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In this enlightening conversation, we're joined by Alex Budak, a professor at Haas Business School and the author of 'Becoming a Change Maker'. Alex shares his unique insights on micro leadership, the dynamics of champions, cynics, and fence sitters in our ability to make change, and the importance of taking a long-term perspective.Alex Budak is not just a faculty member at Berkeley, but also a global director, entrepreneur, and changemaker who has helped countless students lead positive change in their communities. His book, 'Becoming a Change Maker', is a research-backed guide that helps individuals harness their potential to make a positive impact.In this episode, Alex discusses his experiences of leading change, the concept of micro leadership, and the importance of building trust in ourselves. He emphasizes that change isn't just for your career, it's also for your personal life. He shares his belief that while leaders might be scarce, leadership is abundant. He encourages us to see leadership not as a title, but as an act, and to seize the leadership moments that appear around us every day. Subscribe for ad-free interviews and bonus episodes https://plus.acast.com/s/the-unmistakable-creative-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ryan Swehla from Graceada Partners shares his presentation for UC Berkeley Haas Business School's executive education program for public pension trustees. His presentation goes over the Graceada Partner's strategies, focusing on core, value-add, and opportunistic approaches. He explains the benefits and characteristics of these strategies, discusses their role in a diversified investment portfolio, and highlights the importance of private real estate in achieving higher returns with lower volatility. Timestamps: 00:00 Introduction and Background 00:50 Why Invest in Real Estate? 01:12 Understanding Low Correlation 02:37 Efficient Frontier and Illiquidity Premium 04:56 Real Estate Strategies Overview 05:16 Core Real Estate Strategy 05:32 Value Add Real Estate Strategy 05:54 Development or Opportunistic Real Estate Strategy 07:42 Management Styles and Compensation 08:46 Market Cycles and Leverage 14:05 Sponsor Types: Operator vs Allocator 15:35 Conclusion and Key Takeaways
Das Silicon Valley gilt als Hochburg der Demokraten. Bill Clinton und sein Vize Al Gore wurden hier regelrecht gefeiert. Dem rhetorisch begnadeten Barack Obama lag das Hightech-Tal zu Füßen. Eine Bewunderung, die sogar bis in die Geldelite des Silicon Valleys reichte. Meta-Chef Mark Zuckerberg und Salesforce-Gründer Marc Benioff ließen sich gern mit Obama ablichten. Die Republikaner konnten hingegen nie so richtig Fuß fassen. Bei der letzten Wahl des US-Präsidenten bekam Joe Biden in der Bay Area über 70 Prozent der Stimmen. Dreht sich nun der Wind, vor allem, seit Donald Trump den ehemaligen Wagnisfinanzierer und Tech-Kenner J.D. Vance als Vizepräsidentschaftskandidaten an seine Seite geholt hat? Vance, dessen Risikokapital-Karriere zwar nicht sonderlich erfolgreich war, der aber den millionenschweren Rückhalt von Hightech-Milliardären wie Peter Thiel, Elon Musk, Marc Andreessen, David Sacks und Joe Lonsdale hat. Warum ist das so? Und welche Rolle spielt dabei die Regulierung von Tech-Konzernen, Künstlicher Intelligenz und die US-Steuerpolitik? Die Menschen in der Bay Area werden zwar weiterhin einen demokratischen Präsidentschaftskandidaten wählen. Die Wahl wird ohnehin nicht in Kalifornien, sondern wegen der Besonderheiten des US-Wahlrechts in den sogenannten Swing States entschieden. „Aber das Silicon Valley ist für die Dynamik der US-Wirtschaft entscheidend“, sagt Olaf Groth, Professor an der Haas Business School der Universität Berkeley. Was bedeutet also ein möglicher Sieg von Trump und Vance für die Dynamik im Hightech-Tal? Welche Wirtschaftspolitik ist unter einer neuerlichen Trump-Administration zu erwarten? Darüber sprechen Olaf Groth, der Silicon-Valley-Journalist Marcus Schuler und Matthias Hohensee, US-Korrespondent der WirtschaftsWoche, in der aktuellen Folge des Valley Talks.
Synopsis: In this episode of the Biotech2050 podcast, David Kirn, CEO of 4D Molecular Therapeutics, shares invaluable insights for aspiring entrepreneurs in the biotech industry. Kirn discusses the development of his company's platform that integrates gene therapy and directed evolution to create innovative treatments for genetic diseases. By utilizing directed evolution, 4D Molecular Therapeutics has been able to invent an AAV vector that achieves safe and effective gene expression in the retina, targeting rare genetic diseases initially and subsequently expanding to larger markets. Kirn emphasizes the importance of balancing a strong platform with diverse product opportunities to decrease risk and increase the probability of success in the biotech landscape. Kirn's expertise and experience provide a compelling narrative that sheds light on the vital aspects of biotech entrepreneurship. Kirn emphasizes the importance of balancing a strong platform with diverse product opportunities to decrease risk and increase the probability of success in the biotech landscape. The episode delves into the tension between platform and product focus, offering guidance on fundraising and the regional dynamics of biotech investment. Kirn's expertise and experience provide a compelling narrative that sheds light on the vital aspects of biotech entrepreneurship, making this episode a must-listen for academic entrepreneurs looking to navigate the complexities of biotech investment and build traction in the industry. Biography: David Kirn, MD, is our co-founder and has served as our Chief Executive Officer since our inception in 2013. Dr. Kirn is also Adjunct Professor of Bioengineering and Molecular & Cellular Biology at UC Berkeley. Over his 30 year career, Dr. Kirn has co-founded and been CEO of four viral vector-based genetic medicines companies, three of which to date were either acquired or went public. Dr. Kirn also held senior clinical research and development positions at Onyx Pharmaceuticals (VP) and Celgene (SVP), and was a senior advisor to Novartis, Bayer, Pfizer, Biogen and others in the genetic medicines field. Dr. Kirn received a BA in Physiology (Departmental Citation; Phi Beta Kappa) from UC Berkeley in 1985, an MD (Alpha Omega Alpha) from UC San Francisco Medical School in 1989 and completed internal medicine residency training at Harvard Medical School, Brigham and Women's Hospital (including a term as Chief Medical Resident at affiliated VA hospital). He has also completed hematology-oncology and clinical research fellowships at UC San Francisco and completed a certificate of business excellence from the Haas Business School at UC Berkeley. In 2013, he was awarded the Johnson & Johnson Entrepreneur Innovator award from the J&J Innovation Center.
On this episode of Digital Squared, Tom talks with Dr. Kip Webb, a lecturer at the UC Berkeley School of Public Health and Haas Business School. Dr. Webb has dedicated his career to healthcare reform and innovation. He has worked previously as a management consultant, a Chief Clinical Innovation Officer and is now an advisory board member to many health organizations. Together, they discuss his focus on inequities in rural healthcare, how innovation is improving healthcare delivery for everyone, and how the next generation of doctors are learning a new approach to medicine.
Welcome to the I am Charles Schwartz Show! This podcast is an uncommon guide to getting you what you want, when you want it. From the guy who has been coaching entrepreneurs on how to retire for over a decade. This podcast aims at making you UNSTOPPABLE. Awaken the inner beast within you! Quash your limiting beliefs and bring out the best version of YOU. --- Today, we have BRUCE CRYER! Get to know more about him: Bruce has been called a renaissance man. At age 15 he sang in the choir for Duke Ellington and by 19 was playing The Boy in the world's longest running musical, The Fantasticks, in a run lasting more than 800 performances. Trained at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, he has performed in Shakespeare in the Park, television commercials and films, ran a small art business in New York City, and was a founding member of ODC, San Francisco's top rated dance company. He left his musical theater career to join the vibrant California business community and founded and/or managed several innovative businesses in the health care arena. He was a founding director of the acclaimed HeartMath Institute and CEO of HeartMath LLC for 11 years, during which time his clients included Stanford University, Kaiser Permanente, Mayo Clinic, The World Bank, Unilever, Shell, the NHS, Cathay Pacific Airways, Mandarin Oriental Hotel Group, NASA, and Yosemite National Park. He has taught global executives at Stanford Business School, Columbia University Executive Program, Haas Business School at University of California Berkeley, and Nanyang Polytechnic University in Singapore. After fully recovering from a two-year health ordeal, he began to sing and dance again through a project he developed called What Makes Your Heart Sing. In 2017 he recorded his first album of original songs, entitled Renaissance Human. Bruce is now 12 years cancer-free, and almost 11 years living youthfully with titanium hips. His years in both the business and performing arts worlds led him to develop a body of work on Awakening Creativity which is now being taught at Stanford University, University of Delaware, the New York Open Center, 1440 Multiversity in Silicon Valley, and elsewhere. In 2018 he returned to NYC and rejoined the arts scene. He has performed at the Norwood Club, Pangea, Don't Tell Mama, the United Palace Theater, and St Clements Theater and Church. His digital photography is available through Instagram. He is also part of the vocal ensemble at St Clements Church and Theater performing a program in New York City called Peaceable Hour. He is currently Executive Director of the Integrative Health Institute at Salem University.
In this week's episode we welcome “CyberSecurity's Money Man”, Bob Ackerman who shares his story, his strategy for business growth, scaling and his tips for raising investment funds for your startup. KEY TAKEAWAYS FROM THIS EPISODE: What makes a successful startup CEO. What to look for in a board member and investor. The relationship between a startup's leadership team and their investors The key elements an investor is (or should be!) looking for in a startup How to pitch your startup to the investment community THIS WEEK'S GUEST Bob Ackerman is the founder and managing director of venture capitalists Allegis Cyber. He has over 23 years of VC experience, backing successful exits including Solera -who were acquired by Blue Coat, E8 Security who were acquired by VMWare, and IronPort Systems who were acquired by Cisco. Bob was the President and CEO of UniSoft Systems, a global leading UNIX Systems House, and in 1995 he founded InfoGear, who were the designers of the first touch screen cellphone, which he successfully sold to Cisco Systems for over $300M. He sits on the boards of several startup and early stage companies, such as CallSign, Dragos and Panaseer, and is an Adjunct Professor of the Haas Business School at UCB. Bob has been recognized as a Fortune 100 cybersecurity executive and also as one of “CyberSecurity's Money Men”. For more information, or to get in touch with Bob, check out: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bob-ackerman-a233336 Website: https://allegiscyber.com/ YOUR HOST Simon Lader is the host of The Conference Room, Co-Founder of global executive search firm Salisi Human Capital, and podcast growth consultancy Viva Podcasts. Since 1997, Simon has helped cybersecurity vendors to build highly effective teams, and since 2022 he has helped people make money from podcasting. Get to know more about Simon at: Website: https://simonlader.com/ Make Money from Podcasting: https://www.vivapodcasts.com/podcastpowerups Twitter: https://twitter.com/simonlader LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/headhuntersimonlader Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3dd0obQSM8cYRV0HCxiuF0
Marci Zaroff is the Author of EcoRenaissance and Founder of EcoFashion Corp. On this episode, you get a better of understanding of our supply chains and why Zaroff makes the case that we need to create a "win-win" world. A graduate from UC Berkeley's Haas Business School, Author of “ECOrenaissance: Co-Creating a Stylish, Sexy and Sustainable World” (Simon & Schuster,) and also co-founder of Beyond Brands, Good Catch Foods & The Institute for Integrative Nutrition, for over three decades, Ms. Zaroff has been an internationally-recognized ecopreneur, expert, visionary, consultant & global public speaker of conscious business, social innovation & an organic/sustainable lifestyle.8-10% of the world's CO2 footprint come from the fashion and textile industry
Ask Me How I Know: Multifamily Investor Stories of Struggle to Success
We're back for another episode that will enlighten us more about the opportunities that passive investing and real estate syndication could offer! Kathy Jang talks about the incredible impact of real estate investing on attaining a better life. Tune in to seize this chance to live on your terms and reach your financial goals.KEY TAKEAWAYSBenefits of investing passively in real estate syndicationOther passive income streams and sourcesEffective ways to build your mindset and learn more about investingWhy you should hire a good real estate tax adviserHow to pick a trusted syndicator to work withRESOURCES/LINKS MENTIONEDRich Dad, Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki https://amzn.to/3STOR28 Ep198 Brandon Hall on Conscious Pursuits https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ep198-brandon-hall-on-conscious-pursuits/id1501539079?i=1000538427957ABOUT KATHY JANGKathy Jang is the head of marketing at VSV. She leads marketing strategy and execution across the VSV umbrella of companies and properties. Kathy held an undergraduate degree from UC Berkeley's Haas Business School and began her professional career as a Big 4 consultant. She then pursued her MBA at Northwestern's Kellogg School of Management, which led to prestigious positions in medical device marketing in Philips's Nuclear Medicine, St Jude Medical's Heart Failure Therapy, and the makers of Invisalign Clear Aligners. Starting in 2008, Kathy grew her passive income through real estate investments and ultimately left her W2 when she achieved financial freedom, allowing her to live life on her terms. Kathy lives in Phoenix, AZ with her two sons and husband and has a portfolio of> 1800+ units and $110MM assets under management. This passive income journey has been life-changing for Kathy and has made her incredibly passionate about helping others achieve financial freedom and is dedicated to educating people about personal finances and providing them with investment opportunities. CONNECT WITH KATHYLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kathyjang/To find out more about partnering or investing in a multifamily deal, schedule a call here: https://calendly.com/threekeysinvestments/get-acquainted-callVisit ThreeKeysInvestments.com to download a free e-book “Why Invest in Apartments”!Looking to reduce your taxes so you can build wealth? Mode Wealth is a boutique financial firm helping real estate professionals, investors, and entrepreneurs ethically and morally optimize their tax strategy to reduce their tax liability. Learn more and schedule a FREE consultation today! https://modewealth.com/Looking for an affordable healthcare solution? Check out Christian Healthcare Ministries by visiting https://bit.ly/3JTRm1IPlease RSS: Review, Subscribe, Share!Support the show (and my reading addiction)!https://www.buymeacoffee.com/AskMeHowIKnow
Case Interview Preparation & Management Consulting | Strategy | Critical Thinking
Welcome to Strategy Skills episode 256, an episode with an expert in business law and business ethics, J.S. Nelson. Get J.S's book here: https://amzn.to/3C8am91 Managing business ethics has always been a challenge for many organizations. As unethical business conduct rises, the struggle of implementing ethics and compliance programs in organizations also increases. Business ethics can make or break your business or career. But it can be used as a competitive advantage if managed correctly and can build the most valuable asset: your reputation. The key is to articulate your organization's values – defining who you are, what you stand for, and extending it toward every inch of your organization. It's very important for management to cultivate a culture of openness, where people feel safe to speak up and where ethical misconduct is not tolerated. As J.S. mentioned in this episode, “the way to get the behavior that you want is to intervene early and often.” In this episode, J.S speaks about the value of business ethics, the major schools of philosophical ethical thought, and how understanding it can help people become better at being ethical. She discusses the ways an organization can cultivate ethical behavior and how to get away from situations involving ethical traps in the modern business world. Nelson is an expert in business law and business ethics. She is a visiting professor at Harvard Business School. Nelson was the first tenure-track appointment in a U.S. law school, specifically to teach business ethics and to develop law-school curricula around the subject. Nelson has spent nearly fifteen years teaching at top universities across the country, including Villanova Law School, the Stanford Graduate School of Business, Haas Business School of the University of California at Berkeley, Drucker School at Claremont Graduate University, and the Mihaylo School at Cal State Fullerton. Prior to her work in academia, Professor Nelson served as staff counsel for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, and she clerked for the Honorable David M. Ebel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit and the Honorable William H. Yohn Jr. of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. She also worked as a deputy district attorney and as a business litigator in Denver, Colorado. Nelson graduated from Harvard Law School, where she was the Supreme Court Co-Chair of the Harvard Law Review. She earned a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science with honors and distinction in the major from Yale. Get J.S's book here: Business Ethics: What Everyone Needs to Know, J.S. Nelson & Lynn A. Stout: https://amzn.to/3C8am91 Enjoying our podcast? Get access to sample advanced training episodes here: www.firmsconsulting.com/promo
Alex Budak joins the GrowCFO show on the same day that his new book "Becoming a Changemaker" is published. Quite a coup for the podcast! The book is an excellent read for anyone wanting to become a changemaker, in particular for finance leaders wanting to enhance their ability to be a catalyst for change. As a faculty member at UC Berkeley's Haas School of Business, Alex created and teaches the wildly popular course “Becoming a Changemaker,” which has quickly grown into one of the most highly-rated courses anywhere on campus. The course is regularly heralded by students as “transformative” and “life-changing” but has only been accessible to students attending UC Berkeley. That all changes from today as the course is condensed into a book accessible by anyone. The Becoming a Changemaker playbook is a guide for anyone looking to lead positive change. It covers the mindsets and leadership skills needed to navigate, shape, and lead change, as well as how to thrive in uncertain times. The book is tailored to millennials and Gen Zers who are leaving school and entering the workforce. It is based on the popular UC Berkeley course by the same name, which students have praised as transformative and life-changing. Links Alex Budak on LinkedInKevin Appleby on LinkedInGrowCFO Competency FrameworkBecoming a Changemaker on Amazon UK and Amazon USA Timestamps 00:51 Alex explains his background 02:26 Book being published on 13 September 2022 04:05 Change and the CFO 06:17 Technology and change 10:02 Can the changemaker skill be learned? 10:36 The Changemaker index 12:33 Dealing with resistance to change 15:06 Involving people in the change 18:28 Champions, fence-sitters and cynics 23:03 Impact = (mindset+leadership) x action 25:24 Who is the book aimed at? 28:06 How did you get involved in teaching "Changemaker"?
Rich Lyons became UC Berkeley's inaugural chief innovation and entrepreneurship officer in January 2020, having previously been dean of the Haas Business School for a decade. For the past two and a half years, he's been tying the ecosystem together in a way that makes everyone want to participate rather than forcing them to sign […]
Welcome to Strategy Skills episode 256, an episode with an expert in business law and business ethics, J.S. Nelson. Get J.S's book here: https://amzn.to/3ny1z9B Managing business ethics has always been a challenge for many organizations. As unethical business conduct rises, the struggle of implementing ethics and compliance programs in organizations also increases. Business ethics can make or break your business or career. But it can be used as a competitive advantage if managed correctly and can build the most valuable asset: your reputation. The key is to articulate your organization's values – defining who you are, what you stand for, and extending it toward every inch of your organization. It's very important for management to cultivate a culture of openness, where people feel safe to speak up and where ethical misconduct is not tolerated. As J.S. mentioned in this episode, “the way to get the behavior that you want is to intervene early and often.” In this episode, J.S speaks about the value of business ethics, the major schools of philosophical ethical thought, and how understanding it can help people become better at being ethical. She discusses the ways an organization can cultivate ethical behavior and how to get away from situations involving ethical traps in the modern business world. Nelson is an expert in business law and business ethics. She is a visiting professor at Harvard Business School. Nelson was the first tenure-track appointment in a U.S. law school, specifically to teach business ethics and to develop law-school curricula around the subject. Nelson has spent nearly fifteen years teaching at top universities across the country, including Villanova Law School, the Stanford Graduate School of Business, Haas Business School of the University of California at Berkeley, Drucker School at Claremont Graduate University, and the Mihaylo School at Cal State Fullerton. Prior to her work in academia, Professor Nelson served as staff counsel for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, and she clerked for the Honorable David M. Ebel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit and the Honorable William H. Yohn Jr. of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. She also worked as a deputy district attorney and as a business litigator in Denver, Colorado. Nelson graduated from Harvard Law School, where she was the Supreme Court Co-Chair of the Harvard Law Review. She earned a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science with honors and distinction in the major from Yale. Get J.S's book here: Business Ethics: What Everyone Needs to Know, J.S. Nelson & Lynn A. Stout: https://amzn.to/3ny1z9B Enjoying our podcast? Get access to sample advanced training episodes here: www.firmsconsulting.com/promo
A Roadmap for Communicating ESG and Avoiding Greenwashing Claims Environmental, Social, and Governance Topics discussed: The Sustainable Business Handbook (TSBH) Co-authored with two colleagues: Mark Lee and Chris Coulter TSBH is a step by step guide — 13 chapters of key elements to sustainability as a business TSBH how-to manual — Previous book "All In" was tracking the evolution of biz over 20 years Embedding sustainability in the core of the business — one chapter dedicated to communications The power of storytelling — it can only come after identifying a strategy — Board oversight — and leadership buy-in Transparency and accountability are fundamental Critical to a company's success is working through environmental, social, and economic impacts: positive and negative Embedding sustainability is critical for people and the planet Greenwashing and Purposewashing How companies, funds, and investors can avoid greenwashing claims ESG claims must have substance How to build a sustainable business culture Materiality exercise as a tool to improve ESG For reporting ESG, should include carbon and water TCFD and TNFD Collaborations of standards and sustainability reporting and international accounting standard Boards Trends between ESG and investment Top talent will be attracted to companies that align with a responsible way of doing business and shared values What role does the CMO play in the success of a sustainable business? Unilever is an example of embedding sustainability; even before Paul Polman Unilever's “brands with purpose” Suzano, an example of a responsible company Board oversight The Tata Group About David Grayson David Grayson is Emeritus Professor of Corporate Responsibility at the Cranfield School of Management. He is also chair of the Institute of Business Ethics and of the international disability charity Leonard Cheshire. He has advised businesses and Corporate Responsibility coalitions around the world.
Did you know that soil can be one of our greatest solutions to climate change mitigation? If we understand the relationship between soil and humanity, we can rebuild our ecosystems and have healthy plants and people. In this episode, I have an insightful conversation with Marci Zaroff about her mission of leveraging the power of fashion to expand organic and regenerative agriculture through education. She remarks on why we must give back to the earth what we take from it and how it is possible to change the world and look really good at the same time.Marci has been instrumental in driving authenticity, environmental leadership & social justice worldwide for nearly three decades. With a degree from the Haas Business School at UC Berkeley, Marci co-founded a thriving health & environmental educational center in 1990 with an organic café, AVEDA concept salon, and national magazine. Now known as The Institute for Integrative Nutrition, the largest professional health coach certification program in the world. Listen and enjoy!Key Highlights:[00:45 - 04:56] - Opening SegmentMarci shares her background and storyMarci's outlook on how the way people live impacts business and the planet[04:57 - 18:18] - Soil is The Skin of The EarthHow Marci gained confidence in her vision since the '90sThe current status of oil as it relates to clothing and foodWays people could be more responsible when interacting with the immune system[18:19 - 28:01] - Connecting Food, Textiles and BeautyHow circularity and eco-fashion could help to address soil depleting effectsMarci shares a transformative paradigm-shifting moment[28:02 - 35:12] - Co-Creating a Stylish, Sexy, and Sustainable WorldThe paradox about millennial consumers and their perspective of eco-fashionMarci introduces her book ECOrenaissance and her Thread documentaryHow to make sustainability easy for other brands and retailers[35:13 - 41:12] - Taking Circularity and RegenerationTips for consumers to make better choices at the moment of shoppingHow big companies are working together to transform the fashion industryThe government relation and regulatory standard vs the industry's self-organizing[41:13 - 45:54] - Business Models Built on People, Planet, Profit, Passion, and PurposeThe future of fashion, clean living, and eating in the next 5-10 yearsThe importance of embedding organic, sustainable, regenerative, and socially conscious strategies into your business model[45:54 - 48:24] - Closing SegmentConnect with Marci Zaroff through Instagram, LinkedIn, and Facebook. Check out Yes And. Head to ecofashioncorp, empowering conscious consumers and businesses to live in ways that are regenerative for body, soul, and planet!CRAVING MORE?What are you waiting for? Head to Alchemy of Politics; join the conversation and start a change reaction! Follow us on Instagram and Tik Tok. You can connect with Rusha Modi, MD on LinkedIn, Instagram
Steve Tadelis is an interesting bird: Harvard PhD applied microeconomics theorist turned experimentalist, he spent some time at eBay as a Distinguished Scientist where he made some interesting discoveries about the effectiveness (or not) of paid search advertising, a key part of search engine giants like Google's underlying business model. In this interview with Steve, we learn about that research, what makes good versus bad ambassadors of economics in tech, and more.
Steve Tadelis is an interesting bird: Harvard PhD applied microeconomics theorist turned experimentalist, he spent some time at eBay as a Distinguished Scientist where he made some interesting discoveries about the effectiveness (or not) of paid search advertising, a key part of search engine giants like Google's underlying business model. In this interview with Steve, we learn about that research, what makes good versus bad ambassadors of economics in tech, and more. Get full access to Scott's Substack at causalinf.substack.com/subscribe
Marci has been instrumental in driving authenticity, environmental leadership & social justice worldwide for nearly three decades. With a degree from the Haas Business School at UC Berkeley, Marci co-founded a thriving health & environmental educational center in 1990 with an organic café, AVEDA concept salon, and national magazine. Now known as The Institute for Integrative Nutrition, it is the largest professional health coach certification program in the world. Marci keynotes, speaks and consults internationally on sustainable fashion, organic & regenerative agriculture, strategic vision, social innovation and green business/design. She was a key driver in developing the Global Organic Textile Standard (GOTS), as well as the world's first Fair Trade Textile Certification with Fair Trade USA. She has spearheaded and launched first time organic/sustainable fashion initiatives in top retailers — such as Whole Foods Market, Macy's, Target, Bed Bath & Beyond and AVEDA. To View This Episode- https://youtu.be/6h2_GqV1k2I #MarciZaroff #ECO
My guests this week is Marci Zaroff, who coined and trademarked the term "ECOfashion" in 1995. She is an ECOlifestyle entrepreneur and educator who believes that millennials are driving the rapidly growing movement for sustainable and ethical fashion. Marci has been instrumental in driving authenticity, environmental leadership and social justice worldwide for nearly three decades. With a degree from the Haas Business School at UC Berkeley, Marci co-founded a thriving health and environmental educational center in 1990 with an organic café, AVEDA concept salon, and national magazine. Now known as The Institute for Integrative Nutrition, it is the largest professional health coach certification program in the world. 4:53 – Marci 101 She began a path to conscious products when it was still new. When you start to understand how food is energy and how agriculture affects people and products. She started thinking, “What about fashion?” 7:53 – Appealing to people aesthetically First and foremost, appeal to people aesthetically. In food, it has to taste good. In beauty, it has to smell good and work. In fashion, it has to look good and be quality. Once you get that what you put in your body matters, you start to realize that oh, I have a relationship with the actual ingredients that go into me? 18:16 – Ecofashion When people hear “ecofashion” they have a very specific image in their heads. Marci calls it the crunchy, frumpy, boxy, beige and boring viewpoint. People often ask her, “Can you smoke it after you wear it?” 27:11 – Marci's book Marci's book is ECOrenaissance: A Lifestyle Guide for Cocreating a Stylish, Sexy, and Sustainable World Don't go home and throw everything away. It's about slowly integrating this mindset of oh, I can be part of the solution versus part of the problem just by making different choices? 34:14 – This is too expensive. This is too hard. What is her response to people who say, “This is too expensive. This is too hard”? It was the same argument when organic and natural food came out. People called it “whole paycheck.” It's a supply and demand thing, not because it's organic. 42:26 – Prince Charles She worked with Prince Charles in the early 2000s to help connect the consumer with organic agriculture. People don't realize how passionate he is about organic agriculture. 45:43 – Get to know you Her guilty pleasure? Steam, massages and chocolate Favorite ethical fashion brand? Stella McCartney and many others FEATURED QUOTES First and foremost, appeal to people aesthetically. In food, it has to taste good. In beauty, it has to smell good and work. In fashion, it has to look good and be quality. Once you get that what you put in your body matters, you start to realize that oh, I have a relationship with the actual ingredients that go into me? Don't go home and throw everything away. It's about slowly integrating this mindset of oh, I can be part of the solution versus part of the problem just by making different choices? I don't think people realize how passionate Prince Charles is about organic agriculture. ABOUT MARCI ZAROFF: Since coining the term “ECOfashion" in 1995, Marci Zaroff has spent several decades driving positive change through business. She has been planting seeds of consciousness globally; as a serial ecopreneur, (Institute for Integrative Nutrition, Under the Canopy, Good Catch Foods, and Beyond Brands) keynote speaker, mentor, innovator and advisor. The seeds have now taken root, with ECOfashion Corp, her GreenHouse of brands that includes YES AND–contemporary, GOTS-certified sustainable apparel; Farm to Home—GOTS-certified bed and bath available on QVC; Seed to Style—GOTS-certified, size inclusive apparel, available on QVC; and MetaWear—a B2B turnkey sustainable fashion manufacturing solution that is the engine behind all her brands. Marci's leadership in transforming the industry from within— building innovative and transparent supply chains, spearheading sustainable fashion retail launches, and serving on an array of non-profit boards, has solidified her position as an organic authority and expert trailblazer. In fact, Marci was a key driver in defining the Global Organic Textile Standard (GOTS) as well as the world's first Fair Trade textile certification with Fair Trade, USA. She shares her expertise in a regular column in Women's Wear Daily, “The Outside View.” Marci is a Henry Crown Fellow of the Aspen Institute and is the author of “ECOrenaissance: a Lifestyle Guide for Cocreating a Stylish, Sexy & Sustainable World." CONNECT: https://marcizaroff.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/marci-zaroff-b5990a3 https://www.amazon.com/ECOrenaissance-Lifestyle-Cocreating-Stylish-Sustainable/dp/1501123564 Thank you to our partner of the show! Are you looking to clean up your household cleaning products this year? MamaSuds would like to help! The best way is to simply start with one product. Every time you run out of a specific cleaning product, replace it with a non-toxic one. Another tip, purchase a product that has multiple uses. The MamaSuds Collection has many multiple use products (castile soap or the toilet bombs are just a few!). Their blog has lots of great tips and a castile soap recipe that you can print and make a lot of your own effective cleaners! Give them a try at www.mamasuds.com and don't forget to use the coupon code MOLLY for 15% off your order!
Do individual traders and institutional investors suffer from psychological bias? This episode features an interview with Terry Odean, Rudd Family Foundation Professor and Chair of the Finance Group at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley. He shares his journey from dropping out of a seminary to hitchhiking in Afghanistan, driving a cab in the 1970s, to starting his own statistical software company. Discover what Nobel economics laureate, Daniel Kahneman, has to do with career change and ending up in behavioral finance. Terrance shares his findings on the difference in buying and investing behaviors between institutional and individual investors. Together with host Greg La Blanc, he unpacks the investment data he gathered from Taiwan. He offers well-founded insights into investing data before, during, and after the war and through the dot com bubble in 1998-2000. Tune in till the end as he briefly touches on some of his work related to the disposition effect and a recent paper he wrote about the Robinhood app and the GameStop fiasco in 2020.Episode Quotes:What drew you to study individual investors?"I thought institutional investors, most of them are human. They have human biases. However, they've had more opportunities to learn. And, I didn't know how much learning had or hadn't taken place, but I thought, well, individuals are. Far less likely to have had the opportunity to learn that they are behaving suboptimally, that their biases are causing them to make mistakes. The other reason that I wanted to look at individual investors? The other reason that I wanted to look at individual investors? This is because I initially wanted to avoid conflating behavioral biases and agency issues. And what I mean by that is those individual investors, especially at discount brokerage firms. And I got my initial data sets from a discount. Brokerage firms are making decisions for themselves at the time. This firm did not provide financial advisors and advice that's changed. But when I got my data set, individuals made their own decisions. It was relatively straightforward to say this is a person making a financial decision that will directly affect their wealth."What drives the market upwards?"Another thing that drives markets up is when more and more people put their money in the market. And one of the things that cause people to put their money in the market is that the market is going up...It has probably be tied to a story or something. And then it tends to snowball a little bit, as they say, use of margin, the use of margin was way up in 1999. I believe probably high at the moment. The use of margin by individual investors, the willingness to borrow money. So it's to buy more stock. The stock market is a secondary market. It's generally people trading stocks that already exist. If you want to buy it, a stock, you have to offer someone who already owns it enough money. They're willing to sell it. If they're the one who wants to sell, they have to sell it to you at a price where you're willing to buy. If there are a lot of people who want to buy and the people who currently own are content, then that starts to drive the price up because the buyers have to bid up the price to get the people who want it to sell."Thoughts on taking risks and stock markets as a substitute for risk-taking and lottery: "And you're right in the study that I mentioned before where we looked at all Taiwanese investors. We had a little, almost an aside in that paper. We took a look at when Taiwan instituted a national lottery. And that's not to say that you couldn't gamble in Taiwan before the national lottery. There were ways to gamble, but they instituted the national lottery. And we have a little model of expected, trading on the Taiwanese stock exchange and trading fell 25% when the lottery came in. And what we thought was going on is a lot of these people are trading, and turnover was very high. The individual investor turnover would be three, four, or 500%. That means that every stock gets bought. Say if it's 500%, every stock gets bought and sold. Every share of every stock, on average, gets bought and sold five times a year. So there is clearly a lot of speculation going on, and we thought, well, a bunch of people just said, oh, this week, this month, I'm going to try the lottery instead of gambling on the stock market."People at all levels are susceptible to psychological biases to some degree, and will it be helpful to do a psychological hygiene process on a regular basis to alert themselves to any of the biases that they may be succumbing to?"Professional investors, they're also human. And they have many of the same biases. I think they have had more learning opportunities. So as you say, hedge fund managers consciously try to recognize and deal with their own biases, be aware of them, and watch out for them. And certainly, that helps. So knowing that you have these biases is useful, but it doesn't instantly stop you from being influenced by them. I think institutional investors sometimes come up with checks, balances, protocols. For example, there's something called the disposition effect. And that was for the tendency of people to hold onto their losses and sell their winning investments. So things they had done well."Show LinksGuest ProfileTerrance Odean on LinkedInTerrance Odean on TwitterTerrance Odean Faculty Profile at Haas Business School, UC BerkeleyHis WorkJournals on Google ScholarHow Robinhood's trading app spurs investors' herding instincts: Q&A with Prof. OdeanMediating Investor AttentionRobinhood Traders: Wisdom of the Crowd? or Not?
What clues can carry trading give us about the past two decades of international economic downturns?Kevin Coldiron is a Lecturer at UC Berkeley's Haas Business School. He's also the is the co-owner of Algert Coldiron Investors. After 25 years in quantitative finance, Coldiron has a new book called The Rise Of Carry: The Dangerous Consequences Of Volatility Suppression And The New Financial Order Of Decaying Growth And Recurring Crisis.In this episode, we'll hear more about the four characteristics of carry trades and how the market has changed since the 2008 crash. We'll also learn more about feedback loops as they relate to carry trades and the centrality of the S&P 500.Episode Quotes:On the socialization of risk:“I just think competitively, it's very difficult to say we're not going to go down this path because we're worried about a crash that happens every decade. You might be proven right, but it's not likely you'll be in business or be employed by the time you were proven right.”On carry trades and mortgages:“A basic level of trade, like taking out a mortgage, fits the definition of a carry trade. And it's not as destabilizing as a lot of carry trades because as long as there's a reasonable deposit, you can still cover the mortgage payments[…] So, it's really the forced selling in a downturn that creates these fire-sale effects and leads to the big carry unwinds.”On when the federal government should step in:“It's a bit like Russian roulette, right? The feds can say, we're drawing a line here and markets are a bit like teenagers. You set them a boundary and it's going to be tested repeatedly.”Show Links:LinkedInRise of CarryFaculty ProfileOrder Book: The Rise of Carry
Over time, our brains are biologically hardwired with neural pathways and synaptic connections that largely determine our behavior. Once those pathways are formed our brains are pathological about following them. This is both good news, efficiency, and bad news because it actively inhibits new ideas and solutions. Real creativity, real problem solving, always comes from exploring the unknown and the uncertain. So, how do you go from the way things are… to the way things need to be? Welcome to Thinknado. A Thinknado is the freeing of your brain to act like a tornado to pull random ideas in and spin them around and upside down. Tornadoes do not edit what is right or wrong for a tornado – they just whirl and grab at everything in their path. Thinknados are the same in that they throw ideas – crazy ideas, wrong ideas together pulling them into their vortex, spinning them back to the ground. Co-Founder of Thinknado, designer, entrepreneur and imaginative advocate for a better world, John is recognized for innovative investigations into the practice and understanding of design and leadership in the “design for good” movement. John is founding creative director of Pando Populus and a member of the board of directors and co-author of the book Think Wrong. The thing that John Bielenberg designs best is designers. He doesn't think much of design as an end in itself, but rather sees its value in its impact on people, and the world. He's always had a tendency to do something he calls “thinking wrong,” which means, “Whatever you're supposed to think, or make, or say—do your best to do the opposite, and see where it takes you.” Co-Founder Thinknado, entrepreneur, connector of dots and people. Brandt Williams is a strategist with a knack for transforming ideas into successful ventures. He is a member of the board of directors of Pando Populus. As a serial entrepreneur, Brandt has served as founder/co-founder/CEO for early stage ventures and well as an intrapreneur and CMO for Fortune 500 companies. Brandt cares most about mentoring people and teams to find their true purpose. Deeply invested in building a better future, Brandt strives to find new paths for creativity, sustainable livelihoods, and fulfillment. Much of his early career was spent at Microsoft, Apple and a handful of early stage companies as a co-founder and senior leader. Galvanized by the entrepreneurial rigor and having built and sold a couple of companies, Brandt joined a Fortune 500 company as an intrepreneur where he was able to launch several successful ventures. After several years of working at making businesses bigger he pointed his efforts to people. Brandt has been a guest lecturer at Haas Business School, UC Berkeley, St. Mary's College and an Adjunct Professor at California College of the Arts in San Francisco in both Graduate and Undergraduate levels, teaching in several divisions. Brandt is currently an Adjunct Professor at Montana State University in Bozeman, Montana teaching design thinking and entrepreneurship. “Teaching gives a fresh outlook on how best to communicate to motivate. Nothing is more gratifying seeing second career students in grad school find their passion in the process of discovery” -Brandt. His real success is in building impactful teams and help individuals unlock their creativity to build better: businesses, careers, communities and lives.
On this edition of Be More Now, host Blake More interviews poet Lucinda Watson. Watson’s new book, “The Favorite” adds a hint of memoir to a striking collection of poems – poems that transport the reader on a narrative journey from childhood to senior citizenship. A now retired professor at the Haas Business School at UC Berkeley, Watson uses poetry as a launching point for a wide pallet of topics, including the perils and perks of being among the few women in the wild west of finance.
We ask what Donald Trump will do next, and consider the future of the Trump brand. Dan Alexander is a writer with Forbes magazine, and explains how Mr Trump built his business empire. Robert Maguire of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington discusses what his organisation claims are more than 3,500 conflicts of interest for the president since he took office. Nancy Wallace, professor of real estate finance at the Haas Business School in California tells us loans worth more than $480m will come due for Mr Trump in the next four years. And Colm O'Callaghan, former vice-president of Trump International Hotels, suggests a role at the centre of a new television network may be a likely next step for Donald Trump. Also in the programme, as the International Maritime Organisation introduces more stringent targets by 2030 for the carbon footprint of sea freight, Guy Platten, secretary general of the International Chamber of Shipping considers the potential impact of the move. Plus, as haircare brand Garnier unveils a hair shampoo that doesn't come in a plastic bottle, instead working like a bar of soap, Adrien Koskas, global brand president for the firm, explains the thinking behind the launch.
This week Oliver interviews David Hyman, CEO of Unagi Scooters about their new subscription service, Unagi All Access, as well as a wider discussion about the state of owned micromobility and the vehicles therein. It’s a great conversation - David’s got a great perspective on the industry, backed up with studies commissioned from the Haas Business School about the opportunity for scooters beyond just renting them via shared schemes like Lime and Bird. Hope you enjoy!Specifically, they dig into:- A quick review of Unagi scooters and their history as a premium ‘iPhone of scooters’ brand- Why Unagi has chosen to pursue a subscription model and who that will open them up to- What an end-to-end subscription needs to include- Why subscriptions may offer one of the cheapest daily transport options for most people- Why they have so many musicians and celebrities riding their scooters, and why Andrew Yang is a fan- Why David can’t wait to give Annie Hildago, mayor of Paris, a scooter (anyone know her and want to help?!)- Who David most respects in the Micromobility gameApologies about the audio - we had an issue and needed to go to backup.For those tuning in new, you might also enjoy this earlier conversation with David about the history of Unagi and premium scooters.Also, as mentioned in the news, Mina Nada and the Bolt Bikes (now Zooma) team have raised an $11m Series A. Check the interview we did with them out here.
Real Estate Professionals - Property Sales Tactics for Realtors
Create Wealth for Yourself and Your Clients There are real estate investment opportunities that arise from time to time and if you’re not in the right mindset, they can be missed. As a realtor, you are in the prime position to have the opportunity to make the first offer for yourself whether it is from a homeowner or whole seller or investor. Moneeka Sawyer is the Bliss Millionaire. She is the creator of the Blissful Real Estate Investor Formula and is the international best-selling author of the award-winning book “Choose Bliss”, the power and practice of joy and contentment and “Real Estate Investing for Women - Expert Conversations to Increase Wealth and Happiness the Blissful Way”. She has been investing in real estate for over 20 years, she has worked through several different cycles of the market. Through her strategies, she has turned $10,000 into over $2,000,000, working only 5-10 hours per MONTH with very little stress. She graduated from Haas Business School at UC Berkeley, one of the top 3 colleges in the nation, and has been in business for herself ever since and one of her endeavors was the creating the Blissful Real Estate Investor Formula that shows smart women how to use real estate investing to retire rich. She teaches you how to invest in the future of yourself and your family thorough real estate in a way that takes very little time and with low stress. She is the host of the top-ranking podcast Real Estate Investment for Women and has been featured nationwide on radio and TV including ABC NBC and FOX. Resources: iTunes Podcast: Real Estate Investing for Women Books: “Choose Bliss” “Real Estate Investing for Women” Online Programs: Blissful Real Estate Formula: http://blissfulinvestor.com/home-study Core Bliss Programs:http://coreblisslife.com/choose-bliss- happiness-2/ Moneeka’s Gift Moneeka Sawyer created her financial freedom by turning $10,000 to over $2,000,000 in real estate. Find out how she did it, and you can too with this free report. Go to: Blissfulinvestor.com Don’t forget to subscribe to Real Estate Professionals podcast so that you don’t miss a single episode, and while you’re at it, won’t you take a moment and do me a favor to write a short review and rate our show? I would greatly appreciate it! To learn more about our previous guests, listen to past episodes, and get to know your host, go to www.RealEstateSuccessMentor.com Real Estate Professionals Network is where we can continue this conversation with other peers and much more! Don’t forget to subscribe to Real Estate Professionals podcast so that you don’t miss a single episode, and while you’re at it, won’t you take a moment and do me a favor to write a short review and rate our show? I would greatly appreciate it! To learn more about our previous guests, listen to past episodes, and get to know your host, go to www.RealEstateSuccessMentor.com Real Estate Professionals Network is where we can continue this conversation with other peers and much more! My Gift Use the “3 Secrets to Sell More Homes Faster “ in your business. Get your free guide here: StressFreeRemodeling.com/Secrets
Author of the branding bestseller, Hello, My Name is Awesome... How to Create Brand Names That Stick (an Inc. Magazine Top 10 Marketing Book), I am the founder of Eat My Words, the wildly creative naming firm behind countless love-at-first-sight brand names including Burger King's new Mac 'n Cheetos. (I also named Wendy's Baconator while contracting for another firm.) I am also a frequent guest lecturer at MBA programs and have been invited to present on multiple occasions to Stanford GSB, Haas Business School, Tuck @ Dartmouth, USC, USF, USD and SF State.Eat My Words' clients include Coca-cola, Disney, Google, Frito-Lay, MIT, Wrigley, Fujitsu, Hasbro, Del Monte, and leading branding firms (like Landor) who put their good name on our great names.How would you describe what you do for a living to my Scottish Grandparents, Vene and Cordia?You were a copywriter at the prestigious ad agency, Ogilvy & Mather, any Mad Woman/Men stories you dare to share? Why does a name matter?What made you curious enough to write the book, Hello My Name Is Awesome, How to Create Brand Names That Stick? Eat My Words, your brand naming firm, how did you come up with this name?The SMILE and SCRATCH is your proven approach for what makes or breaks a name. Tell us more.With clients such as Disney, Microsoft, Adobe and others, what advice do you give innovative medical technology companies that may be reluctant to create catchy and creative product names that make powerful emotional connections and create instant brand affinity?You have 12 Rules for Building Brand Name Consensus. Rule #2 states, The essential question to ask yourself when reviewing names, is not, Do I like it? which is subject to personal bias. The better question to ask is, Is it right? which is much more objective and effective.You share there is a right way to brainstorm names and a wrong way to brainstorm. Give us one example from each.What do you mean by "Curse of Knowledge" and how it can apply to our listening audience of healthcare professionals and medical device leaders.What's the first delightful or delectable thing you will treat yourself to once we receive the ALL-CLEAR post-coved-19? What book are you reading that we should be reading?What's next for you?
Moneeka Sawyer is often described as one of the most joyful people you will ever meet. But don't confuse her big smile and infectious laugh with naivete. Her multi-million dollar real estate empire is just one example of her ability to strategize, organize, and implement big business plans. She is the best-selling author of the book "Choose Bliss: The Power and Practice of Joy and Contentment," which was recently honored with the very prestigious Woman of Impact Quill Award by Focus on Women Magazine. Moneeka lives her dreams and won't let anyone tell her what she can and can't do. She graduated from Haas Business School at UC Berkeley, one of the top 3 colleges in the nation, and has been in business for herself ever since. While building her multi-million dollar business, she has travelled to over 55 countries, dances every single day, and spends lots of time with her husband of over 20 years and her adorable little puppy (who is the love of her life, but shhhh...don't tell her husband). Her clients find themselves inspired to take action and achieve massive success through her results- driven book and programs that also include having fun as part of the process. One of her clients recently said, "run, don't walk, to take Moneeka's program. You will get so much more than you ever anticipated." Moneeka is the host of the top rated podcast Real Estate Investing for Women. Her expertise, and joyous laugh, have been featured all over the world in over 50 podcasts, on stages, radio, and TV stations including ABC, CBS, FOX, and the CW.
Moneeka Sawyer is often described as one of the most blissful people you will ever meet. But don't confuse her big smile and infectious laugh with naivete. Her multi-million dollar real estate empire is just one example of her ability to strategize, organize, and implement big business plans. Sawyer is the best-selling author of the book "Choose Bliss: The Power and Practice of Joy and Contentment," which was recently honored with the very prestigious Woman of Impact Quill Award by Focus on Women Magazine. She has been investing in real estate for over 20 years, so has worked through several different cycles of the market. Through her strategies, she has turned $10,000 into over $2,000,000, working only 5-10 hours per MONTH with very little stress. She lives her dreams and won't let anyone tell her what she can and can't do. Even though she was constantly told she couldn't get in, she graduated from Haas Business School at UC Berkeley, one of the top 3 colleges in the nation, and has been in business for herself ever since. While building her multi-million dollar business, she has travelled to over 55 countries, dances every single day, and spends lots of time with her husband of over 20 years and her adorable little puppy (who is the love of her life, but shhhh...don't tell her husband). She is also the host of the Podcast "Real Estate Investing for Women" where she focuses on all the aspects of real estate investing including strategies, mindset, emotional mastery, money smart, and so much more, to ensure her listeners’ success. Moneeka's expertise, and blissful laugh, have been featured all over the world in over 50 podcasts, on stages, radio, and TV stations including ABC, CBS, FOX, and the CW. How to contact us www.RogerBlankenship.com Facebook.com/flippingamericamedia Twitter and Instagram @FlippingAmerica Call our National Comment Line: 404-369-1018, ext 1. Leave your message or your question. Email your questions to questions@rogerblankenship.com. Please always tell us where you are from. We like to know where the show is being heard. And let us know how you found out about us if you don’t mind. Sponsors American IRA: www.americanIRA.com Civic Financial: bit.ly/CivicFunding Announcements: Lunch with me every Wednesday. Baraonda My latest article in Forbes is out. bit.ly/findredeals. The FAN is here! Would you like to invest in the Flipping America projects across the country? Coming soon you will be able to for as little as $100. That’s right, Flipping America is partnering with Ground Floor Funding to create a crowd-funded platform where you can invest in the deals we are doing here. The fund will pay out a 8% preferred rate of return and can go as high as 16%. You can make money with me, the Flipping America Guy. Flipping America App is in the app store. You can listen to the show, read the show notes, and the entire catalog of shows is now available to you. It’s a free download and there are no upsells or in-app purchases. Free to download, free to listen. Go ahead and give it a try and drop me a line and let me know what you think. Want a quick analytical tool to tell you how strong a potential fix and flip deal is? Download the Property Grade app. You answer 10 simple questions about the property and the app instantly tells you what you can expect to make, your return on investment, your return on cash, and then the program gives the project a letter grade using the proprietary Flipping America Investment Property Grade algorithm. News: For everyone concerned about recession, we have some numbers. https://www.housingwire.com/articles/this-is-how-u-s-gdp-performed-in-the-third-quarter/ Additional reading: https://www.barrons.com/articles/un-spinning-the-trump-obama-gdp-numbers-51553801603 Housing Secretary Ben Carson talks about changes to FHA regulation https://www.cnbc.com/video/2019/10/28/ben-carson-hud-fha-mortgage-applications-squawk-box.html WeWork Is Reportedly Expanding Into Esports With New ‘Play By We’ Venture https://www.forbes.com/sites/sergeiklebnikov/2019/10/29/wework-is-reportedly-expanding-into-esports-with-new-play-by-we-venture/#59dc1bb17a54 “The besieged startup has already branched into other businesses, like education with WeGrow, fitness with Rise By We and co-living with WeLive, although it has been divesting assets from some of them.” Regulator Says Government Will ‘Wipe Out’ Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Shareholders If Needed https://www.realtor.com/news/real-estate-news/regulator-says-government-will-wipe-out-fannie-mae-and-freddie-mac-shareholders-if-needed/ Investors Are Still Going After Student Housing Properties, But They Are More Concerned About Prices https://www.nreionline.com/student-housing/investors-are-still-going-after-student-housing-properties-they-are-more-concerned Motivational Thoughts for the day “I am inspired to teach and mentor others to move through their pain and learn how to live a life of boldness, happiness, and peace. This is what I am dedicating my life to do.” ~Moneeka Sawyer
The Undergraduate Real Estate Club is very excited to invite Roh Habibi, the founder and principal of the Habibi Group to discuss his journey as a luxury single family home broker. -Overview: Roh and his team specialize in opulent resale properties, ground up developments, and conversions in the San Francisco Bay Area and wine country. As a result of his impressive accomplishments Roh was cast as the star of the #1 Real Estate television show in the world, Million Dollar Listing San Francisco. He is frequently spotlighted as an industry expert and authority on prestigious media outlets, such as the Wall Street Journal, CNBC, Fox Business and Bloomberg, among others. -Time: 7:00-8:30pm, Wednesday, February 20th -Location: C125 Haas School of Business -Attire: campus casual
Dr. Rafinejad has had over 30 years of experience as a senior executive in high-tech industries in Silicon Valley. He was a Corporate Vice President at both Applied Materials and Lam Research, both multi-billion dollar semiconductor equipment companies. Prior to PGS, he was Associate Professor, Consulting at Stanford University. He has also served as adjunct faculty at Haas Business School at Berkeley and Dean of Management at Menlo College in Atherton, California. Dr. Rafinejad is the founding CEO of Blue Dome Consulting serving high tech companies in the U.S. and China to develop product innovation and organizational leadership capability. He has authored several publications including two books on product innovation. His recent book was published in 2017 and is titled: Sustainable Product Innovation – Entrepreneurship for Human Well-Being. Dariush Joins Sustainable Nation to Discuss: Graduate programs that prepare students to become successful sustainability leaders Sustainable product innovation Leading sustainability change from positions not labeled "sustainability" Advice and recommendations for sustainability leaders Final Five Responses: What is one piece of advice you would give other sustainability professionals that might help them in their careers? It is important that sustainability professionals extend their reach beyond corporate sustainability programs which aim to measure and report. Sustainability professionals should build coalitions with the operating units of the company, starting with the enthusiasts and early adopters in each of these units. Sustainability professionals should become entrepreneurs within the corporations. They should seek opportunities for innovation in every building block of the company to affect triple bottom line change. They should remember, however, the big changes start with the small wins and small steps, and through prototyping solutions to demonstrate viability and to create enthusiasm for the potential outcome. What are you, what are you most excited about right now in the world of sustainability? I'm excited by the rise in the awareness of acute need for sustainable development, for social justice and for stewardship of the environment and natural resources. I'm also encouraged by the rise in the recognition that sustainable development is the next innovation wave that will fuel future prosperity and wellbeing. What is one book you'd recommend sustainability professionals read? I'm sorry. I have to shamelessly recommend my own book, Sustainable Product Innovation: Entrepreneurship for human wellbeing. That was published in 2017. So sorry about that. What are some of your favorite resources or tools that really help you in your work? I use many resources in the sustainability space. Some examples, for instance, I look at websites of activists and other NGOs. Governmental resources are plentiful and they're invaluable. US Department of Energy and the state of California sustainability sites. Leading corporations and industry alliances have many good resources. I also consult trade journals in addition to scientific journals. Trade journals like Solar Magazine, Green Chemistry and others are also very valuable. United Nations organizations such as United Nation Environmental Program as well as United Nations Sustainable Development Goals websites are great resources. They provide and pull data, provide advice and recommendations. One of the PGS faculty professors has published in GreenBiz as well. So, there are many, many resources and of course the listeners who are interested in the scientific area, there is much research done in the sustainability area in regards to climate change, both in prevention as well as adaptation technologies that are being developed. So there's plenty of those areas of opportunity as well. Where can our listeners go to learn more about you and what's going on at Presidio Graduate School? The best resource is the Presidio Graduate School website at presidio.edu. They can email admissions@presidio.edu also and ask to join an upcoming monthly virtual open house that we have. PGS also has a Twitter handle and LinkedIn resources they can connect to. Learn more about Preidio Graduate School: https://www.presidio.edu/ Learn more about Sustridge: https://www.sustridge.com/
Almost all offices have them. The person whose self-belief exceeds their abilities, who belittles their co-workers, and who considers themselves so special and unique, they're left infuriated when others fail to recognise them.We're talking about the office narcissist. Tim Judge, an organisational and leadership psychologist at the Ohio State University, tells us how to spot one. Karlyn Borysenko, author of a book called Zen Your Work, found herself working for what she later realised was a narcissistic boss. She said she had to make use of a number of strategies to cope.And Don Moore, professor at the Haas Business School, says that while self confidence is ok, overconfidence destroys businesses and politics.(Picture: A woman kissing a mirror; Credit: Getty Images)
Per har tatt turen til Silicon Valley for å finne ut av hva som skal til for å lykkes, hvem investorene ser etter og hvor mye penger som trengs for å skape en gigasuksess. Vi møter Morten Hansen, professor ved University of California, Berkeley, Toby Stuart, professor og sjef for entrepenørfakultetet ved Haas Business School på UoC Berkeley, og Julie Henna, entrepenør og nvestor. Programledere Per Valebrokk og Marius Lorentzen. Produsert av Magne Antonsen. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Sandra Epstein focuses on the history of the Haas Business School and its relationship to the Berkeley campus and to university business education. The Haas School of Business’ upward trajectory from a “College of Commerce” to its top-ranked position today owes as much to its place as it does to its people and culture. Its affiliation with the Berkeley campus has ensured rigorous academic scholarship and research as well as placed it in the forefront of innovative developments in business, technology, and society. Series: "Center for Studies in Higher Education" [Education] [Show ID: 31797]
Sandra Epstein focuses on the history of the Haas Business School and its relationship to the Berkeley campus and to university business education. The Haas School of Business’ upward trajectory from a “College of Commerce” to its top-ranked position today owes as much to its place as it does to its people and culture. Its affiliation with the Berkeley campus has ensured rigorous academic scholarship and research as well as placed it in the forefront of innovative developments in business, technology, and society. Series: "Center for Studies in Higher Education" [Education] [Show ID: 31797]
Business, Life, & Coffee | Entrepreneurship, Life Hacks, Personal Development for Busy Professionals
How One Major Retail Bookseller is Doing It's Part To Help Close The Tech Job Skills Gap Ft. Kathleen Campisano, Vice President, Toys & Games, Barnes & Noble, Inc. This episode is sponsored by Jumpstart:HR, LLC - HR Outsourcing for Small Businesses and Startups Learn more at www.jumpstart-hr.com Find Your Nearest Maker Faire: bn.com/makerfaire About this Episode: Barnes & Noble and Maker Media, creator of Make: Magazine are teaming up for the second year to give children and adults in communities across the country the permission to explore, learn, make mistakes and have fun while building their tech literacy skills. Barnes & Noble stores throughout the U.S. will once again be transformed into a fun and interactive education space featuring “Make” Space where customer can interact with Makers, get hands-on with some of the latest materials for building and constructing and be introduced to some of the newest innovations using virtual reality, augmented reality, 3D printing, robotics, coding and programming and more! Guests of all ages will also have the opportunity to get hands-on experiences around the art of designing, handcrafting and constructing, in the spirit of collaboration, cooperative learning and teamwork. About Kathleen: Kathleen Campisano is an award-winning business leader with a 20+ year record of driving multimillion dollar growth. Her areas of expertise include marketing, branding, ideation, P&L management, merchandising, experiential retailing and innovation in both product and content development. Campisano has been the Vice President of Toys & Games for Barnes & Noble since 2009. She is a longtime contributor to the toy industry and currently serves on the TIA Board. Campisano has also served as Executive Vice President and Chief Marketing Officer for Mega Brands, as SVP of Design, Product Development and Marketing, pre/post IPO, at LeapFrog Enterprises, along with key marketing brand positions at Fisher Price and Century Baby Products. Ms. Campisano has guest lectured at Toy & Game Conferences across the country, Haas Business School of Management at UC Berkeley, and has served on several retail panels representing the specialty toy market. She holds an Executive MBA from the SUNY School of Management in Buffalo, NY, and a BS in Marketing from Xavier University in Cincinnati, OH.
I had an interesting coffee with Eric Schoenberg in New York recently. He is an adjunct professor who teaches about family wealth at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, and also a member of a group known as the Patriotic Millionaires, who believe counter-intuitively, that he and other wealthy people, should be made to pay more tax. Facts like that twenty Americans own more wealth than half the population bother him, and are a reason why he believes that the US system is in need of reform. Eric saw first hand the effects of greed and wealth on human decision making. Having been involved in the first dotcom boom during the nineties at Broadview International, and the experience had led him to conducting research on the psychology of money and asset market bubbles. Since then he has taught behavioural economics and leadership at Columbia Business School, NYU's Stern School of Business, and the Haas Business School of the University of California at Berkeley. We reminisced about the strange digital tulip-mania of the late 90s, and why in the midst of a bubble people seem want to take on more risk even though they feel like they are making a lot of money.
I had an interesting coffee with Eric Schoenberg in New York recently. He is an adjunct professor who teaches about family wealth at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, and also a member of a group known as the Patriotic Millionaires, who believe counter-intuitively, that he and other wealthy people, should be made to pay more tax. Facts like that twenty Americans own more wealth than half the population bother him, and are a reason why he believes that the US system is in need of reform. Eric saw first hand the effects of greed and wealth on human decision making. Having been involved in the first dotcom boom during the nineties at Broadview International, and the experience had led him to conducting research on the psychology of money and asset market bubbles. Since then he has taught behavioural economics and leadership at Columbia Business School, NYU's Stern School of Business, and the Haas Business School of the University of California at Berkeley. We reminisced about the strange digital tulip-mania of the late 90s, and why in the midst of a bubble people seem want to take on more risk even though they feel like they are making a lot of money.
"Your purpose is when your natural talents, skills, and interests all align." - Suzannah Scully About: Suzannah Scully- Executive Coach Overview: Once a part of the corporate world, Suzannah has taken her experience to start her own practice as an Executive Coach and help large corporations and entrepreneurs. Suzannah provides us with some great insight on how we can improve ourselves and our companies. Highlights: Background: (From her website) "Suzannah Scully is a coach, speaker and blogger with a corporate background working for organizations such as Gap, Inc., Williams-Sonoma, Inc and The Wine Group. Her mission is to give leaders the space and tools to break through barriers and reach their potential. She has given presentations for Stanford University (see presentation here), Haas Business School of Berkeley and Vanderbilt University as well as other local bay area companies on the topics of leadership development, effective communication and personal branding. Suzannah received a B.A. from UCLA in Sociology and has received her C.P.C.C. from The Coaches Training Institute. She is married with two children and a dog and lives in Marin County, CA. When not working or with her family, you can usually find her at yoga, in a library or at the movies." How it all Started: It was during a business trip to France, that she had her "ah-ha" moment, realizing she wasn't fully happy with her career. At that moment, she decided to leave the traditional work path and began training to become a business coach. Suzannah has now run her own practice for 10 years and will soon be starting her own podcast as well. Role of an Executive Coach: Suzannah is an executive coach who works with entrepreneurs and corporations by providing them with the tools to access new parts of themselves while taking their career and lives to the next level. Her clients include: high profile individuals, large organizations such as Apple, Sony, Eventbrite, and Slalom Consulting as well as Bay Area startups. She usually works with her clients for 6 months, meeting with them twice monthly. The majority of her clients are in the Bay area, but she is more than willing to work with clients all over the country. What Sets Suzannah Apart: Suzannah has a strong corporate background- she understands how to navigate a big corporate company. By working with well-known companies, like Apple, her clients can trust that she is experienced at what she does. Suzannah really focuses on helping clients excel in the background aspect of the company- how to get people on your side, how to network effectively, how to build a team, etc. Suzannah has found that brilliant minds can be impatient, they want everyone to be at the same pace and it can be easy for them to lose the art of listening. Suzannah addresses this issue by teaching the 3 levels of listening, not asking just yes/no questions, and teaching them to really understand the 'why' of what someone may be sharing. Measuring Success: At the beginning of each meeting with her clients, Suzannah will analyze what success looks like to them. That is what she then works toward with her clients. She ensures they are accomplishing what they have set out to do by creating milestones. Suzannah is there to push her clients to do what they have hired her for while being supportive along the way. Purpose vs. Passion: Suzannah shares that you can be passionate about something but that t it doesn't necessarily mean it's going to be your purpose. Your passions are the things you enjoy doing in your free time. Your purpose is when your natural talents, skills, and interests all align. When you know what your purpose is, you will enjoy what you do, and knowing your purpose will help you determine what you can be successful in. It may not always work out, but it's always worth a shot. Importance of Personal Branding: Everybody has a personal brand, and it needs to be managed. Suzannah shares 3 steps on how to create an effective brand. 1: Define your aspirations. 2: Determine your unique value proposition. 3: Communicate your brand. Advice for Entrepreneurs: The best way to reach out to mentors, or venture capitalists, is to make sure you are giving as well as taking. Find ways to help that other person and give back to them. Always look for opportunities to serve, and it will come back to you. What moves you may not move someone else, but that doesn't make it wrong. Trust yourself, listen to yourself, and follow that wisdom. Subscribe to the Outlier Newsletter: Click Here Connect With Suzannah: Website | @SuzannahScully | Facebook | Podcast Book Recommendations: 1) Give and Take 2) Essentialism If you enjoy Outlier On Air, please Subscribe & Review on iTunes or Stitcher
During the Cold War with the Soviet Union, science and engineering at both Stanford and U.C. Berkeley were heavily funded to develop Cold War weapon systems. Stanford’s focus was Electronic Intelligence and those advanced microwave components and systems were useful in a variety of weapons systems. Starting in the 1950’s, Stanford’s engineering department became “outward facing” and developed a culture of spinouts and active faculty support and participation in the first wave of Silicon Valley startups.
Henry Chesbrough is known as the father of Open Innovation and wrote the book that defined the practice. Henry is the Faculty Director of the Garwood Center for Corporate Innovation, at U.C. Berkeley in the Haas Business School. Henry and I teach a corporate innovation class together.