewing his performances on videotape to look for ways to improve. MIT researcher Michael Schrage says that we could all benefit from such self-scrutiny at work, with the help of new video technologies. Great--or scary--idea? Would you be brave enough to w...atch a video of yourself participating in a meeting?
bit.ly
Anyone who's seen video of themselves swinging a tennis racket or golf club — or, more painful yet, giving a talk — knows that sickening shock of (un)recognition: Is that really me? Is that really how I look?
Afficher davantagePartager sur Facebook
Faites glisser le bouton gris ci-dessus sur votre barre de signets pour partager rapidement des contenus avec vos amis.










