10 Alumni VCs Share their Best Advice for Entrepreneurs
From ideation to exiting and everything in between, here’s a roundup of top insights from alumni venture capitalists.
From ideation to exiting and everything in between, here’s a roundup of top insights from alumni venture capitalists.
Whether it is incremental or groundbreaking — there is opportunity in every role to be innovative.
The head of India's largest search firm highlights five specific interventions that will improve living standards for its neediest citizens.
As the founder of Small Axe Peppers, John Crotty '96 works with community gardens to grow peppers, which he then turns into the Bronx Hot Sauce.
The agenda Xi Jinping laid out at the 19th Party Congress promises radical change. Jin-Yong Cai of TPG Capital discussed the particulars at a recent Chazen Institute event.
Financial technology is upending nearly the entire financial industry. It's even changing the very nature of money itself.
Erika Irish Brown ’98, global head of diversity and inclusion for financial-information powerhouse Bloomberg, is working to disrupt the modern-day workplace and open its doors to the world.
President Trump’s choice of Jerome Powell as chair of the US Federal Reserve breaks precedent on several fronts.
Drew Silverstein ’16 and his partners created Amper Music, an artificial-intelligence composer, performer, and producer that allows anyone to create original music with just a few clicks—even if they can’t play a single note.
A flexible work and life reality can overwhelm us, but it can also provide a powerful opportunity — if you know how to harness it — to be your best, on and off the job.
Developing countries are increasingly pushing back against the intellectual property regime. The production of knowledge should be used in ways that put the health and well-being of people ahead of corporate profits.
To achieve stronger economic growth and development, the world needs initiatives focused on building bridges — initiatives like China's Belt and Road.
If the United States doesn’t honor its obligations and raise the debt ceiling, financial aftershocks could be “enormous,” says Chazen Faculty Fellow Jesse Schreger.
Army veteran Brooke Jones-Chinetti ’18 developed a mentorship platform that is revolutionizing how female veterans are transitioning into the workforce.
Neither theory nor evidence suggests that the Republicans’ proposed corporate tax giveaway will increase investment or employment.