
While regulations nudge insurance companies toward prudent portfolios, they may also increase systemic fragility.
When Kellogg’s Craig Wortmann lost a portion of his leg to cancer, he felt like he lost part of his identity, too. On this episode of The Insightful Leader podcast, he offers a guide to “bouncing back better.”
Here’s a cautious promotion of strategic nepotism in the family business.
A new type of score looks at people’s shopping behaviors and utility payments to determine their eligibility for loans and credit cards.
As AI replaces job responsibilities, it creates just as many opportunities, new research shows.

“It’s not like we can’t enter a new area and hit a home run, but there’s just a far, far lower chance of that happening.”

In this bonus episode of our series, “Insight Unpacked: American Healthcare and Its Web of Misaligned Incentives,” a healthcare economist must make critical decisions with partial information.

On this episode of The Insightful Leader: when Fuyao Glass opened a U.S. factory, it underestimated the importance of translating company culture.
For the most part, yes! And the more we look, the better we get.
New research challenges the long-held belief that unconscious attitudes are set in stone.

While increasing bonuses and commission rates might seem like a good idea, doing so can inadvertently harm the quality of an organization’s workforce.
But there’s little common ground in the research that Republicans and Democrats cite.
The administration hopes to bring back manufacturing and reduce trade deficits. But renegotiating trade may damage global trust in the U.S.
The effect of peer influence “raises some interesting and potentially troubling questions about the nature of expertise and decision-making.”
On this (rerun) episode of The Insightful Leader: You can’t always control what happens at work. But reframing setbacks, and instituting some serious calendar discipline, can go a long way toward reducing stress.
Regardless of their political ideology, people are less likely to follow back users from certain racial groups.
While many view the internet as the death knell of local print journalism, the unraveling started decades earlier—with the rise of television.