
Corporate Money in Politics Faces a Reckoning
[I posted this last month for my MIT Sloan Management Review column, here. The real question now is, Will these companies continue to withhold money

[I posted this last month for my MIT Sloan Management Review column, here. The real question now is, Will these companies continue to withhold money

Hi all. It’s been awhile since I posted (my site was under reconstruction so I’m delayed.) But I promised to post everything I write here,

A new administration is coming in and can set a new agenda. As pressing as climate is, they must start with protecting American democracy. We can’t do anything important before that is fixed.
I offer some reflections on the current crisis and the connections to our biggest trends and challenges

While we continue to grasp the scale of this pandemic, the new challenges we face point to more permanent changes we must make in our lives and how we do business.
In the US in particular, we have a bad habit of ignoring experts and scientists until it’s too late

How can the world provide more stuff and quality of life for 9 or 10 billion of us in a climate and resource-constrained world?

Amazon’s Jeff Bezos has offered $10 billion to fight climate change. This is good, but there are some issues.

It’s time for companies to lobby around the world for pro-climate policies. They need to use their powerful political influence.

Blackrock CEO Larry Fink is shaking up the finance world, declaring that climate change will drive massive shifts in capital allocation.