Work as Play: How Gaming Culture Can Power Your Career
University of California, Berkeley Haas School of BusinessS3 E4: Work as play: How gaming culture can power your career
S3 E4: Work as play: How gaming culture can power your career
S3 E4: Meet your new boss: An algorithm
S3 E3: The dishwasher divide: How to decode tight and loose cultures
When a company misses an earnings target, it usually faces some backlash: a drop in stock prices, negative headlines, and sometimes even CEO turnover.
In the U.S., demand for in vitro fertilization (IVF) increased almost 140% between 2004 and 2018. Among other things, this trend suggests a business opportunity; in that same span of time the market share of for-profit chain clinics grew from 5% to 20%, with chains now performing over 40% of IVF treatment cycles nationwide.
It鈥檚 lately been considered good business for companies to show they are responsible corporate citizens. Google touts its solar-powered data centers. Apple talks about its use of recycled materials. Walmart describes its support for local communities.
When plotting their career trajectories, young professionals are often encouraged to follow their passion. And in the entrepreneurial world, passion is often seen as a key ingredient for success. But figures such as Elon Musk, known for his passion as well as arrogance, show that this drive is not without its perils鈥攊ncluding what researchers call 鈥減erformance overconfidence.鈥
Why economic forecasts are so often wrong
The race to control the gen AI market has begun. Who will come out on top?
From politicians to pop stars to professionals, gender stereotypes shape how we view power and status
How hospitals gamed a Medicare loophole to reap billions
Strangers trust others more when they put down their phones
The world of work is a work in progress. Hybrid work arrangements, emerging AI tools, ongoing layoffs, and an increasingly diverse pool of workers who want a voice and a sense of belonging at work鈥攎anagers have a lot on their plates.
A paper published today in the journal Nature finds that online images show stronger gender biases than online texts. Researchers also found that bias is more psychologically potent in visual form than in writing.
In writing a good online dating profile, the average love-seeker is likely to fill it up with all the appealing qualities and interests that make them special.
A team of researchers who developed tools for investors, academics, and businesses to measure economic risks from the loss of the planet鈥檚 biodiversity has won the inaugural Berkeley Haas Sustainable Business Research Prize.
For decades, a cottage industry of books and workshops has promised to make women better negotiators and help close the gender pay gap. Yet not only does the pay gap persist, it tends to be larger for women who gain advanced business skills.
The Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley, today announced the launch of the Berkeley Haas Sustainable Business Research Prize. The prize encourages serious research with timely, real-world business-practice applications among business school faculty around the world related to responsible business, sustainability, and ESG (environmental, social, and governance) issues.
Both men and women are perceived as more capable or effective as they get older, but only women are seen as less warm as they age鈥攃ausing them to be judged more harshly.
Are depressed people simply more realistic in judging how much they control their lives, while others view the world through rose-colored lenses, living under the illusion that they have more control than they do? That鈥檚 the general idea behind depressive realism, a theory that has held sway in science and popular culture for more than four decades. The problem is, it's not true, researchers find.