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Chanel CEO Leena Nair visited Microsoft to discuss AI, she told Stanford's business school. Chanel is preparing for AI integration and testing experiments including chatbots, Nair said. AdvertisementChatGPT may be one of the major contenders in the AI race, but Chanel CEO Leena Nair was left slightly less than impressed by it during her trip to Microsoft headquarters. "And we're like, 'Show us a picture of a senior leadership team from Chanel visiting Microsoft' — it is all men in suits." Yes, 76% of my organization is women, 96% of my clients are women, female CEO," Nair said.
Persons: Leena Nair, Nair, Chanel, , you've Organizations: Microsoft, Service, Stanford Graduate School, ChatGPT, Chanel, Unilever, Business Locations: Seattle
Ratan Tata, the former Tata Group chairman who put a staid and sprawling Indian conglomerate on the global stage with a string of high-profile acquisitions, has died, the Tata Group said in a statement late on Wednesday. Ratan Tata "was a visionary business leader, a compassionate soul and an extraordinary human being," Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on social media platform X. He founded telecommunications firm Tata Teleservices in 1996 and took IT firm Tata Consultancy Services, the group's cash cow, public in 2004. Tata Motors then acquired British luxury auto brands Jaguar and Land Rover from Ford Motor Co in 2008 for $2.3 billion. The Tata Group said Mistry had failed to turnaround poorly performing businesses while Mistry accused Ratan Tata, who was chairman emeritus of the conglomerate, of interfering and creating an alternate power center at the group.
Persons: Ratan Tata, Ratan, Narendra Modi, Telco, J.R.D, Tata, Tata Teleservices, Tetley, Ratan Tata's, Cyrus Mistry, Shapoorji Pallonji, Mistry, Ola Organizations: Tata Group, Ratan Naval Tata, Cornell University, Tata, Tata Motors Ltd, Tata Steel Ltd, National Radio & Electronics Company, Tata Consultancy Services, Stanford Graduate School of Business, Corus, Tata Motors, Rover, Ford Motor Co, India —, Tata Sons, Urban Company Locations: India, Dutch, Indian
Cherie Luo worked at a matcha farm as part of a requirement during her time at Stanford Graduate Business School. She graduated from Stanford Graduate School of Business in June. In order to graduate, Stanford MBA students are required to fulfill an international program known as the Global Management Immersion Experience. However, the opportunity to work at a matcha farm in Japan for a month stood out. I'm starting a matcha business with my sisterThe matcha farm was located in Wazuka, a town an hour from Kyoto.
Persons: Cherie Luo, Luo, , matcha, Daiki Tanaka, san, that's, we've Organizations: Stanford Graduate Business School, Luo, Service, Stanford Graduate School of Business, Stanford, Global Management, LinkedIn Locations: Silicon Valley, Long Island, Manhattan, Asia, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, New York, Flushing , Queens, Wazuka, Kyoto
States of flow can lead to productive work sessions or explain your compulsion to endlessly scroll through social media. The act of pulling the lever turns an uncertain outcome into a certain one. Binary tasks, where the only outcomes are success or failure, aren't very conducive to flow, Melnikoff says. have a yes-or-no outcome, you're better off focusing on a more ambiguous number of consecutive successes or failures, Melnikoff says. "People value the sense that they're being productive and one with the activity that they're engaging in.
Persons: David Melnikoff, Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi —, Melnikoff, doesn't Organizations: Stanford Graduate School of Business, CNBC Locations: States, they're
One of the world's largest e-commerce companies is emerging as a top pick on Wall Street as investors look for tech opportunities beyond the Magnificent Seven. "There was no venture capital for Latin America. Last year, venture-backed companies in Latin America raised $3.3 billion across nearly 1,000 deals, according to PitchBook. E-commerce and online payments are steadily growing, and Latin America has a young, mobile-savvy population of more than 600 million people. "When you look at the penetration of e-commerce in Latin America, it's still quite low compared to the U.S., Europe or Asia," Galperin told CNBC.
Persons: Marcos Gaplerin, Brad Gerstner, Gerstner, CNBC's Scott Wapner, Goldman Sachs, It's, Buenos Aires Galperin, Galperin, MercadoLibre, We've, it's Organizations: Nasdaq, Wall Street, Stanford Graduate School of Business, CNBC, Stanford, eBay Locations: Delaware, Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, Chile, South America, Mercado Pago, Buenos Aires, Palo Alto , California, California, America, Silicon Valley, New York, Sand, West, Latin America, U.S, Europe, Asia
I wanted to work in technology, and I wanted to work in business, so I went to get an MBA, as many people do. Coming out of Cornell's business school in 1999, I had a choice between traditional routes like consulting or brand management. Since then, I've spent 25 years working in leadership roles at tech companies, including Yahoo, Google, and Facebook. Sometimes, a demotion might be the right moveAt various stages in my career, I've had those kinds of crossroad moments. So, I'm teaching people how to scale companies while I'm scaling my own company, and I'm teaching people how to be great leaders while I'm building a company that helps people be great leaders.
Persons: , Jennifer Dulski, It's, I've, That's, you've Organizations: Service, Rising Team, Stanford Graduate School of Business, Yahoo, Google, Facebook, Business, Rising, Stanford
At the time, I hadn't even heard of the term "executive coach." Here's how an executive coach changed my company and myself forever and why executive coaching is still an important part of our continued success. Another lesson was that I had to set very clear goals. AdvertisementIf you can be super clear on where you're going and what your goals are, you're going to be 20 times more effective. You're going to get that hour back 20 fold, maybe even a hundredfold.
Persons: , Graham Weaver, Alex Nicoll, JP Flaum, Graham, Flaum, I'd, We're, It's, I've Organizations: Service, Alpine Investors, Business, Stanford Graduate School of Business ., Alpine, Graduate School of Business Locations: Denver , Colorado, Dallas, Chicago, Washington ,
A good leader can't be afraid to get their hands dirty, according to Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang. Years later, he would hatch the idea for Nvidia with his co-founders in a booth at the same Denny's where he'd once cleared tables, washed dishes and even cleaned toilets. "To me, no task is beneath me because, remember, I used to be a dishwasher [and] I used to clean toilets," Huang said in a March interview at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. Whenever possible, the longtime CEO likes to show his employees his reasoning for a suggestion or solution he offers. That structure improves Nvidia's performance by allowing information and strategy to flow more directly between Huang and Nvidia's other leaders, according to Huang.
Persons: Jensen Huang, Long, Huang, I've Organizations: Nvidia, Forbes, Stanford Graduate School of Business, Stanford, California Institute of Technology, CNBC Locations: Denny's
Manage a lot of peopleHuang believes a CEO should have more direct reports than anyone else in an organization. He, in fact, has more than 50 direct reports, considered an unusually high number for any manager. Advertisement"The more direct reports the CEO has, the less layers are in the company," Huang said in an interview at The New York Times DealBook Summit in 2023. Skip the 1:1 meetingsHuang has said he doesn't have one-on-one meetings with his many direct reports. Advertisement"Almost everything that I say, I say to everybody all at the same time," he said at Stripe Sessions 2024.
Persons: , Huang, Skip, You've, Insider's Jyoti Mann, Nvidian, I've, It's Organizations: Service, Apple, Microsoft, Business, The New York Times DealBook Summit, Stanford's Graduate School of Business, Stripe, Nvidia, Yorker, Stanford Graduate School of Business
Getting your colleagues and bosses to listen to your ideas at work doesn't have to be hard — if you know what to say. You can gain influence at work by incorporating a handful of specific words into your vocabulary, according to a variety of experts and research. "Like suggests a personal preference, while recommend suggests others will enjoy it as well," Berger tells Make It. "If you're willing to say not just that France was fun, but it is fun; not just that this book had a great plot, but it has a great plot; when you're generalizing beyond the past, it suggests you're more confident or certain about what you're saying," Berger told the "Knowledge at Wharton" podcast last year. We'll teach you how to speak clearly and confidently, calm your nerves, what to say and not say, and body language techniques to make a great first impression.
Persons: Matt Abrahams, Abrahams, Wharton, Jonah Berger, Berger, , endorsers, Pryor Organizations: Stanford University, CNBC, Harvard University, Xerox, Wharton, Stanford Graduate School of Business Locations: France, Philadelphia
Stanford professor on the future of banking regulation
  + stars: | 2024-06-26 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailStanford professor on the future of banking regulationAnat Admati, George G.C. Parker professor of finance and economics at Stanford Graduate School of Business, joins 'Money Movers' to discuss the future of banking regulation.
Persons: Admati, George G.C, Parker Organizations: Stanford, Stanford Graduate School of Business
He landed on an option that's becoming increasingly popular with top MBAs and entrepreneurs: launching his own search fund. AdvertisementHere are three reasons why he decided on a search fund:Shift in the search fund businessSingh graduated from Harvard's MBA program in 2022. "Historically, tech people have stayed away from search funds because it's not exciting to them," he said. These could be projects that convert on-premise software companies to cloud companies or projects that change one-time software purchases to yearly subscriptions. Singh said he knew of about 20 MBAs from his Harvard cohort who started search funds, out of about 800 in his class.
Persons: , Gaurav Singh, Singh, that's, he'd, wouldn't, Harvard Organizations: Service, Harvard Business School, Business, Stanford Graduate School of Business, Stanford, Investors Locations: Toronto, Stanford, Midwest
He landed on an option that's becoming increasingly popular with top MBAs and entrepreneurs: launching his own search fund. AdvertisementHere are three reasons why he decided on a search fund:Shift in the search fund businessSingh graduated from Harvard's MBA program in 2022. "Historically, tech people have stayed away from search funds because it's not exciting to them," he said. These could be projects that convert on-premise software companies to cloud companies or projects that change one-time software purchases to yearly subscriptions. Singh said he knew of about 20 MBAs from his Harvard cohort who started search funds, out of about 800 in his class.
Persons: , Gaurav Singh, Singh, that's, he'd, wouldn't, Harvard Organizations: Service, Harvard Business School, Business, Stanford Graduate School of Business, Stanford, Investors Locations: Toronto, Stanford, Midwest
Practical realists and head-in-the-cloud dreamers don't always get along in the workplace. The problem: You need both for your business to succeed, according to Beth Viner, a managing director and partner at Boston Consulting Group's tech, design and business unit. At times, that puts them at odds with their realist counterparts, the "doers" who build and sustain companies. In her talk, Viner largely addressed the dreamers in the room — but the lessons she shared are applicable to everyone. Here are her top three tips for working with those colleagues you may find the most frustrating.
Persons: Beth Viner, Viner, York & San Francisco, DON'T, she's Organizations: Boston Consulting, Stanford Graduate School of Business, York & San, doer Locations: York
Before co-founding Netflix, Reed Hastings thought another of his business ideas would become a household name. Specifically, it was a "foot mouse" — where users could control a computer cursor with their feet, Hastings said at a recent Stanford Graduate School of Business event. "It was a terrible idea, but I was equally committed to that terrible idea as I was to Netflix," he said. In the case of the foot mouse, Hastings was a Stanford graduate student at the time, working toward his master's in computer science. He even hired a mechanical engineering graduate student to mockup a prototype.
Persons: Reed Hastings, Hastings, he's Organizations: Netflix, Stanford Graduate School of, Wired, Stanford
Read previewOn Monday night, the biggest fashion event of the year took place in New York City: the Met Gala . AdvertisementBut few made as many waves as Mona Patel, an entrepreneur who wore a custom Iris van Herpen gown to her first Met Gala. Mona Patel attends the 2024 Met Gala. Mona Patel turned heads at the 2024 Met GalaThanks to the dramatic ensemble she wore to make her Met Gala debut, Patel was among the most talked-about attendees of the event. Mona Patel at the 2024 Met Gala.
Persons: , Mona Patel, Iris van Herpen, Patel, Sean Zanni, Vogue, Anna Wintour, Emma, John Shearer, Casey Curran, Mike Coppola, Chris Martin, Edgar Martin, Sidney Jamila, Roach — Zendaya's, Roach Organizations: Service, Metropolitan Museum, Art's Costume, Business, Rutgers University, Haute Mona, Forbes, LinkedIn, Harvard Business School, Stanford Graduate School of Business, MIT Sloan School of Management, CareFirst, Couture, Vogue India Locations: New York City, India, Florida, Mumbai
A general view of the atmosphere during The SDI Takeover @ Dave & Buster's in Los Angeles on June 23, 2022Arcade giant Dave & Buster's is taking its games to a new level by offering social wagering on its app. Customers can soon make a friendly $5 wager on a Hot Shots basketball game, a bet on a Skee-Ball competition or on another arcade game. Dave & Buster's, started in 1982, now has more than 222 venues in North America, offering everything from bowling to laser tag, plus virtual reality. The company says it has five million loyalty members and 30 million unique visitors to its locations each year. "We're thrilled to work with Lucra to bring this exciting new gaming platform to our customers,"said Simon Murray, senior vice president of entertainment and attractions at Dave & Buster's.
Persons: Buster's, We're, Lucra, Simon Murray, Dylan Robbins, Michael Madding, Robbins, Madding, Goldman Sachs, Marc Lasry, John Isner, Julie, Zach Ertz Organizations: SDI, Stanford Graduate School, Business, Raptor, SeventySix, Dupr, @ & ' Locations: Los Angeles, North America
Read previewA trio of top Wall Street bosses is facing investor agitation this spring over their jobs. The attempts to add more independent oversight to the firms' boards of directors is a public rebuke to those CEOs. Last week, top proxy firms Glass Lewis and Institutional Shareholder Services recommended Goldman and BofA separate their CEO-chair jobs. AdvertisementA cyclical history of splitting CEO and chairman rolesThese proposals cycle in and out of fashion, and Wall Street has seen plenty of similar ballot questions, from shareholders large and small. Large companies — like the trio of Wall Street firms now — were targeted much more often for shareholder proposals to split the jobs than the small companies.
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, David Solomon, Larry Fink, Brian Moynihan, Glass Lewis, Goldman, BofA, Moynihan Organizations: Service, Goldman, BlackRock, Bank of America, Business, Institutional, Exxon, Stanford Graduate School of Business, Stanford, Wall Street
But beware, says Stanford University communication expert Matt Abrahams: They can get you into trouble, by negatively impacting the way other people see you. Crutch phrases often include "hedging language" that water down your sentences and make you seem less smart, he says. "[They] can actually undermine our competence and intelligence," Abrahams, a communication consultant and organizational behavior lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, tells CNBC Make It. "Saying something like, 'So what I hear you saying is,' demonstrates that you've actually really listened to the person. Plus, sign up for CNBC Make It's newsletter to get tips and tricks for success at work, with money and in life.
Persons: Matt Abrahams, Abrahams, I'd, you've, Wharton, I've Organizations: Stanford University, Stanford Graduate School of Business, CNBC, Harvard
It could also mean taking a few minutes to click around the deductions page on your tax software to make sure you're not leaving money on the table. Here are three tax moves that experts say people tend to overlook. If you didn't hit your maximum contribution for 2023, you can retroactively direct funds to those accounts for the 2023 tax year. If you have children or other dependents, for instance, your tax prep software will likely guide you to the Child Tax Credit and the Child and Dependent Care Credit. "You're not going to enter something in wrong and the program's not going to give you the Child Tax Credit.
Persons: Mark Jaeger, Hunt, Jaeger, Ed deHaan, deHaan, de Haan Organizations: Child Tax, Care, American Opportunity, Tax, Stanford Graduate School of Business, Research Locations: TaxAct
Some forms that may not have been on your radar last year could drastically raise or lower your bill for tax year 2023, experts say. Here are three tax documents you may have forgotten about last year that could be important this tax season. 1099-INT for savings accountsYou always owed federal income tax on interest from savings accounts. Even if you forgot to report a chunk of your interest income, "the main story is not to panic. For 2023, you may receive a Form 1099-MISC or 1099-B from the financial institution you use to trade crypto.
Persons: Ed deHaan, you've, Mark Jaeger, Jaeger, Matt Metras Organizations: Stanford Graduate School of Business, Federal Reserve, IRS, MDM Financial Services, CNBC Locations: TaxAct
In 2018, Mr. Silva enrolled at the Stanford Graduate School of Business with the goal of starting his own company. “I was going to live the Stanford dream,” he said. Instead of starting a company from scratch — Mr. Silva had co-founded one before business school and even been its chief executive — he could buy one and run it. Mr. Silva, 34, was intrigued. After raising a search fund of more than $30 million from a small group of investors, Mr. Silva bought MásLabor, a Virginia consulting firm specializing in employment visas, in July 2021.
Persons: Edward Silva, Silva, , , , . Silva, V.C.s Organizations: Stanford Graduate School of Business, Stanford, MásLabor Locations: Virginia
You don't have to be a CEO, or even a manager, to be influential at the office. Getting your coworkers to listen to and support your ideas boils down to just three emotional intelligence techniques, says Stanford University lecturer and communication expert Matt Abrahams. The advice is timely, Abrahams adds: Hybrid and remote work mean most entry- and mid-level Gen Z and millennial employees get less face time with their bosses. "You really are forging your own way and need to get others to at least support, if not follow, the things you're trying to do." Find alliesWhenever you find yourself in a room of people who don't usually work with, you have an opportunity to form new relationships.
Persons: Stanford Graduate School of Business Matt Abrahams, Matt Abrahams, Abrahams, I'm Organizations: Stanford Graduate School of Business, New York Marriott Marquis Hotel, Stanford University, CNBC Locations: New York City
Hyundai Motor Group is the world's third-largest automaker in the world by volume — but it wasn't always so. The three auto brands in the automaker's stable — Hyundai, Kia and Genesis — are nipping at the heels of well-established competitors, and winning an ever-growing list of industry awards. Tesla still dominates the electric vehicle industry, but Hyundai Motor Group is the second best-selling EV manufacturer in the U.S."On the electrification side, Hyundai has done a really great job," said Sam Abuelsamid, principal research analyst at Guidehouse Insights. "I think Hyundai Motor Group isn't a car company," said Jose Munoz, the global president and chief operating officer at Hyundai. Watch the video to learn more about how Hyundai became the third-largest global automaker.
Persons: William Barnett, Tesla, Sam Abuelsamid, They've, Jose Munoz Organizations: Hyundai Motor, Hyundai, Kia, American, Stanford Graduate School of Business, Guidehouse, United Auto Workers Locations: America, U.S, Singapore
While some optimists focus on AI's benefits in education, others fear that using AI in classrooms could catalyze cheating and misinformation. This is where AI literacy can be useful. Created within the Stanford Graduate School of Education, CRAFT is a collaborative effort of Stanford education researchers, software developers, and curriculum developers. Lee also told BI that AI literacy in classrooms "should involve recognition of where AI can be effective and where it requires extra vigilance." He said the school also hopes to grow CRAFT's teacher codesign fellowship through which fellows develop AI literacy lessons.
Persons: , OpenAI, Victor Lee, Lee, Matthew Ratz, Ratz, ChatGPT, Erin Reddick, who's, Reddick, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Organizations: Stanford, Service, Allied Market Research, Arizona State University, ASU, Stanford Graduate School of Education, Montgomery College, TED, Ratz, Houghton Locations: North America, Jasper, Houghton Mifflin
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