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Meet alumni of Duke University’s Fuqua of Business through conversations with members of the school’s Alumni Council. Hear firsthand how these alumni applied what they learned as students at Fuqua to ...
“For some decisions, you may not need to rely on sophisticated algorithms to get good results,“ Brown said. “Simple decision rules can match or exceed complex methods under uncertainty, while at the ...
The authors also discovered that in areas where dialysis facilities are owned by one of the chains, medical directors are ...
In this episode, Professor Keisha Cutright of Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business discusses her research on how consumers seek structure in times of psychological uncertainty. Drawing on ...
The researchers found that on average, winning a government R&D contract adds 19 times the value of the contract’s potential ...
Susan McClanahan, MBA, MEd, is a career coach with over a decade of experience guiding MBAs and alumni at Duke University's ...
Before you mention that AI tool that's been helping you at work, consider how your colleagues might respond. In this podcast, Professors Richard Larrick and Jack Soll, along with PhD candidate Jessica ...
A new AI tool developed atDuke University’s Fuqua School of Business may change how the world identifies promising research, before it ever earns a citation or patent. By predicting value before ...
A paradox lies at the heart of the financial advice industry: the professionals we trust with our life savings are among the highest-paid yet among the least trusted in our economy, with significant ...
Growing up, issues like poverty, inequity and polarization were dinner table conversations for Arya Diwase, MPP/MBA ’24. She came to Fuqua wanting to make a difference for her community in India — ...
Marketers’ optimism about the U.S. economy lost strength, as a three-year-high in confidence levels recorded last spring was dampened by election uncertainty and lingering inflation worries. But ...
There is a social security puzzle in the U.S. The earliest age a U.S. citizen can claim their social security benefits is 62. The latest is 70. Claiming early means getting a smaller payout (about 70% ...