Superpreneur seems like a better label for Elon Musk. At 38 he has already been a co-founder of PayPal which sold for $1.5 billion and SpaceX which aims to commercialize the launching of payloads into orbit. He is also an initial investor in electric-car pioneer Tesla Motors and solar energy company SolarCity which sells and services solar energy equipment. In the second half of a two-part interview arranged by Wharton Entrepreneurial Programs he tells Knowledge at Wharton the story of his entre...
May 27, 2009•13 min
Executive compensation packages that provide huge payouts for short-term stock-market gains have been blamed for playing a role in the risky behavior that triggered the continuing financial crisis. In a new research paper a Wharton professor and several colleagues say they have come up with something better: A compensation structure based on long-term escrow accounts. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
May 27, 2009•11 min
Just as computer operating systems vied for dominance back in the late 1970s and early 1980s smartphone makers these days are jostling for market share hoping that their mix of capabilities -- ranging from web surfing to email to calendar management -- will ensure them a critical mass of customers. What the makers of such mobile devices as the BlackBerry iPhone and Treo are trying to avoid is the outcome of that earlier race when one company -- Microsoft -- ended up the dominant player. Hosted o...
May 27, 2009•13 min
New restrictions proposed for ratings agencies -- including Moody’s Fitch and Standard & Poor’s -- could have unintended consequences warn experts in the United States. Europe however has clamped down on the agencies whose stamps of approval on a broad spectrum of subprime mortgage securities helped pave the way to the credit crash of 2007 and the continuing global recession. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
May 27, 2009•18 min
Entrepreneur Elon Musk has three passions: the Internet space exploration and clean energy. The first paid off handsomely for him in 2002 when he sold PayPal to eBay for $1.5 billion in stock. The second is fueled by SpaceX a company that makes space launch vehicles. Musk’s third passion is Tesla Motors which makes the Tesla Roadster an electric sports car that claims to go 244 miles per charge and sells for $101 500 or more. In the first of a two-part interview with Wharton Entrepreneurial Prog...
May 13, 2009•14 min
Equities are subject to much wider price swings than previously understood according to a recent paper co-authored by Wharton finance and economics professor Robert Stambaugh. The research adds a new perspective to the work of Wharton finance professor Jeremy J. Siegel author of the book Stocks for the Long Run which says stock returns more than offset risks if you stay with the market through its ups and downs. In a recent interview with Knowledge at Wharton the professors described their views...
Apr 29, 2009•25 min
When Leonard Abess sold a majority stake in Miami-based City National Bank last fall he did something very unusual. He took $60 million of that money and gave it out as bonuses to 399 current bank employees and 72 former employees. He did it without calling in a public relations firm or the media. He didn’t blog about it. And while he was mentioned in President Obama’s inauguration speech and was ABC News Person of the Week these things were not done at his instigation. In fact he wasn’t even on...
Apr 29, 2009•20 min
The world of private equity has been in a shambles since the onset of the financial crisis but some executives see that as an opportunity rather than a threat. Among them is David N. Roberts senior managing director of Angelo Gordon who manages the firm’s private equity business. A 16-year veteran of the firm Roberts also founded the firm’s opportunistic real estate area. During a visit to campus recently Roberts pointed out that while the government’s stimulus programs have not yet had a widesp...
Apr 20, 2009•19 min
Even the biggest tax hikes will not raise enough money to pay off the national debt or meet coming obligations to retiring baby boomers for Medicare and Social Security. To accomplish the latter politicians must do something they fear even more than raising taxes: Reduce Medicare and Social Security benefits. In an interview with Knowledge at Wharton insurance and risk management professor Kent Smetters discussed the impending crisis. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Apr 15, 2009•24 min
Perception matters so don’t bring a politician to a union rally in a Datsun. This was one of the lessons Harris Diamond learned during a career that started with selling peanuts in Yankee Stadium. Now CEO of public relations firm Weber Shandwick Worldwide Diamond shared his thoughts on leadership -- and luck -- during a recent Wharton Leadership Lecture. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Apr 15, 2009•9 min
Emotion not only helped lead America into the current economic crisis but may also be helping to keep it there. At a recent conference called ”Crisis of Confidence: The Recession and the Economy of Fear ” sponsored by the University of Pennsylvania’s Department of Psychiatry and the Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia an interdisciplinary panel explored the psychology behind today’s economy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Apr 15, 2009•16 min
The world may be buzzing about Twitter but will the San Francisco-based messaging service with the high cool factor ever be a money maker? Or will it operate at a perpetual loss as one Wall Street analyst suggested ”until the next cool Web 2.0 social networking concept comes along and Twitter tweets no more.” Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Apr 15, 2009•16 min
Wharton legal studies and business ethics professor Kevin Werbach recently worked with the Obama administration’s transition team on a review of the Federal Communications Commission and related technology and telecommunications issues. In an interview with Knowledge at Wharton he says that advances in technology and the urgent need to restart the economy require the commission to rethink its role -- not just as a regulator but as an agency that creates jobs and encourages investment. Hosted on ...
Apr 01, 2009•14 min
On April 2 the Financial Accounting Standards Board is expected to vote on a proposal to relax a standard at the heart of the financial crisis -- mark-to-market accounting rules that require toxic assets to be carried on companies’ books at fire-sale prices based on recent trades of similar assets for far less than they would command in normal times. Many big banks say the crisis has been made worse by these rules. Not everyone agrees. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Apr 01, 2009•14 min
While military uses have tended to dominate commercial development of autonomous robots in America the business opportunities for smart robots are also sizable according to Daniel Lee an engineering professor at the University of Pennsylvania. Lee who recently spoke about the future of robotics as part of the Executive Master’s in Technology Management program has an ambitious goal: to learn how to make robots think and act like humans. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information...
Apr 01, 2009•12 min
”Cloud computing” promises myriad benefits -- including cost savings on technology infrastructure and faster software upgrades -- for users ranging from small startups to large corporations. That’s an auspicious future considering that not everyone agrees on exactly what cloud computing is or what it can do. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Apr 01, 2009•13 min
U.S. stocks raised eyebrows this week and last closing higher in six of seven trading days including four in a row from March 10 to 13. But how does the market look for the longer term? In an interview with Knowledge at Wharton Wharton finance professor Jeremy J. Siegel says he was pleased to see consecutive gains after so many declines. He adds that history provides lots of evidence that stocks remain good long-term investments especially when they are down 50% from their peak. Hosted on Acast....
Mar 18, 2009•12 min
Heartland Payment Systems a credit card processor may have had up to 100 million records exposed to malicious hackers. Payment processors CheckFree and RBS Worldpay and employment site Monster.com have all reported data breaches in recent months as have universities and government agencies. Experts at Wharton say that personal data is increasingly a liability for companies and suggest that part of the solution may be minimizing the customer information these companies keep. Hosted on Acast. See ...
Mar 18, 2009•10 min
The hedge fund industry’s long history of avoiding tougher regulation may be coming to an end as the Obama administration and Congress look for ways to avoid another financial meltdown. Although it is not clear that hedge funds actually played much of a role in the current crisis the industry’s sagging performance combined with investors’ and regulators’ heightened demand for transparency will likely cause big changes in the way these secretive investment pools operate according to several Whart...
Mar 18, 2009•15 min
The world financial crisis is unraveling the gains made by many Central and Eastern European economies during their post-Cold War resurgence. With the region no longer isolated an economic collapse could reverberate in the West as Central and Eastern European borrowers default on an enormous volume of loans that Western banks were all too eager to grant just a few years ago. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Mar 04, 2009•14 min
Getting customers to spread the word about a new product through their social or professional networks is a hot strategy in the marketing world. But how do companies find the right individuals to deliver the message? New research by Wharton marketing professors Raghuram Iyengar and Christophe Van den Bulte finds that traditional targets may not be so influential. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Mar 04, 2009•10 min
Giving products away -- think Adobe Reader or access to online news -- has become a legitimate business model on the Internet and even beyond. Once companies accept that price need not be tied to the cost of production and begin thinking creatively new possibilities emerge -- even for offline products according to Wharton faculty and others. Welcome to the world of ”freeconomics.” Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Mar 04, 2009•15 min
When governments around the world spend vast sums to stimulate their economies it seems only reasonable for each to invest at home. Why should the American taxpayer pay for steel from Canada when U.S. steelmakers are struggling? So it was hardly a surprise that the $787 billion stimulus plan just signed by President Barack Obama included protectionist language. But economists and political leaders in the U.S. Europe and elsewhere worry that such sentiments threaten free-trade principles that are...
Feb 18, 2009•14 min
Despite evidence that ambitious goal setting can hurt productivity damage a company’s reputation and violate ethical standards its use has become endemic in American business practice and scholarship even spilling over to the debate on how to improve America’s public schools. A new paper by Wharton operations and information management professor Maurice E. Schweitzer and three co-authors documents the hazards of corporate goal setting and concludes that it is overprescribed. Hosted on Acast. See...
Feb 18, 2009•13 min
Attention Shoppers: We no longer have the following items -- ”a sense of entitlement ” ”conspicuous consumption” and ”a golden period of luxury.” At least that is the word from Wharton faculty and other experts who point to a new logic that is defining not just what U.S. consumers buy but how they view the shopping experience. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Feb 18, 2009•13 min
Nine months ago a group of Wharton students launched an online site called Givology.org whose purpose is to raise money for scholarships and education projects in the developing world. Givology’s vision according to chief development officer Catherine Gao is that of a global community of individuals connected through their belief in the power of education to change people’s lives. The group which so far has attracted more than 200 lenders has partnerships in China India Uganda Ecuador and Kenya....
Feb 18, 2009•9 min
What impact has the global financial crisis had on India’s real estate market? According to Aniruddha Joshi executive director of Hirco Group in Britain which develops residential properties and mixed-use townships in India the credit crisis has affected portfolio allocations. Still Hirco’s strategy toward property development in India will not change Joshi told Knowledge at Wharton in an interview during the recent Knowledge at Wharton Real Estate in Emerging Markets Forum. ”We believe that the...
Feb 05, 2009•14 min
Toyota officially eclipsed General Motors as the world’s largest automaker by sales last year but its strength is only relative: The Japanese automaker like its competitors is struggling against a sharp drop-off in sales and global overcapacity. According to Wharton faculty after years of conservative growth Toyota accelerated its expansion in the past decade making it harder to apply the brakes in the current downturn. The new market dynamics which coincide with a changeover in company leadersh...
Feb 04, 2009•13 min
The contrast is jarring. As thousands of Americans lose their jobs headlines are focused on excessive executive compensation and lavish perks including multi-million-dollar bonuses a $1.2 million executive suite renovation (since repaid) and plans to buy a new corporate jet (since scrapped). It’s not surprising that the harsh economic climate and resurgent role of government in business has turned a spotlight on compensation. Indeed rules announced this week by the Obama administration set new l...
Feb 04, 2009•14 min
When the giant pharmaceutical company Pfizer announced on January 26 that it was acquiring Wyeth for $68 billion analysts started questioning what benefits the deal would bring and for whom. Pfizer executives suggest the acquisition makes strategic sense by expanding the company into a range of new areas and by helping make up for an expected loss of more than $12 billion in annual revenues once its Lipitor patent expires in 2011. But Wyeth also brings some liabilities -- notably continuing laws...
Feb 04, 2009•17 min