on

Sally Ride on Breaking Ground in Aerospace and Education

Sally Ride, former NASA astronaut and founder of Sally Ride Science.




on

What’s Wrong with Today’s Entrepreneurs

Dan McGinn, HBR senior editor and author of the article "Too Many Pivots, Too Little Passion."




on

Nate Silver on Predicting the Unpredictable

Nate Silver, statistician and founder of The New York Times political blog FiveThirtyEight.com.




on

Ernest Shackleton’s Lessons for Leaders in Harsh Climates

Nancy Koehn, Harvard Business School historian and editor of "The Story of American Business."




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Jeff Bezos on Leading for the Long-Term at Amazon

Jeff Bezos, CEO of Amazon.com.




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Why Organizations Are the Way They Are

Tim Sullivan, editorial director of Harvard Business Review Press and coauthor of "The Org: The Underlying Logic of the Office."




on

Whole Foods’ John Mackey on Capitalism’s Moral Code

John Mackey, co-CEO of Whole Foods Market and coauthor of "Conscious Capitalism: Liberating the Heroic Spirit of Business."




on

Encyclopaedia Britannica’s Transformation

Jorge Cauz, president of Encyclopaedia Britannica.




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Mary Robinson on Influence Without Authority

Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland.




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Solving America’s Innovation Crisis

Bruce Nussbaum, professor at Parsons The New School of Design and author of "Creative Intelligence: Harnessing the Power to Create, Connect, and Inspire."




on

Take Control of Your Time

Elizabeth Grace Saunders, founder and CEO of Real Life E and author of "The 3 Secrets to Effective Time Investment."




on

Building a Company Everyone Loves

Rob Goffee and Gareth Jones, authors of the HBR article "Creating the Best Workplace on Earth."




on

Yes, Business Relies on Nature

Mark Tercek, CEO of The Nature Conservancy and author of "Nature's Fortune: How Business and Society Thrive by Investing in Nature."




on

Maya Angelou on Courage and Creativity

Dr. Maya Angelou, renowned author.




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The Secret to Effective Motivation

Heidi Grant Halvorson and E. Tory Higgins, authors of "Focus: Use Different Ways of Seeing the World to Power Success and Influence."




on

Why Some Companies Last and Others Don’t

Michael Raynor, director at Deloitte Services LP and coauthor of the HBR article "Three Rules for Making a Company Truly Great."




on

Read Fiction and Be a Better Leader

Joseph Badaracco, Harvard Business School professor.




on

Attacking the Sleep Conspiracy

Russell Sanna, executive director of the Division of Sleep Medicine at Harvard Medical School.




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Why We Love to Hate Consultants

Dan McGinn, HBR senior editor.




on

The Rise of the Megacorporation

Richard Adelstein, professor of economics at Wesleyan University and author of "The Rise of Planning in Industrial America, 1864-1914."




on

Clay Christensen and Dominic Barton on Consulting’s Disruption

The HBS sage and McKinsey head discuss how to stay on top in a rapidly changing industry.




on

Christine Lagarde on the World Economy and the IMF’s Future

The managing director of the International Monetary Fund talks with HBR editor in chief Adi Ignatius.




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Scott Adams on Whether Management Really Matters

The Dilbert creator talks with HBR senior editor Dan McGinn.




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What the Best Decision Makers Do

Ram Charan, coauthor of "Boards that Lead," talks about what he's learned in three decades of helping executives make tough decisions.




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Feeling Conflicted? Get Out of Your Own Way

Erica Ariel Fox, who teaches negotiation at Harvard Law School, discusses how to resolve inner conflict to lead wisely and live well.




on

Get a Dysfunctional Team Back on Track

Roger Schwarz, author of "Smart Leaders, Smarter Teams," explains how to build trust and accountability on your team.




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The Economics of Online Dating

Paul Oyer, Stanford economist and the author of "Everything I Ever Needed to Know About Economics I Learned from Online Dating," explains the marketplace of online love.




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The Condensed January-February 2014 Magazine

Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.




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Salman Khan on the Online Learning Revolution

The founder of the Khan Academy talks with HBR senior editor Alison Beard.




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We Need Economic Forecasters Even Though We Can’t Trust Them

Walter Friedman, director of the Business History Initiative at Harvard Business School, on the pioneers of market prediction.




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Is Work-Family Conflict Reaching a Tipping Point?

Stewart D. Friedman, Wharton professor and author of "Baby Bust," presents new research.




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Our Bizarre Fascination with Stories of Doom

Andrew O'Connell, HBR editor, explains why we find tales of disaster so compelling.




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Ruth Reichl on Challenging Career Moves

The renowned author and former editor of Gourmet talks about the magazine's closure and her recent transition to fiction writing.




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Cross-Culture Work in a Global Economy

Erin Meyer, affiliate professor at INSEAD and author of "The Culture Map," on why memorizing a list of etiquette rules doesn't work.




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Succeeding Quietly in Our Recognition-Obsessed Culture

David Zweig, author of "Invisibles," on employees who value good work over self-promotion.




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The Condensed July-August 2014 Issue

Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.




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Marc Andreessen and Jim Barksdale on How to Make Money

The tech luminaries on bundling and unbundling in the digital age.




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The Dangers of Confidence

Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, professor at University College London, on how confidence masks incompetence.




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The Condensed September 2014 Issue

Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.




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How to Stop Corporate Inversions

Bill George and Mihir Desai, professors at Harvard Business School, explain why our corporate tax code is driving American business overseas.




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The Fall of the Talent Economy?

Roger Martin, former dean of the Rotman School of Management, on why talent's powerful economic position is unsustainable.​




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The Condensed October 2014 Issue

Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.




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How Silicon Valley Became Uncool

Walter Frick, HBR editor, explains why we valorize tech heroes from the past, but scoff at today's entrepreneurs.




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Focus More on Value Capture

Stefan Michel, professor at IMD, says your business should rethink how it captures value, not just how it creates it.




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The Condensed November 2014 Issue

Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.




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How to Change Someone’s Behavior with Minimal Effort

Steve J. Martin, coauthor of "The Small Big: Small Changes That Spark Big Influence," on the little things that persuade.




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Boris Johnson on Influence and Ambition

The mayor of London explains why Churchill is a role model and whether his aspirations include the Prime Minister's office.




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The Condensed December 2014 Issue

Amy Bernstein, editor of HBR, offers executive summaries of the major features.




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Making Good Decisions

Stanford's Ron Howard, one of the fathers of decision analysis, explains how it's done.




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Explaining Silicon Valley’s Success

AnnaLee Saxenian, author of the classic book "Regional Advantage," still thinks the area's future is bright.