

Knowledge at Wharton
The Wharton School
The Knowledge at Wharton Network Acast feed serves as a curated showcase highlighting the best content from our podcast collection. Each week, we feature one standout episode from each show in the Wharton Podcast Network, giving listeners a comprehensive sample of our diverse business and academic content. This rotating selection allows audiences to discover new shows within our network while experiencing the depth and variety of Wharton's thought leadership across different topics and formats. It's your monthly gateway to explore the full spectrum of insights available through the Wharton Podcast Network. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jul 15, 2009 • 31min
Harnessing Networks to Create Value and Identify New Opportunities
As the recent financial crisis has showed so dramatically networks exist everywhere. Global inter-linkage of loans and mortgages -- which were intended to distribute risk -- actually ended up spreading it far and wide. Similar network-based impacts are at work in fields as diverse as information security and supply chain management. But while networks create new risks they also generate new opportunities write Paul R. Kleindorfer Yoram (Jerry) Wind and Robert E. Gunther in their new book ”The Network Challenge: Strategy Profit and Risk in an Interlinked World.” In an interview with Knowledge at Wharton Kleindorfer and Wind discuss the themes of many of the 28 essays in their book. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jul 15, 2009 • 18min
Former Infosys CEO Nandan Nilekani: ’We Are on the Razor’s Edge’
When Nandan Nilekani was the CEO of Infosys one of India’s top IT and outsourcing firms he often found himself being forced to answer questions not just about his company but also his country. Sometimes global business executives who visited the company’s sprawling campus in Bangalore would raise issues to which Nilekani had no answer -- such as ”Why does Infosys have such a beautiful campus but also large slums in other parts of the city?” So when Nilekani decided to write a book unlike other CEOs who write about their favorite leadership or management theories he chose India as his subject. In ”Imagining India: The Idea of a Renewed Nation ” Nilekani tackles themes ranging from education and demographics to investment and infrastructure. Nilekani who was recently recruited by Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to head a project to create a national identification card for the country spoke with India Knowledge at Wharton about the book at the recent Wharton India Economic Forum in Philadelphia. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jul 15, 2009 • 32min
’Walk the Market’: Tapping into Africa’s 900 Million Consumers
When multinational companies want to tap into the massive pent-up consumer demand in emerging markets the first countries that they usually think of are China and India. But what about Africa asks Vijay Mahajan author of Africa Rising: How 900 Million Consumers Offer More Than You Think (Wharton School Publishing). Though often overlooked in global corporate growth strategies Africa as a whole has enough consumer power to give China and India a run for their money he argues. Mahajan a marketing professor at the University of Texas in Austin and co-author of an earlier book titled The 86% Solution: How to Succeed in the Biggest Marketing Opportunity of the 21st Century (Wharton School Publishing) talked with Knowledge at Wharton about Africa Rising. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jul 8, 2009 • 26min
One War We Shouldn’t Avoid: A New Approach to Reducing the Cost of Future Catastrophes
In 2005 three major hurricanes -- Katrina Rita and Wilma -- struck the U.S. Gulf Coast area causing not just death and destruction but also leading to insurance payments and federal disaster relief of more than $180 billion. Today say the authors of a new book titled At War with the Weather: Managing Large-Scale Risks in a New Era of Catastrophes the U.S. is even more vulnerable to catastrophic losses. Written by Howard Kunreuther and Erwann Michel-Kerjan with colleagues Neil Doherty Martin Grace Robert Klein and Mark Pauly At War with the Weather analyzes current thinking about catastrophes and proposes new solutions for reducing loss and providing financial protection against future disasters. Kunreuther co-director of Wharton’s Risk Management and Decision Processes Center and Michel-Kerjan the Center’s managing director recently talked to Knowledge at Wharton about their book. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jul 8, 2009 • 12min
’Rewarding Failure’: Will the Crisis Leave a Residue of Moral Hazard?
The federal government has poured hundreds of billions of dollars into the banking system and most experts seem to agree that the financial crisis is closer to its end than its beginning. But as attention shifts from fire fighting to rebuilding many are worrying about the ”moral hazard” that may remain with an apparent government safety net encouraging a new round of foolish risk taking. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jul 8, 2009 • 15min
Eradicating Mud Cookies: Global Executives Try to Connect Profit to Social Good
Thirty-nine executives -- from countries as diverse as Nigeria India Russia South Africa and The Netherlands -- were challenged to devise a profitable business plan to address social ills around the globe. The effort part of the Aresty Institute of Executive Education’s Advanced Management Program called on participants’ expertise in such fields as oil aerospace finance fashion entertainment and HIV/AIDS education. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jul 8, 2009 • 22min
Caught in the Middle: Rising Unemployment Takes Its Toll on Older Managers
U.S. recessions since the oil crisis in the early 1970s each had their own special causes and victims but they also had something in common: They were over relatively quickly. The current downturn however is deeper and already longer than any since World War II. This spells trouble for one especially vulnerable group -- managers in their 40s and early 50s. What can they do when the industry they made their career in downsizes or goes bust? And how should they go about picking themselves up and getting back into the game? Wharton faculty and employment counselors weigh in. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jun 24, 2009 • 26min
The New Role of Risk Management: Rebuilding the Model
Risk managers armed with the most sophisticated quantitative tools available did not foresee the biggest development in a generation -- the systematic breakdown and global contagion of financial markets. In an interview with Knowledge at Wharton John Drzik president and CEO of the Oliver Wyman Group Richard J. Herring a finance professor at Wharton and Francis X. Diebold a Wharton professor of economics finance and statistics discussed how to build a more informed risk management model. All three took part in the recent Wharton Financial Institutions Center and Oliver Wyman Institute 12th Annual Financial Risk Roundtable 2009. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jun 24, 2009 • 30min
Peter Guber on Sharing Stories not Just Information to Communicate Effectively
Do you want to communicate a corporate message effectively? Turn it into a story says Mandalay Entertainment Group chairman Peter Guber. He argues that stories are more memorable and engaging than slide presentations memos or sales pitches. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jun 24, 2009 • 15min
Jeremy Siegel: ’The Market Will Stage Another Recovery’
Now that it’s clear the recession will not turn into a depression stocks are poised for a recovery says Wharton finance professor Jeremy J. Siegel. In an interview with Knowledge at Wharton he said last week’s market decline in response to rising commodity prices -- especially for energy -- and fear of the ever-growing federal deficit was no more than a short-term setback. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.


