Business and Policy Leader Events

NYU Stern Ally Week 2018

Ally Week promotional sign
Joining the NYU community in creating opportunities to deepen understanding of others' experiences, NYU Stern will host its sixth annual Ally Week from April 9-13. 
School News

Center for Business and Human Rights Deputy Director Paul Barrett highlights the significance of the anniversary of the 2013 Rana Plaza factory collapse in Bangladesh

Excerpt from PBS -- "The garment industry employs millions of people in Bangladesh, across about 7,000 facilities, said Paul Barrett, deputy director of New York University’s Stern Center for Business and Human Rights, which has been following Bangladesh’s garment industry since the factory collapse. 'The remembrance of what happened in April 2013 is very powerful and still symbolizes a lot to the people of Bangladesh.'"
Faculty News

Professor Nouriel Roubini shares his views on US-China trade tensions

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "The... optimists say that Trump is just trying to increase his bargaining power and is using these threats as a way of opening up China. I have a slightly more pessimistic view because the economic nationalists are in and those who are internationalist are out [of the Trump administration]."
Business and Policy Leader Events

26th Annual Stern Women in Business Conference

"Transform the Present. Shape the Future" conference sign
On April 6, Stern Women in Business (SWIB) will host its 26th annual Stern Women in Business Conference entitled, "Transform the Present. Shape the Future"
Faculty News

Professor Ian D'Souza shares insights on behavioral finance and family offices

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Excerpt from Campden FB -- "For family offices that are a number of generations removed from the founder, the importance is to have a board or investment committee that can review the actions of the family office investment staff over time to ensure there is continuous adaption relative to the office’s long-term objectives."
Faculty News

Professor John Horton's joint research on rating inflation on online platforms is spotlighted

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Excerpt from Quartz -- "How did Uber’s ratings become more inflated than grades at Harvard? That’s the topic of a new paper, 'Reputation Inflation,' from NYU’s John Horton and Apostolos Filippas, and Collage.com CEO Joseph Golden. The paper argues that online platforms, especially peer-to-peer ones like Uber and Airbnb, are highly susceptible to ratings inflation because, well, it’s uncomfortable for one person to leave another a bad review."
Faculty News

Professor Anindya Ghose's comments on mobile payments in India are highlighted

Excerpt from InvestorPlace -- “Users will increasingly message because of the presence of payments on the same platform, and they will increasingly use payments because of the presence of messaging on the same platform.”
School News

Undergraduate student Alex Grieco interviews Professor Joseph Foudy about Stern's Barr Family International Studies Program (ISP)

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "Physically going to these countries helps students understand the consumer and regulatory environments and is especially helpful in understanding niche markets. Additionally, students don’t often have the experience of seeing the business on the ground (for example, an operating factory) and experience the customer behavior in different countries."
School News

NYU Stern Students Win First Place in UCLA Anderson Fink Center Stock Pitch Competition

NYU Stern students William Li (MBA ‘18), Charles Perron-Piché (MBA ‘19), Diven Sharma (MBA ‘18) and Tim Zhao (MBA ‘19) pose with their prize
A team of NYU Stern MBA students won the eighth annual UCLA Anderson Fink Center Stock Pitch Competition. The team, including William Li (MBA ‘18), Charles Perron-Piché (MBA ‘19), Diven Sharma (MBA ‘18) and Tim Zhao (MBA ‘19), was awarded $6,000 for their presentation, and earned Stern’s first win in the competition. 
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway discusses President Trump's approach to criticizing Amazon

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Excerpt from Fox Business -- "'If he was serious about this, he would have made the argument against all of big tech, and he would have privately gone to some Democratic and Republican senators and made it a bipartisan issue,' he said. 'The place to go gangster on these guys is through red state [attorneys general]. That’s what he should have done.'"
Faculty News

Professor Karen Brenner discusses WPP's possible search for a successor to its CEO, Martin Sorrell, who is under investigation for misuse of company funds

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Excerpt from AdAge -- "Sorrell built WPP into the world's largest agency company and has not publicly identified possible successors, but that doesn't mean he's irreplaceable, suggests Karen Brenner, a clinical professor of business at the Leonard N. Stern School of Business at NYU. 'Think about companies where you have iconic CEOs who are so closely associated with the company,' Brenner says. Outsiders frequently believe such companies will suffer without that CEO at the helm, she says, citing the example of Steve Jobs and Apple."
Faculty News

Professor Robert Salomon shares how the trade deficit with China benefits the US economy

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Excerpt from TIME -- "...according to Rob Salomon, associate professor of international management at the NYU Stern School of Business, trade deficits may actually help the U.S. by flowing dollars back into the economy and keeping American interest rates low. 'This makes mortgages less expensive, this makes business loans less expensive, and this makes capital to start businesses less expensive,' he says."
Faculty News

Professor Michael Posner applauds Facebook's removal of accounts controlled by the Russia-based Internet Research Agency (IRA)

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Excerpt from Newsweek -- "'Facebook has appropriately banned the IRA from its platforms,' said Michael Posner, director of the NYU Stern Center for Business and Human Rights. 'We applaud Facebook for recognizing that Russian disinformation online is a serious problem and for developing a response to this sustained effort to inject political propaganda into American society, as well into Russian and European societies.'"
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran discusses Spotify's non-traditional IPO and how the company may increase its value

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "I think it builds on a solid foundation. It's going into a business that is broken. The music business fundamentally is broken and I think Spotify might be the best chance for the music business to turn itself around. So I think you have to build from the basics again, revenues and margins improving over time are what's going to drive the value of the company."
School News

Undergraduate student Alex Grieco shares her experiences on an International Studies Program (ISP) trip to Hong Kong

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "In short, the ISP trip was an incredible, eye-opening whirlwind. While my body and sleep schedule have not yet recovered from the constant running around, I would not have changed a thing. I went on the trip with some very close friends but coming back, I know I have created more personal relationships with students and staff that I was previously only acquainted with. In the end, not only did I feel closer to the Stern community, but I had more pride for our school and every opportunity it has provided me. And even though we were in Hong Kong for less than five full days, the lessons learned and relationships created will last a lifetime."
School News

Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard's talk at Stern, hosted by the Center for Global Economy and Business, is highlighted

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "Asset valuations are stretched across a broad set of financial markets and some cryptocurrencies have witnessed 'extreme volatility,' Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard said, though overall risks to the financial system are still low. 'Estimates of risk premiums and spreads in a range of markets remain narrow by historical standards,' Brainard said Tuesday in prepared remarks at New York University’s Stern School of Business."
School News

Stern's ​MBA ​international academic offerings​ including DBi courses and Stern Solutions projects are featured; Jamie Tobias, Assistant Dean of Student Engagement, is quoted

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Excerpt from US News & World Report -- "The Stern School of Business at New York University still makes international academic experiences optional for MBA students, but the number who have embraced global offerings has grown substantially in recent years, says Jamie Tobias, assistant dean of student engagement. ... Many students also partner with faculty and go abroad through Stern Solutions to help solve a real-world business problem. A recent group collaborated with the World Wildlife Fund and the United Arab Emirates' Fujairah municipality to launch the country's first national park."
Faculty News

Professor Priya Raghubir's joint research on the impact of payment methods on shopper spending is highlighted

Excerpt from The Sydney Morning Herald -- "Researchers Priya Raghubir and Joydeep Srivastava found that there are significant differences in spending based on how shoppers pay for things. Their main argument was that 'the more transparent the payment outflow, the greater the aversion to spending or higher the pain of paying… leading to less transparent payment modes such as credit cards and gift cards (vs. cash) being more easily spent or treated as play or "monopoly money".'"
Research Center Events

NYU Stern Center for Sustainable Business Panel Discussion: The Intersection of Sustainability, Sports and Business

On April 3, NYU Stern’s Center for Sustainable Business hosted a panel discussion entitled, “The Intersection of Sustainability, Sports and Business”. 
Research Center Events

Public Talk and Q&A with Lael Brainard, Member, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

Dr. Lael Brainard, Member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (center); Professor Jennifer Carpenter, Associate Director of the NYU Stern Center for Global Economy and Business (right); Professor Kim Schoenholtz, Director of the NYU Stern Center for Global Economy and Business (left)
On April 3, the NYU Stern Center for Global Economy and Business hosted a public talk with Dr. Lael Brainard, Member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
Faculty News

Professor Vasant Dhar highlights the need for retailers to protect their customers' data in light of the Lord and Taylor and Saks Fifth Avenue security breach

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Excerpt from CBS News -- "Dhar said companies need to start being proactive and treat customer data as first class. 'This is a CEO-level issue. It isn’t something that you slough off to your tech person and say, "hey, prevent these things from happening,"' he said."
Faculty News

Professor Alexander Tuzhilin's work on targeted technologies is referenced

Excerpt from MIT Technology Review -- "Research points to where the field is headed. At an event that NYC Media Lab hosted in 2015, Alexander Tuzhilin, professor of information systems at the NYU Stern School of Business, pointed out that most of the targeting applications we see today represent the second generation of these technologies. The data employed includes context awareness, spatiotemporal and mobile data, multi-criteria ratings, social-media data, conversational recommendations, and more. These are standard tools of the trade used in targeting by internet marketers, as well as by Cambridge Analytica in 2016."
Faculty News

Professor Michelle Greenwald is interviewed about the benefits of partnerships between brands

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Excerpt from CNBC -- "If brands find the right counterpart for a viral partnership, it can create a great synergy, according to Michelle Greenwald, marketing professor at NYU Stern. She says that it can be a funny juxtaposition and bring new audiences to both brands. Warby Parker's brand isn't one that's generally associated with comedy, so Arby's can help lighten the mood and bring comedy to the table. Greenwald says that the brands' different audiences can help bring exposure to both of them and create more widespread awareness without spending much money."
School News

Undergraduate students Michelle Enkerlin and Shobhit Jain are named to the Poets & Quants 2018 "Best & Brightest" list

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "For this year’s graduating class, business comes down to one word: Impact. As the big day nears, these future business leaders are leaving their mark – often in big ways that defy traditional business roles and methods."
School News

Isser Gallogly, Associate Dean, MBA Admissions and Program Innovation, is quoted about standardized testing, admissions interviews and Stern's EQ Endorsement and "Pick Six" visual essays

U.S. News and World Report logo
Excerpt from US News & World Report -- "'Think about your story and how you want to present yourself,' Gallogly advises. 'The interviewer has read your entire application so you can go a lot deeper and have a substantive discussion.'"

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