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"Décroissance" : un mot qui divise. Pour certaines personnes, c'est une nécessité écologique. Pour d'autres, c'est la porte ouverte à la précarité. Alors, que peut proposer l'économie pour sauver la planète et nous avec ? Face à face, deux économistes de HEC Lausanne aux visions différentes : Kenza Benhima qui défend un avenir où la croissance a sa place et Thimothé Parrique, partisan de la décroissance. A travers des défis et des jeux, ces deux expert·e·s vont devoir trouver des points d'accords. Pari réussi ou échec cuisant ? A découvrir dans cet épisode de Twist. Journaliste et animateur : Grégoire Molle Réalisation : Brian Lanni Production : Magali Philip
Nous savions que le deuxième mandat de Donald Trump serait pire que le premier, il a eu 4 ans pour préparer sa revanche. Mais l'ensemble de ses décisions prises en un mois bouleverse non seulement l'équilibre géopolitique mondial, mais aussi notre vision du monde, de la solidarité, du respect voire de la valeur d'une vie humaine. Le business, voilà le maître mot de ce nouveau mandat ! Mais est-ce que la brutalité des décisions américaines de ce dernier mois n'est pas un concentré du pire de ce que le capitalisme peut produire ? Mettre la croissance économique en haut de l'agenda politique, les profits avant les dégâts environnementaux et sociaux, la technologie au cœur de la stratégie… Cette hiérarchie des priorités va à l'encontre des besoins de l'ensemble des Vivants de cette planète, mais peu importe tant que ça rapporte ! Si vous suivez l'actualité, vous comprenez les faits, vous sentez bien qu'il y a un malaise mais comment chacun d'entre nous peut-il se positionner ? Quels sens donner à sa vie dans un monde bouleversé ? Avec :- Pascal Chabot, philosophe pour son ouvrage Un sens à la vie (PUF, 2024)- Céline Marty, philosophe pour son ouvrage Travailler moins pour vivre mieux (Dunod, 2021)- Timothée Parrique, chercheur en économie écologique à HEC Lausanne, spécialiste de la décroissance et du post-capitalisme, auteur de Ralentir ou périr (Seuil, 2022).Programmation musicale :- Gonzales - Working Together- Oscar Emch - Les moyens (Playlist RFI).
Nous savions que le deuxième mandat de Donald Trump serait pire que le premier, il a eu 4 ans pour préparer sa revanche. Mais l'ensemble de ses décisions prises en un mois bouleverse non seulement l'équilibre géopolitique mondial, mais aussi notre vision du monde, de la solidarité, du respect voire de la valeur d'une vie humaine. Le business, voilà le maître mot de ce nouveau mandat ! Mais est-ce que la brutalité des décisions américaines de ce dernier mois n'est pas un concentré du pire de ce que le capitalisme peut produire ? Mettre la croissance économique en haut de l'agenda politique, les profits avant les dégâts environnementaux et sociaux, la technologie au cœur de la stratégie… Cette hiérarchie des priorités va à l'encontre des besoins de l'ensemble des Vivants de cette planète, mais peu importe tant que ça rapporte ! Si vous suivez l'actualité, vous comprenez les faits, vous sentez bien qu'il y a un malaise mais comment chacun d'entre nous peut-il se positionner ? Quels sens donner à sa vie dans un monde bouleversé ? Avec :- Pascal Chabot, philosophe pour son ouvrage Un sens à la vie (PUF, 2024)- Céline Marty, philosophe pour son ouvrage Travailler moins pour vivre mieux (Dunod, 2021)- Timothée Parrique, chercheur en économie écologique à HEC Lausanne, spécialiste de la décroissance et du post-capitalisme, auteur de Ralentir ou périr (Seuil, 2022).Programmation musicale :- Gonzales - Working Together- Oscar Emch - Les moyens (Playlist RFI).
Luxus – das Wort weckt Bilder von glitzernden Juwelen, edlen Stoffen und makellosem Design. Doch Luxus ist weit mehr als ein Preisschild. In dieser Folge von StoryRadar taucht Ferris gemeinsam mit Felicitas Morhart, Professorin für Luxusmarketing an der HEC Lausanne, tief in die Welt des Luxus ein. Gemeinsam sprechen sie über die faszinierende Verbindung von Identität und Symbolik im Luxusmarketing und der Macht von artistischem Storytelling. Ausserdem erklärt Felicitas, welche Risiken in der Kommunikation auf die Luxusmarken zukommen werden, wie digitale Plattformen den Markt verändern und welche Trends die Zukunft bestimmen werden. Jetzt reinhören und die Geheimnisse hinter erfolgreichen Luxusmarken entdecken! Mehr über Felicitas Morhart: LinkedIn Felicitas Morhart Webseite Podcast Luxury On Air Mehr über Ferris Bühler: LinkedIn Ferris Bühler Instagram Ferris Bühler Hier findest du uns: Webseite Ferris Bühler Communications Facebook Ferris Bühler Communications LinkedIn Ferris Bühler Communications Instagram Ferris Bühler Communications TikTok Ferris Bühler Communications Webseite StoryRadar Instagram StoryRadar Wir freuen uns sehr über eine positive Bewertung auf Apple Podcasts. StoryRadar wird präsentiert von news aktuell. Ob Medienmitteilung, Bild oder Video – news aktuell bringt Ihre PR-Inhalte zuverlässig zu den gewünschten Zielgruppen. Vertrauen Sie für Ihre erfolgreiche Kommunikation auf vielfältige PR-Lösungen aus einer Hand und sorgen Sie so einfach und gezielt für mehr Reichweite sowie Sichtbarkeit. Jetzt informieren auf newsaktuell.ch. Mehr über news aktuell: LinkedIn news aktuell X news aktuell Bluesky news aktuell YouTube news aktuell Facebook news aktuell Instagram news aktuell Fragen oder Anregungen dürft ihr jederzeit an storyradar@ferrisbuehler.com senden.
[PARTENAIRE] Et si, pour Noël, vous souffliez une idée lumineuse à vos proches
Jamais 2 sans 3 ! Nous recevons notre ami John Antonakis, professeur de sciences comportementales à HEC Lausanne, qui a continué d'affiner son modèle de prédiction de résultats d'élections basé - entre autres - sur le charisme. Modèle, qui avant le résultat de la dernière élection américaine, donnait Trump vainqueur avec 70% de chance, malgré les sondages qui prédisaient une victoire de Kamala Harris. Malheureusement pour nous, le modèle avait raison. Comment ça marche ? Pourquoi ça marche ? Quelles révisions ont été apportées au modèle pour améliorer son efficacité ? Bref, nous parlons de probabilités, d'hypothèses, de feedback, de corrections et de validation, bref, de science en train de se faire. Et on va sans doute parler un peu politique aussi ; on en a gros !Notes d'émission : https://www.podcastscience.fm/emission/2024/12/07/podcast-science-520-il-avait-prevu-la-victoire-de-trump/Retrouvez-nous sur PodcastScience.fm, Bluesky, Twitter, Facebook et Instagram.Soutenez-nous sur Tipeee Soutenez nous sur Patreon Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Timestamps: 5:20 - Workaholics having fun 15:35 - Market validation 33:33 - Why Switzerland is the best headquarters 46:19 - Instilling company values 54:30 - Selling 100% of your shares About Fabio Ronga: Fabio Ronga is the co-founder and CEO of beqom, a cloud-based compensation management solution. He holds a master's degree in Business Information Systems from HEC Lausanne and previously worked at Hyperion (bought by Oracle) and Outlooksoft (bought by SAP) before starting beqom in 2008. Together with his co-founders (including Tanya Jansen and Stephan Pohl, who are still active in the company), Fabio built beqom to solve HR problems he himself had encountered earlier in his career. Serendipitously enough, someone Fabio used to know from Hyperion was on the board of a French company who had built the exact tech that Fabio and his co-founders needed, but was using it for different purposes. beqom was born out of a partnership with that company. Later on, when beqom was coming into its own, it merged with this French company. beqom started out with Swiss headquarters and maintains them to this day. Fabio thinks this helped them be global-minded about their product building from day one: since Switzerland is such a linguistically and culturally fragmented country, Swiss founders cannot rely on their domestic market to keep them in business, like US companies can. In 2022 beqom received a strategic investment of USD 300M from Sumeru Equity Partners. A few years prior, beqom had received another investment from Goldman Sachs, in exchange of which they promised a favorable exit scenario — this was their motivation for the 2022 Sumeru investment. The cover portrait was edited by www.smartportrait.io. Don't forget to give us a follow on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and Linkedin, so you can always stay up to date with our latest initiatives. That way, there's no excuse for missing out on live shows, weekly giveaways or founders' dinners.
Recent research has shed light on the apprehension CEOs harbor towards uncertainty. A 2019 Harvard Business Review study revealed a tendency among CEOs to shy away from decision-making in uncertain situations, even when such decisions could significantly influence a company's success. The study's findings attribute this behavior to the inherent risk aversion of CEOs, who prioritize decisions geared toward minimizing potential losses. Another pertinent study, featured in the journal "Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes," unveiled that uncertainty often prompts CEOs to make impulsive decisions. This tendency arises due to cognitive biases like the sunk cost fallacy, posing challenges for CEOs in maintaining rational decision-making processes. This topic needed a recognized expert on risk and uncertainty - welcome to my guest Alec Corthay About Alec Corthay [expert in the management of uncertainty] Meet Alec Corthay, a seasoned management expert renowned for his expertise in handling uncertainty. With a background in advisory roles at EY and Cegos, Alec brings over two decades of experience to the table. He has also served as a CIA-certified internal auditor and holds a degree in economics from HEC Lausanne. As a prominent figure, Alec engages as a speaker, facilitator, and corporate trainer, leveraging his insights to guide leaders in navigating uncertainty effectively. He imparts knowledge and techniques honed through years of experience in his roles, sharing invaluable expertise gained from teaching at prestigious institutions such as Centrale and Mines Paris engineer schools. Moreover, Alec is the visionary founder and CEO of Zerra, a testament to his dedication and leadership in the realm of uncertainty management. Reach out Alec on https://www.linkedin.com/in/aleccorthay/ and on his company website Zerra https://www.zerra.fr/ What We Discussed in this Episode on How Corporates Can Learn to Live and Thrive with Uncertainty - Transforming Corporate Culture: Strategies to Shift from Risk Aversion to Calculated Risk-Taking - Balancing Control and Entrepreneurship: Practical Approaches for Organizational Operations - Building Personal Agility: Techniques to Enhance Individual Capacity for Adaptability - Fostering Virality in Uncertainty: Cultivating a Culture of Thriving Amidst Ambiguity - The Vital Role of Agility and Flexibility in Navigating an Uncertain Business Landscape - Harnessing Data Analytics for Proactive Response: How Predictive Modeling Aids Corporations in Addressing Challenges - Striking the Right Balance: Assessing Control and Agility Alignment in Corporate Structures ### About the Growth Hacking Culture Podcast The Growth Hacking Culture Podcast is a series of insightful interviews with prominent experts on mindsets, skills and mental resources to grow individually, lead motivated teams and create human-centric work cultures. These episodes are about thought provoking ideas to scale up and growth hack human-centric and performing work cultures. Hosted by Ivan Palomino. This episode is sponsored by: PeopleKult [behavioral science, tech and analytics to scale up the next generation work culture] The Cornerstone Advisory [innovation, performance and growth for future-focused organizations]
17th July 2023 The Spokesmen Cycling Podcast EPISODE 335: The Potential for Cargo Bikes SPONSOR: Tern Bicycles HOST: Carlton Reid GUESTS: Patrick Rérat and Virginie Lurkin, HEC Lausanne, at the University of Lausanne TOPICS: The Potential for Cargo Bikes report LINKS: https://www.the-spokesmen.com/ https://www.ternbicycles.com https://twitter.com/CarltonReid https://e4s.center/resources/reports/the-potential-of-cargo-bikes-diffusion-uses-effects-and-willingness-for-delivery/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/virginie-lurkin-71072767/ https://twitter.com/PatrickRerat
Laura estudió Marketing y Estrategia en HEC Lausanne y durante los años que residió en Suiza trabajó en los equipos de marketing del sector del lujo y farmacéutico, donde comenzó su pasión por el metaverso y la web3. Actualmente, se dedica a enseñar y a crear conciencia sobre las amplias posibilidades y oportunidades que brindará esta revolución tecnológica. Lauri in metaverse arrasa en TikTok, Instagram y Twitter, es la interlocutora ideal, traductora simultánea, de tanta innovación que trae Blockchain , el Metaverso y la WEB3. Conversamos con ella sobre los tiempos que vivimos y su camino al metaverso... de Laura Gonzalez a Lauri y Metaverse.
Timestamps: 4:47 - How the idea for Batmaid started in a New York apartment 6:45 - The importance of social responsibility in business 17:15 - Profitability in a people business 24:22 - Building a strong brand in Switzerland's different regions 36:48 - Journey of finding investment About Andreas Schollin-Borg: Andreas Schollin-Borg always knew he wanted to become an entrepreneur. At the age of 16 he began a small business selling caps, and the bug bit. Due to his father's insistence, he obtained a finance and ship trading degree from HEC Lausanne and a Master's from the University of Geneva, and even went on to study at NYU, all the while trying out different entrepreneurial ideas in his mind — fast forward to the present, he is the co-founder of Batmaid, and the CEO of Batgroup, the parent company of Batmaid, Batwork, and Batsoft. Back in 2014, he initially wanted to start a shoe business while in New York and was actively studying this industry. While doing this, his apartment was a mess and difficult to work in, so he found a locally-based app to book a housekeeper to do some cleaning. It was such a good experience, and he loved the idea so much that he decided to take it back to Switzerland with him. However, he knew he would need support and partnership, and found it one night at a beer pong tournament where he met his future partner, Eric Laudet. They have only grown from there: Batmaid has become the Batgroup, including Batmaid, Batwork, and Batsoft, which all combat different areas of the cleaning business, and it has expanded to other regions of Switzerland and 8 countries around Europe. Initially, it was challenging to convince investors to give capital to the company because people-based businesses are often seen as unreliable, but Andreas proved there was a demand for this service, and with some significant branding initiatives, a partnership with Onet (one of the biggest facility management companies in Europe) and some damn good tech, investors became convinced. An essential part of their business is the social mission of combating the black market and giving their staff rights, legal agency, and financial and emotional support. Having a constant fear of going to work in the case that somebody asks for a social security number, or simply not getting a retirement package, is a reality for many of the cleaning staff, and it is Batmaid's goal to improve that experience, to be a safe environment fueled by trust between the employer, the employee and the client. For the next 12 months, Andreas is taking a brief pause on growth and focusing on profitability, while also working towards improving their service. He would love Batmaid to be something that is accessible to everybody in any part of Switzerland, and for it to be the number one tech-based cleaning company in the world. “Bringing the supplier and user together, it's the chicken and egg problem – you need the supply before the demand, because if you have no supply, demand will never come.” “When you're in a startup or scaleup, the problems don't get simpler, they just get more complex.” Don't forget to give us a follow on our Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and Linkedin accounts, so you can always stay up to date with our latest initiatives. That way, there's no excuse for missing out on live shows, weekly give-aways or founders dinners!
Vincent Held a étudié l'économie politique et la finance aux Universités de Lausanne, St-Gall et Bocconi. Diplômé du Master of Science in Finance de HEC Lausanne en 2007, il travaille depuis 2008 dans le domaine du conseil en Ressources Humaines. Il est l'auteur du Crépuscule de la Banque nationale suisse, paru en 2017 aux Editions Xénia, « Après la crise: Chronique de l'émergence d'un nouvel ordre monétaire international » et « Asservissement: De la déshumanisation sociétale à l'esclavage numérique » paru en 2021 aux Editions Réorganisation du Monde.
En tant que professeur à la HEC Lausanne, Yves Pigneur aidait régulièrement les étudiant·es à relire leur business plan. Il a alors élaboré 9 questions fondamentales pour appréhender un projet et visualiser son plan d'affaires. C'était les débuts du Business Model Canva, aujourd'hui téléchargé par plusieurs dizaines de millions de personnes à travers le monde. Dans ce nouvel épisode de notre podcast, on parle proposition de valeur, désirabilité, test et impact avec notre invité. *** Animé par nos coachs en création d'entreprise, le podcast de GENILEM est un rendez-vous pour les personnes passionnées et curieuses d'entrepreneuriat. Avec le soutien de notre parrain Berney Associés.
Après avoir obtenu un bachelor en Sciences Économique à HEC Lausanne et réalisé une année d'échange universitaire à l'Université du Kent, en Angleterre, Clément a intégré une formation à l'EM LYON Business School, en Management. Il a alors suivi un programme entrepreneurial dans le but de créer sa propre entreprise. Ce programme comportait notamment des... L'article Saison 5 – Growing up & Scaling Up – E22 – Clément Buffet – Plusse est apparu en premier sur La 1ère chaine académique de podcasts sur l'entrepreneuriat.
Unravelling the relationship between trade and peace is not nearly as simple as it may seem: since trade can affect conflict and vice versa, how can the effect of trade on the probability of the onset of conflict be accurately estimated? And once accurately estimated, what has actually been the effect of trade on conflict? How can this inform our current reality? Discussing this, and more, are the three distinguished authors of "Make Trade not War?": Mr. Philippe Martin, Professor of Economics at Sciences Po Paris and Chair of the French Council of Economic Analysis, Mr. Thierry Mayer, Professor of Economics at Sciences Po Paris, and Mr. Mathias Thoenig, Professor of Economics at HEC Lausanne. Guests: Philippe Martin, Professor of Economics, Sciences Po Paris, and Chair, French Council of Economic Analysis Thierry Mayer, Professor of Economics, Sciences Po Paris Mathias Thoenig, Professor of Economics, HEC Lausanne Host: Axel M. Addy, former Minister of Commerce and Industry and Chief Negotiator of Liberia's accession to the WTO.
On this episode of Investor Connect, Hall welcomes Gregory Dewerpe, Founder at A/O Proptech. Headquartered in London, England, A/O Proptech is Europe's largest proptech VC firm. They are stage agnostic, investing permanent capital to support entrepreneurs and companies from Series A to later-stage growth and they enable founders to create, iterate and scale disruptive products and platforms by leveraging their unique access to large RE owners and managers, corporates, governments, and industry stakeholders. A/O Proptech's mission is to transform real estate into a more digital, efficient, and accessible asset class by applying innovative technologies and business models. Their vision is to improve the quality of life, accelerate sustainable living, and enable the decarbonization of the largest asset class in the world. Greg is a long-standing prominent voice promoting the acceleration of positive transformation in the real estate industry. Having worked with and invested heavily in the sector (directly and indirectly), Greg founded A/O after running his own specialist real estate investment and advisory firm, AMD Capital, on the back of a deep understanding of the industry's shortcomings as well as the realisation that the built world can be one of the most powerful vectors for change. Previously, Greg worked in investment banking at Credit Suisse and Citigroup, where he originated and structured over $30bn of new investments globally. Gregory holds an MSc in Business and Finance from HEC Lausanne, and has attended the London School of Economics and Harvard Business School's executive education program. Greg shares how he sees the real estate investing industry evolving and what he thinks will be the biggest change in the next 12-24 months. He discusses his investment thesis and some companies that fit the thesis. You can visit A/O Proptech at , on LinkedIn at , and on Twitter at . Greg can be contacted at , on LinkedIn at , and on Twitter at . _____________________________________________________________________ For more episodes from Investor Connect, please visit the site at: Check out our other podcasts here: For Investors check out: For Startups check out: For eGuides check out: For upcoming Events, check out For Feedback please contact info@tencapital.group Please , share, and leave a review. Music courtesy of .
Elle a tenté de ramener la couronne à la maison… Anthéa Buttner à seulement 19 ans, mais elle a déjà beaucoup d'ambition. Cette jeune Chablaisienne née à Évian, dans une famille originaire d'Abondance, a été nommée première dauphine de Miss pays de Savoie et elle a concouru au titre de Miss Rhône-Alpes. Très sportive, adepte du ski alpin, de la course à pied et de la randonnée en montagne, Anthéa est une jeune femme au caractère bien trempé, qui revendique fièrement son identité Chablaisienne. En parallèle des concours de beauté, notre Dauphine prépare aussi un bachelor à HEC Lausanne… À cela, il faut ajouter une carrière naissante de mannequin. Rien ne semble arrêter Anthéa ! De la jeune adolescente timide et peu sûre d'elle, à la jeune femme prête à tout pour réussir, elle assume ses choix de vie et elle nous raconte son parcours dans cet épisode. Qu'est-ce qui motive une jeune femme à participer à des concours de beauté ? Quelles sont les coulisses de ce type d'épreuve ? Comment accéder à l'élection de Miss France ? Comment prendre confiance en soi ? Un épisode rafraîchissant à écouter de toute urgence. Notes de l'épisode : Anthéa Buttner Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Interview de Philippe Bacchetta, professeur en macroéconomie à HEC Lausanne.
Is Indexation a good idea? What rights do freelancers have? From the history of indexation in Luxembourg to its pros and cons across the socio-economic spectrum, Aline Muller and Jean-Paul Olinger discuss with Lisa Burke. Indexation of wages has existed in Luxembourg since 1975, across the public and private sector. This means that wages are automatically increased in accordance with the consumer price index. This average is monitored over a rolling period of six months using a 'cote d'application'. However, Luxembourg is in the minority of countries using indexation for wages. The economic and social arguments are varied and nuanced, over which demographic one focuses on, and what time period. How does indexation affect social inequalities, our competitive edge compared to neighbouring countries, and what voice does a freelancer have? Through all of this discussion, the main aim for any government should be to: "Maintain business activity and employment at the end of the COVID crisis whilst maintaining social cohesion” My guests: Jean-Paul Olinger, Director of Union des Entreprises Luxembourgeoises (UEL) and the Institut National pour le Développement durable et la Responsabilité sociale des entreprises (INDR). He holds an MBA from HEC Lausanne and a Master of Business Law and Taxation from the University of Mannheim. Jean-Paul joined the tax team of KPMG Luxembourg in 2005, where he went from assistant to partner. And in January 2018, he joined UEL. Aline Muller, CEO of LISER (Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research), affiliate Professor of Economics and Finance at the University of Luxembourg and the University of Liège; andMember of the Board of Directors of the Luxembourg Central Bank. LISER's mission is to provide well-grounded and clear-cut answers to policy relevant questions with the objective to advance knowledge in economic, social and spatial sciences. Aline presents at many leading international finance conferences and her work has been published in top ranked finance journals. She regularly teaches financial economics and applied econometric courses at the Radboud University of Nijmegen, Maastricht University, Erasmus University Rotterdam, University of Luxembourg and University of Liège. And also lectures at several universities in Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Australasia. Subscribe to the podcast I'd be delighted if you could subscribe to my series and leave a review - it really helps for the podcast to be found. You can subscribe to all my podcasts on whatever player you choose to use: RTL Play, iTunes, Spotify or XML. Get in touch with Lisa Burke at www.lisatoniburke.com or on social media (Instagram, Twitter @lisa_toni_burke )
In this episode of the QB pod, Sarah and Merle chat with Victoria Valle Lara as part of our "Early Career Behavioural Researcher" series. We discuss life on the PhD and Victoria's experiences transitioning from the PhD into consultancy. Victoria is a senior behavioural economist at Allianz and completed her PhD in Economics in 2019 from HEC Lausanne, Switzerland. Finding Victoria: Linkedin: https://ch.linkedin.com/in/victoria-valle-lara Worker Empowerment and Subjective Evaluation: On Building an Effective Conflict Culture - WORKING PAPER: https://www.nber.org/papers/w27857 Questioning Behaviour Links: Facebook: @QBpodcast (https://www.facebook.com/QBPodcast) Insta: @questioningbehaviour (https://www.instagram.com/questioning...) Twitter: @QB_podcast (https://twitter.com/QB_Podcast) LinkedIn: @Questioning Behaviour (https://www.linkedin.com/groups/8928118/) Music: Derek Clegg “You're the Dummy” https://derekclegg.bandcamp.com/
In this informative and helpful episode, Guido Palazzo, a business ethics professor with a passion for examining and understanding unethical decision making, provides profound observations about the current state of society, and how to embrace uncertainty, fear, and irrationality with a sense of hope. In addition, he shares ways that leaders and HR professionals can create an organizational culture that mitigates ethical tunnel vision. Guido Palazzo is Professor of Business Ethics at HEC Lausanne, University of Lausanne. In his research, he is passionate about the dark side of the force and examines unethical decision making from various angles. He is mainly known for his studies in globalization, in particular on human rights violations in global value chains, but he also studies the reasons for unethical behavior in organization and the impact of organized crime on business and society. Currently, he is examining the illegal toxic waste business of the Italian Mafia. He studied business administration and has a PhD in philosophy from the University of Marburg in Germany.
Débat entre Johanna Gapany, conseillère aux Etats (PLR/FR), Samuel Bendahan, conseiller national (PS/VD), et Marius Brülhart, professeur d'économie à HEC Lausanne.
John Antonakis believes that the key to moving forward is getting back to basics: "We need to go back to basics, do some clean experiments, use clean behavioral measures, and then we can build the scaffolding on firm concrete and not on Jell-O that we have right now." We had a great conversation about this and other areas of our field. I hope you enjoy it.About Dr. John AntonakisJohn Antonakis is a Full Professor of Organizational Behavior at HEC Lausanne, University of Lausanne. His research focuses on predictors and outcomes of leadership, leadership development, psychometrics, and research methods.He has published articles in many top journals such as Science, Psychological Science, Academy of Management Journal, Journal of Applied Psychology, Journal of Management, Journal of Operations Management, and Harvard Business Review. He has also published three books and 20 book chapters and has presented his research at dozens of conferences. He has received about 2.38 million Swiss Francs in funding for his research.John is Editor in Chief of The Leadership Quarterly, and is on the editorial boards of many other top journals in management and applied psychology. He is a fellow of the Association for Psychological Science (APS) and the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology (SIOP), as well as an elected member of the Society of Organizational Behaviour (SOB).Learn More About John's Work:John at Google ScholarJohn's Textbook - The Nature of LeadershipJohn's TED TalkQuotes From This Episode:On Charismatic Leadership Theory - "All the literature was written in a very abstract way... there are a lot of theoretical accounts of charismatic leaders, but it wasn’t properly defined. It was defined as if it was undefinable.""We said that charisma is basically symbolic, emotional, and value-laden...so values meaning that you speak about your morals, your values, what you’re defending. Symbolic means that you can speak in pictures, and emotion is that you can signal your emotions - your confidence, your emotional state, with your body, what you say, and on your face... These things are easy to observe, they’re easy to code objectively and easy to manipulate.""The process of becoming a doctor requires that one studies medicine and then gets certified to practice and uses interventions that have been tested. This doesn’t happen in leadership. People become leaders for all sorts of reasons.""We need to focus more on making the world of leaders selection more professional."Resources Mentioned in This EpisodeStoner by John WilliamsAlphaGo DocumentaryAbout The International Leadership Association (ILA)The ILA was created in 1999 to bring together professionals with a keen interest in the study, practice, and teaching of leadership. Today, ILA is the largest worldwide community committed to leadership scholarship, development, and practice. Connect with Your Host, Scott AllenScott's other Podcast - The Captovation PodcastLinkedInWebsite
Interview de Marius Brülhart, professeur d'économie à la HEC Lausanne et membre de la task force de la Confédération.
With the great strides in financial technology in recent years, the lower data processing costs and fees associated with investing in the stock market should have led to broader increases of household wealth. But in this podcast, economist Roxana Mihet says while fintech has reduced barriers to access and held out the promise of gains for all, it may have worsened capital income inequality. Mihet is Assistant Professor of Finance at HEC Lausanne, and her recent study suggests the most likely beneficiaries of financial innovation are those who have access to the valuable data that inform good investments. Mihet was recipient of the ECB's Young Economists Award in 2020 for her work on Financial Innovation and the Inequality Gap. She was invited by the IMF's Strategy, Policy and Review Department to present her research. Transcript
Interview de Marius Brülhart, professeur d’économie à HEC Lausanne et membre de la task force de la Confédération.
Donald Trump n'y arrive pas. Plus d'une semaine après que les résultats officiels ont donné une large avance à Joe Biden, le président américain ne s'avoue toujours pas vaincu. Jour après jour, il tweete sur sa victoire ou le trucage du scrutin. Mais pourquoi est-ce si difficile de lâcher le pouvoir? Marianne Schmid Mast, psychologue et professeure en comportement organisationnel à HEC Lausanne, esquisse des pistes dans le Point J. Caroline Réalisation : Mathieu Ballmer et Luana Biadici Nous écrire : pointj@rts.ch
Débat entre Yves Menoud, secrétaire patronal de la NODE, et Philippe Bacchetta, professeur d'économie à HEC Lausanne.
Interview de Marius Brülhart, professeur d'économie à HEC Lausanne.
Soutenez nous sur Patreon.com/PodcastScience // et fr.tipeee.com/podcast-science // Retrouvez nous sur PodcastScience.fm // Twitter: Twitter.com/PodcastScience // Facebook: Facebook.com/PodcastScience // Notes d'émission : https://www.podcastscience.fm/emission/2020/10/28/podcast-science-425-le-retour-du-charismatique-john-antonakis/ À quelques jours des élections présidentielles américaines, les sondages annoncent toujours Biden gagnant. Mais que dit la science ? John Antonakis, professeur de comportement organisationnel à HEC Lausanne et expert en charisme en politique avait prédit la victoire de Trump sur cette antenne il y a 5 ans (c’était les épisodes 230 et 231, sur l’étude scientifique du charisme), et John avait promis de revenir nous en parler. Je ne suis pas sûr qu’il vienne avec des bonnes nouvelles. Mais je suis certain que nous allons passer un bon moment en sa compagnie. Nous sommes le mercredi 21 octobre 2021, c’est l’épisode 425. Bienvenue sur Podcast Science !
Interview de Juliette Radi, chargée de recherche en économie à HEC Lausanne et cofondatrice de l'association XYZ.
Donald Trump assure être guéri et immunisé contre le coronavirus. L'est-il également contre une défaite à la prochaine présidentielle américaine ? C'est ce qu'affirment un certain nombre d'observateurs et de prévisionnistes. Ils prennent appui sur les sondages, les précédents scrutins ou encore des modèles mathématiques. Celui de John Antonakis, professeur de comportement organisationnel à HEC Lausanne et Philippe Jacquart, de l'EM Lyon Business School, prédit une réélection de l'actuel président américain, grâce notamment à son charisme. Explications de John Antonakis dans le Point J. Caroline Stevan Réalisation : David Chapuis Nous écrire : pointj@rts.ch
Jonas Schneiter est entouré pour cette émission de Marie Fourquet, Micheline Calmy-Rey, Gabriel Bender et de l'humoriste Nathanaël Rochat. L'équipe parle des tenues vestimentaires à lʹécole, des "complotistes" et du oui à 50,1% pour lʹachat de nouveaux avions de chasse. En deuxième partie d'émission, les beaux parleurs accueillent John Antonakis, professeur de comportement organisationnel à HEC Lausanne pour aborder le sujet des élections américaines. Carlos Henriquez nous le présente avec humour.
John Antonakis est professeur de comportement organisationnel à HEC Lausanne. Ses études prédisent la victoire de Donald Trump à la présidentielle américaine. Il a également étudié de près, tout au long de sa carrière, lʹimportance du charisme en politique. Son portrait est brossé avec humour par Carlos Henriquez.
Débat entre Johanna Gapany, conseillère aux Etats (PLR/FR), Samuel Bendahan, conseiller national (PS/VD), Marius Brülhart, professeur d'économie à HEC Lausanne et Pascal Meyer, patron de la plateforme de ventes en ligne Qoqa.ch.
Nordic Business Ethics Network's Anna and Niina had an insightful discussion with Guido Palazzo Professor of Business Ethics and Vice Dean at HEC Lausanne.
Interview de Délia Nilles, directrice adjointe du Créa, l’Institut d’économie appliquée de HEC Lausanne.
Débat entre Michaël Malquarti, gestionnaire de fonds chez Quaero Capital, et Philippe Bacchetta, professeur en macroéconomie à HEC Lausanne.
Show Notes:(2:08) Mael recalled his experience getting a Bachelor of Science Degree in Economics from HEC Lausanne in Switzerland.(4:47) Mael discussed his experience co-founding Wanago, which is the world’s first van acquisition and conversion crowdfunding platform.(9:48) Mael talked about his decision to pursue a Master’s degree in Actuarial Science, also at HEC Lausanne.(11:51) Mael talked about his teaching assistantships experience for courses in Corporate and Public Finance.(13:30) Mael talked about his 6-month internship at Vaudoise Assurances, in which he focused on an individual non-life product pricing.(16:26) Mael gave his insights on the state of adopting new tools in the actuarial science space.(18:12) Mael briefly went over his decision to do a Post Master’s program in Big Data at Telecom Paris, which focuses on statistics, machine learning, deep learning, reinforcement learning, and programming.(20:51) Mael explained the end-to-end process of a deep learning research project for the French employment center on multi-modal emotion recognition, where his team delivered state-of-the-art models in text, sound, and video processing for sentiment analysis (check out the GitHub repo).(26:12) Mael talked about his 6-month part-time internship doing Natural Language Processing for Veamly, a productivity app for engineers.(28:58) Mael talked about his involvement with VIVADATA, a specialized AI programming school in Paris, as a machine learning instructor.(34:18) Mael discussed his current responsibilities at Anasen, a Paris-based startup backed by Y Combinator back in 2017.(38:12) Mael talked about his interest in machine learning for healthcare, and his goal to pursue a Ph.D. degree.(40:00) Mael provided a neat summary on current state of data engineering technologies, referring to his list of in-depth Data Engineering Articles.(42:36) Mael discussed his NoSQL Big Data Project, in which he built a Cassandra architecture for the GDELT database.(47:38) Mael talked about his generic process of writing technical content (check out his Machine Learning Tutorials GitHub Repo).(52:50) Mael discussed 2 machine learning projects that I personally found to be very interesting: (1) a Language Recognition App built using Markov Chains and likelihood decoding algorithms, and (2) the Data Visualization of French traffic accidents database built with D3, Python, Flask, and Altair.(56:13) Mael discussed his resources to learn deep learning (check out his Deep Learning articles on the theory of deep learning, different architectures of deep neural networks, and the applications in Natural Language Processing / Computer Vision).(57:33) Mael mentioned 2 impressive computer vision projects that he did: (1) a series of face classification algorithms using deep learning architectures, and (2) face detection algorithms using OpenCV.(59:47) Mael moved on to talk about his NLP project fsText, a few-shot learning text classification library on GitHub, using pre-trained embeddings and Siamese networks.(01:03:09) Mael went over applications of Reinforcement Learning that he is excited about (check out his recent Reinforcement Learning Articles).(01:05:14) Mael shared his advice for people who want to get into freelance technical writing.(01:06:47) Mael shared his thoughts on the tech and data community in Paris.(01:07:49) Closing segment.His Contact Info:TwitterWebsiteLinkedInGitHubMediumHis Recommended Resources:Deep Learning by Ian Goodfellow, Yoshua Bengio, and Aaron CourvillePyImageSearch by Adrian RosebrockStation F Incubator in ParisBenevolentAIEconometrics Data Science: A Predictive Modeling Approach by Francis Diebold
Show Notes:(2:08) Mael recalled his experience getting a Bachelor of Science Degree in Economics from HEC Lausanne in Switzerland.(4:47) Mael discussed his experience co-founding Wanago, which is the world’s first van acquisition and conversion crowdfunding platform.(9:48) Mael talked about his decision to pursue a Master’s degree in Actuarial Science, also at HEC Lausanne.(11:51) Mael talked about his teaching assistantships experience for courses in Corporate and Public Finance.(13:30) Mael talked about his 6-month internship at Vaudoise Assurances, in which he focused on an individual non-life product pricing.(16:26) Mael gave his insights on the state of adopting new tools in the actuarial science space.(18:12) Mael briefly went over his decision to do a Post Master’s program in Big Data at Telecom Paris, which focuses on statistics, machine learning, deep learning, reinforcement learning, and programming.(20:51) Mael explained the end-to-end process of a deep learning research project for the French employment center on multi-modal emotion recognition, where his team delivered state-of-the-art models in text, sound, and video processing for sentiment analysis (check out the GitHub repo).(26:12) Mael talked about his 6-month part-time internship doing Natural Language Processing for Veamly, a productivity app for engineers.(28:58) Mael talked about his involvement with VIVADATA, a specialized AI programming school in Paris, as a machine learning instructor.(34:18) Mael discussed his current responsibilities at Anasen, a Paris-based startup backed by Y Combinator back in 2017.(38:12) Mael talked about his interest in machine learning for healthcare, and his goal to pursue a Ph.D. degree.(40:00) Mael provided a neat summary on current state of data engineering technologies, referring to his list of in-depth Data Engineering Articles.(42:36) Mael discussed his NoSQL Big Data Project, in which he built a Cassandra architecture for the GDELT database.(47:38) Mael talked about his generic process of writing technical content (check out his Machine Learning Tutorials GitHub Repo).(52:50) Mael discussed 2 machine learning projects that I personally found to be very interesting: (1) a Language Recognition App built using Markov Chains and likelihood decoding algorithms, and (2) the Data Visualization of French traffic accidents database built with D3, Python, Flask, and Altair.(56:13) Mael discussed his resources to learn deep learning (check out his Deep Learning articles on the theory of deep learning, different architectures of deep neural networks, and the applications in Natural Language Processing / Computer Vision).(57:33) Mael mentioned 2 impressive computer vision projects that he did: (1) a series of face classification algorithms using deep learning architectures, and (2) face detection algorithms using OpenCV.(59:47) Mael moved on to talk about his NLP project fsText, a few-shot learning text classification library on GitHub, using pre-trained embeddings and Siamese networks.(01:03:09) Mael went over applications of Reinforcement Learning that he is excited about (check out his recent Reinforcement Learning Articles).(01:05:14) Mael shared his advice for people who want to get into freelance technical writing.(01:06:47) Mael shared his thoughts on the tech and data community in Paris.(01:07:49) Closing segment.His Contact Info:TwitterWebsiteLinkedInGitHubMediumHis Recommended Resources:Deep Learning by Ian Goodfellow, Yoshua Bengio, and Aaron CourvillePyImageSearch by Adrian RosebrockStation F Incubator in ParisBenevolentAIEconometrics Data Science: A Predictive Modeling Approach by Francis Diebold
This is the fifth episode of Listen to the Editors, a series of interviews with journal editors to unveil the trends in research for Operations and Supply Chain Management. In this episode we are interviewing the co-editors-in-chief for the Journal of Operations Management, Suzanne de Treville and Tyson R. Browning. We discussed how to integrate research and practice (via design research or interventionist research). According to the editors, if a researcher joins a consulting project and everything goes well, there is no paper. However, if the researcher finds something new, a theory that does not work in the real world, and that novelty can bring insights that advance the knowledge, that paper might interest JOM. We also discussed the reasons for the 60% of papers that are desk-rejected by JOM. Among other reasons, such as lack of fit, poor methodology, or non-empirical papers, the editors mentioned the lack of “delta”. The delta is what do you learn from the paper. The editors are working harder to provide more feedback to those authors that have papers rejected at this stage. The editors are also looking into ways to deepen their relationship with ASCM (formerly known as APICS). They are attending the ASCM this year for the first time. They are also willing to receive research proposals for gathering data on the ASCM corporate members and responding to problems that the executives of such firms are interested in. This is a really long interview, but we believe you might enjoy, if you want to learn where the journal is heading to. The host for this show is Iuri Gavronski, Associate Professor for the Graduate Program in Business for the UNISINOS Jesuit University. Listen to the editors is an initiative of the Operations and Supply Chain Management division of the Academy of Management. We post our interviews monthly in our division website. You can discuss any of the topics of this episode using our interactive tool, https://connect.aom.org. Using the discussion section of our site, you can also post suggestions for questions, journal editors you would like to hear from, and requests for clarifications. You can also subscribe to our podcast in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or with the Podcast Addict app on Android. Papers cited in this episode: ============================= Example of a JOM paper based on a consulting project (Browning 2010 JOM): http://doi.org/10.1016/j.jom.2009.11.007 Editorial on recent developments at JOM: (Browning & de Treville 2018, JOM): http://doi.org/10.1016/j.jom.2018.12.005 Methods for JOM, general (Guide & Ketokivi 2015, JOM): http://doi.org/10.1016/S0272-6963(15)00056-X PLS (Rönkkö et al. 2016, JOM): http://doi.org/10.1016/j.jom.2016.05.002 Level of analysis and single informants in surveys (Ketokivi 2019, JOM): http://doi.org/10.1002/joom.1011 Endogeneity: (Ketokivi & McIntosh 2017, JOM): http://doi.org/10.1016/j.jom.2017.05.001 (Lu et al. 2018, JOM): http://doi.org/10.1016/j.jom.2018.10.001 OM case study methodology: (Handfield & Melnyk 1998, JOM): http://doi.org/10.1016/S0272-6963(02)00022-0 (Meredith 1998, JOM): http://doi.org/10.1016/S0272-6963(98)00023-0 (Stuart et al. 2002, JOM): http://doi.org/10.1016/S0272-6963(02)00022-0 (Barratt et al. 2011, JOM): http://doi.org/10.1016/j.jom.2010.06.002 (Ketokivi & Choi 2014, JOM): http://doi.org/10.1016/j.jom.2014.03.004 Example of single-case study (Browning 2009, JOM): https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jom.2008.03.009 Website for the Journal: ======================== https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/18731317 Editor Bios: ============ Dr. Suzanne de Treville is Full Professor of Operations Management at HEC Lausanne, University of Lausanne. Her research areas include: Competitive manufacturing in a high-cost environment, Supply chain management and lead time reduction, Lean production, Process consistency improvement, Health care operations, and Queuing theory-based mathematical modeling of operations. Dr. Tyson R. Browning is a full Professor of Operations Management in the Neeley School of Business at Texas Christian University, where he conducts research on managing complex projects (integrating managerial and engineering perspectives) and teaches MBA courses on project management, operations management, risk management, and process improvement. Background music: ================= “Night & Day” by Dee Yan-Key is licensed under CC-BY-NC-SA http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Dee_Yan-Key/years_and_years_ago/08--Dee_Yan-Key-Night___Day 2019-05-31 - Episode 005
Dr. Eelco Fiole is co-founder and sole managing partner of Alpha Governance Partners (AGP), a risk-governance-focused fiduciary services firm with alternative assets under the governance of US$15 billion across 12 jurisdictions globally. He is also CFO of the Tezos Foundation, a blockchain endeavor that has enjoyed one of the largest fundraising levels globally. Eelco is an adjunct professor in finance ethics at HEC Lausanne (the faculty of business and economics of the University of Lausanne in Switzerland, 2018 winner of the global CFA Research Challenge) and chairs the Annual Conference Advisory Group for the CFA Institute. He has gained almost a decade of fiduciary COO and CFO experience in alternative investments, emerging markets, wealth management and blockchain at Credit Suisse Asset Management, with operational responsibility for US$17 billion in alternative strategies, (in Zurich, London, and New York). He was a consultant for five years at PwC in Zurich, and his work there included a focus on frontier markets. He started his career as an institutional banker with ABN AMRO in Amsterdam, after spending early working years as an engineer in the oil-and-chemical industry. Currently a master of studies in social innovation candidate at the University of Cambridge, Eelco has completed advanced degrees in economics (PhD, Basel), ethics (MAS, Zurich), positive leadership (MPLS, Madrid) laws (LLM, London), and business (MS, Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University). His holds a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from Rotterdam University of Applied Sciences). A chartered financial analyst (CFA) and a chartered director (CDir), Eelco holds various other leading finance and management designations. His global travel for business and education has included private and professional exposure to China for 20 years. He is based in Zurich and Singapore and is fluent in English, German and his native Dutch, has conversational French, and basic Spanish and Mandarin. Worst investment ever Background After finishing a business degree and working with major organizations, Eelco felt he had a pretty good understanding of what was going on in the financial investment arena, but he was yet to receive his CFA designation. Reliance on flawed research A friend of Eelco’s sent him an equity research report by a CFA charterholder who was working at a well-established, reputable investment house. The report projected that a large telecom firm’s stock would go up from 17 to 20 euro. Eelco thought that based on: the credibility of the research house; the compelling nature of their argument; that it was not a speculative stock; it was a large telecom firm; and the level of his own expertise to read such a treatise, he decided to buy the stock. However, soon after, instead of going up from 17 to 20 euro, it went down to 6 euro, in tandem with the inherent deception surrounding the tech bubble. What he hadn’t realized what that part of the valuation performed on the stock (outside of the usual equity research carried out on any stock) was based on the psychology of the market at the time around the tech bubble, and Eelco paid the price. He has remained involved in the investing space ever since, going through the ranks of various organizations, but submits that this was one of the key experiences of his career, even though he became a CFA charterholder later. Suffice to say, the report he had relied on and the result of the reality going the other way, was a memorable shock. “The frameworks that we get offered through the CFA or some other academic material are not enough to reflect reality in the end … you need to be able to apply your own judgment.” - Dr. Eelco Fiole Some lessons Do your own analysis. Don’t rely solely on even the most professional research. An investor needs to also invest time to clearly understand a recommendation and the analysis behind an investment. Develop your own opinion on investment, even if you obtain information from t the most credible of sources. Think outside of the box about risk. Even though Eelco felt confident about his understanding of the risk in his investment, going through about the report itself and the firm’s reputation, there was obvious risk outside of those considerations, which hit him hard. You cannot assume that what you are reading about is enough to do guarantee results, you need to check your assumptions, and adjust your views on things as well. Educational and learning frameworks are necessary, but they are not enough. Yeah, The CFA or similar programs provide a great framework on how to think about investments but investors also need to stay open to the broader regional and global picture, particularly about risk, and arrive at their own conclusions, use their own judgement in the end. Such learning frameworks are enough to reflect the total reality to which a stock is subject. Be aware of your own assumptions, biases, and check them. Eelco realized that he had made a whole lot of assumptions that he was not checking, including those about his own ability, the time to judge what I was looking at. So I learned also that we need to be humble in how we approach these things. “Looking back I realized that I made a whole lot of implicit assumptions there that I wasn’t checking … so I learned also that we need to be humble in how we approach these things.” - Dr. Eelco Fiole Andrew’s takeaways Do your own work. If you want to be successful in any career, learning is essential. Investing is the same and we have to do the work to try to be successful. However, in the world of finance, hard work is not enough. Risk can come from anywhere. Ethics are involved in doing your own work. It’s part of investing ethics and the responsibility of an investment analyst that is learned in the CFA courses, that even if you overhear a good tip from Warren Buffet, you still have to do your own work. Separate the research work you do on return from the research work you do on risk. That way, all the excitement and positive feeling you get about a great investment story is moderated by distinct and separate research on risk. If fact, tear it apart from a risk perspective. The idea of detached risk work is so critical. Actionable advice Be skeptical, not negative, be cautious. Be skeptical about what people are offering you and then come back to do the work for yourself, and apply your own judgement. No. 1 goal for the next 12 months My goal is to push better governance in the investment space so I’m actively committed to support initiatives around better governance, specifically risk governance. This will mean better risk-adjusted outcomes for investors. Risk governance takes place on boards and in all kinds of investment entities and involves applying fiduciary duties on those involved in playing around with a lot of other people’s money. Parting words Risk nowadays is idiosyncratic … I would wish everybody to increase their awareness and help people make sound choices, both professionally and ethically. You can also check out Andrew’s books How to Start Building Your Wealth Investing in the Stock Market My Worst Investment Ever 9 Valuation Mistakes and How to Avoid Them Transform Your Business with Dr.Deming’s 14 Points Connect with Eelco Fiole: LinkedIn Email Connect with Andrew Stotz astotz.com LinkedIn Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube My Worst Investment Ever Podcast
Patrick Arthus était l'invité de l'Heure H du 27 avril 2016 Diplômé de l'Ecole Polytechnique, de l'Ecole Nationale de la Statistique et de l'Administration Economique et de l'Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris, Patrick ARTUS est aujourd'hui le Chef économiste de Natixis et membre du Comité Exécutif. Il débute sa carrière en 1975 à l'INSEE où il participe entre autres aux travaux de prévision et de modélisation. Il travaille ensuite au Département d'Economie de l'OCDE (1980) puis devient Directeur des Etudes à l'ENSAE et Responsable de Séminaire de Recherche à l'Université Paris Dauphine (1982). Il enseigna dans diverses Universités (Dauphine, ENSAE, Centre des Hautes Etudes de l'Armement, Ecole Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées, HEC Lausanne...), et il est actuellement Professeur d'économie à l'Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. Il cumule ses fonctions d'enseignant avec ses travaux de recherche et s'associe à diverses revues ou associations économiques. Il est membre des Conseils d’administration de TOTAL et d'IPSOS en qualité d'Administrateur.
Future Squared with Steve Glaveski - Helping You Navigate a Brave New World
Alex is an entrepreneur, speaker and business model innovator. He is co-founder of Strategyzer, a SaaS company that helps organizations develop new growth engines, better value propositions and powerful business models via online applications and facilitated online courses. In 2015 Alex won the strategy award by Thinkers50, called the “Oscars of Management Thinking” by the FT, and ranks #15 among the leading business thinkers of the world. In 2013 he won the inaugural Innovation Luminary Award by the European Union. Alex is lead author of Business Model Generation and Value Proposition Design, which sold over a million copies in 37 languages. USA Today named Business Model Generation among the 12 best business books of all times. The German edition was named Management Book of the Year 2011. Fast Company Magazine named it one of the Best Books for Business Owners in 2010. Alex invented the Business Model Canvas, a strategic management tool to visualize, challenge and (re-) invent business models. Leading organizations and start-ups around the world use it. Previous start-ups include netfinance.ch and Arvetica. Alexander holds a PhD from HEC Lausanne, Switzerland, and he is a founding member of The Constellation, a global not-for-profit organization aiming to make HIV/AIDS and Malaria history. We explored a number of topics in this episode, including: How much of R&D corporations should invest into disruptive innovation Why what got you here won’t get you there and how disruptive innovation requires different methods and behaviours The value of taking a portfolio approach to corporate innovation investments You’ll learn this and a lot more in this conversation with the one and only, Alex Osterwalder. Topics discussed: How much of R&D corporations should invest into disruptive innovation Why what got you here won’t get you there and how disruptive innovation requires different methods and behaviours The value of taking a portfolio approach to corporate innovation investments Setting up an innovation team Empowering people to make and act on decisions The different types of innovation Why it’s much riskier not to innovate Why early stage innovation isn’t expensive Why receiving large bags of funding up-front can inhibit innovation Show notes: Alex’s website: http://www.alexosterwalder.com Strategyzer: http://www.strategyzer.com Twitter: http://twitter.com/alexosterwalder (@AlexOsterwalder) Get his books: Business Model Generation: https://amzn.to/2Ni7zQ9 Value Proposition Design: https://amzn.to/2NirVJ9 The Big Pad of 50 Blank, Extra-Large Business Model Canvases and 50 Blank, Extra-Large Value Proposition Canvases: https://amzn.to/2P2TTZC Business Model You: https://amzn.to/2BKEMlP Join Steve's mailing list at futuresquared.xyz/subscribe Listen on iTunes @ goo.gl/sMnEa0 Listen on Spotify @ spoti.fi/2G2QsxV Listen on Stitcher @ www.stitcher.com/podcast/future Listen on Google Play @ bit.ly/FSGoog If you've got any questions on this podcast feel free to send an email to steve@collectivecamp.us or tweet me on Twitter @steveglaveski or @future_squared Follow me on Instagram: @thesteveglaveski Like us? It'd make our day if you took 1 minute to show some love on iTunes, Stitcher or Soundcloud by subscribing, sharing and giving us a 5 star rating. For more information on Collective Campus, our innovation hub, school and consultancy based in Australia and Singapore check out www.collectivecampus.io
Marc Laperrouza est enseignant et chercheur à l'EPFL et HEC Lausanne. Grand connaisseur de la Chine, pays auquel il s'intéresse depuis les années 1990, il dresse un état des lieux de l'industrie digitale d'un géant en plein réveil, et dont les ambitions dépassent ce que l'on imagine en Europe. En fin de conversation, nous évoquons ensemble le China Hardware Innovation Camp (https://chi.camp), un programme de formation avant gardiste qui rassemble des étudiants au parcours différents (designers, ingénieurs, managers)et permet de traverser un processus d'innovation de l'idée jusqu'au prototype. Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
Timestamps 0:40 - The concept of Seedspaces and co-habitation 14:23 - Things to consider when picking a co-founder 17:09 - The importance of recruiting 22:43 - Operating across different cultures 31:45 - Advice to female entrepreneurs Biography Alisée de Tonnac is the Founder and CEO of Seedstars, an investment firm building and investing in tech companies in 60+ emerging markets. After traveling for a year around the world she set up the first edition of Seedstars in 2013 and grew the competition to 60+ cities around the world. Prior to founding Seedstars, Alisée worked as product manager for luxury brands at L’Oréal Group and was part of the Italian team at Voyage Privé, a leading European startup. She graduated from HEC Lausanne and obtained her Masters in International Management from the Bocconi University in Italy with highest honors. She was also a member of the Harvard Model Congress Europe where she won the Award of Excellence. Alisée is a board member of the School of Management in Fribourg, Switzerland. She was nominated top 30 under 30 Social Entrepreneur by Forbes Magazine and an Innovation Fellow by Wired UK. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/swisspreneur/message
Official video presentation of HEC Lausanne
Robert DANON, professeur en droit fiscal, HEC Lausanne et Faculté de droit de l'UNIL
Robert DANON, professeur en droit fiscal, HEC Lausanne et Faculté de droit de l'UNIL
Robert DANON, professeur en droit fiscal, HEC Lausanne et Faculté de droit de l'UNIL
Clip de présentation de la Faculté des HEC Lausanne
John ANTONAKIS, professeur de leadership à HEC Lausanne
John ANTONAKIS, professeur de leadership à HEC Lausanne
John ANTONAKIS, professeur de leadership à HEC Lausanne
Benoît GARBINATO, professeur au Départment des systèmes d'information à HEC Lausanne
Benoît GARBINATO, professeur au Départment des systèmes d'information à HEC Lausanne
Benoît GARBINATO, professeur au Départment des systèmes d'information à HEC Lausanne
John ANTONAKIS, professeur de leadership à HEC Lausanne
John ANTONAKIS, professeur de leadership à HEC Lausanne
John ANTONAKIS, professeur de leadership à HEC Lausanne
Philippe BACHETTA, professeur d'économie à HEC Lausanne
Philippe BACHETTA, professeur d'économie à HEC Lausanne
Philippe BACHETTA, professeur d'économie à HEC Lausanne
Prof. John ANTONAKIS, HEC Lausanne
Prof. John ANTONAKIS, HEC Lausanne
Déborah PHILIPPE, professeure HEC Lausanne
Samuel BENDAHAN, gradué HEC Lausanne et professeur
Guido PALAZZO, professeur HEC Lausanne
Déborah PHILIPPE, professeure HEC Lausanne
Guido PALAZZO, professeur HEC Lausanne
Samuel BENDAHAN, gradué HEC Lausanne et professeur
HEC Lausanne en 1911, mais aussi et surtout aux jours d'aujourd'hui.
A l’occasion de son centenaire en 2011, HEC Lausanne, la Faculté des hautes études commerciales de l’Université de Lausanne (UNIL), s’est placé résolument sous le signe du Management Responsable.
A l’occasion de son centenaire en 2011, HEC Lausanne, la Faculté des hautes études commerciales de l’Université de Lausanne (UNIL), s’est placé résolument sous le signe du Management Responsable.
Jean-Pierre DANTHINE, professeur à HEC Lausanne et directeur du Swiss Finance Institute et Darrell DUFFIE, professeur invité de l'Université de Stanford.
Jean-Pierre DANTHINE, professeur à HEC Lausanne et directeur du Swiss Finance Institute et Darrell DUFFIE, professeur invité de l'Université de Stanford.
Jean-Pierre DANTHINE, professeur à HEC Lausanne et directeur du Swiss Finance Institute et Darrell DUFFIE, professeur invité de l'Université de Stanford.
John ANTONAKIS, Professeur en comportement organisationnel à HEC Lausanne
Jean-Pierre DANTHINE, professeur à HEC Lausanne et directeur du Swiss Finance Institute et Darrell DUFFIE, professeur invité de l'Université de Stanford.
Jean-Pierre DANTHINE, professeur à HEC Lausanne et directeur du Swiss Finance Institute et Darrell DUFFIE, professeur invité de l'Université de Stanford.
Jean-Pierre DANTHINE, professeur à HEC Lausanne et directeur du Swiss Finance Institute et Darrell DUFFIE, professeur invité de l'Université de Stanford.
Jean-Pierre DANTHINE, professeur à HEC Lausanne et directeur du Swiss Finance Institute et Darrell DUFFIE, professeur invité de l'Université de Stanford.
John ANTONAKIS, Professeur en comportement organisationnel à HEC Lausanne
Jean-Pierre DANTHINE, professeur à HEC Lausanne et directeur du Swiss Finance Institute et Darrell DUFFIE, professeur invité de l'Université de Stanford.
Film de présentation de la Faculté des hautes études commerciales