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Top 2 kellogg school of management News Today

#1
The Recipe for Innovation? An Alliance Between Art and Science.
#1 out of 2
business16h ago

The Recipe for Innovation? An Alliance Between Art and Science.

  • A culture of curiosity should be embedded across the organization, not confined to a small innovation unit.
  • Leaders must break down silos and connect cloud thinkers with clock thinkers for breakthroughs.
  • Cross-disciplinary collaboration has historical precedent, such as Bell Labs' artist–engineer partnerships.
  • Organizations should dedicate resources to spaces where cloud and clock thinkers can converge.
  • Three recommendations guide leaders: cultivate curiosity, dissolve silos, and articulate a clear vision.
  • Crafting a consistent, future-facing vision helps diffuse innovation strategy across the org.
  • Failures are treated as data, not setbacks, within an innovation framework.
  • Cross-disciplinary education, like Northwestern’s Design Thinking and Communication course, connects diverse minds.
  • Past collaborations, such as the 9 Evenings: Theatre and Engineering series, illustrate lasting value of art–science ties.
  • The piece frames innovation as a cultural, organizational rather than purely technical achievement.
  • The article positions cross-disciplinary bridge-building as essential for real-world breakthroughs.
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#2
How International Investing Still Pays
#2 out of 2
business16h ago

How International Investing Still Pays

  • A Kellogg study analyzed 27 countries from 1966 to 2022 and built 26 portfolios pairing U.S. stocks with foreign equities.
  • The edge comes from isolating country-specific factors from global forces that affect all countries.
  • Most portfolios showed higher risk-adjusted profits than U.S. stocks alone, measured by the Sharpe ratio.
  • Country-specific factors remained influential even as global markets became more connected.
  • The strategy could inform funds and ETFs but is less accessible to typical retail investors due to data needs.
  • The study groups country-specific risks with U.S. investments to improve diversification.
  • Globalization traditionally linked markets, making diversification harder.
  • The authors suggest funds might adopt country-specific-factor frameworks for better diversification.
  • The research used 27 countries and a long time span, reinforcing robustness of findings.
  • The study is published as a Kellogg Insight feature linked to a working paper.
  • The research points to a potential for mutual funds and ETFs to apply the country-specific framework.
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