Ripple Effect Knowledge at Wharton
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- Business
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Every day, business scholars answer pressing questions in their research — but what do their insights mean for you? In this podcast, Wharton faculty dive into what inspired their studies and how their findings resonate with the world today. Learn how research insights translate into knowledge you can use, with host Dan Loney.
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Marketplace Dignity | Cait Lamberton
Wharton’s Cait Lamberton talks about her new book, Marketplace Dignity, which explains why customers want firms to treat them with respect and dignity above anything else. This episode is part of the “Meet the Authors” series.
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Inflation and the Housing Market | Susan Wachter
Wharton real estate professor Susan Wachter talks about rising housing prices and affordability issues, and what can help bring the housing market back into alignment in the next few years. This episode is part of a series on “Real Estate.”
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Is It Better to Rent or Buy? | Ben Keys
Wharton’s Benjamin Keys explains the opposing market forces that are driving the difficult decision between buying and renting property. This episode is part of a series on “Real Estate.”
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Next Crisis: Empty Office Buildings | Joe Gyourko
Commercial real estate will never be the same after the pandemic permanently changed work habits. Wharton’s Joe Gyourko explains how empty office buildings will impact cities long-term. This episode is part of a series on “Real Estate.”
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The U.S. Housing Market Has Homeowners Stuck | Lu Liu
Wharton’s Lu Liu discusses what policy changes may be needed to break mortgage lock-in, which is restricting real estate inventory in the U.S. housing market. This episode is part of a series on “Real Estate.”
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Why Is Financial Literacy Important? | Olivia Mitchell
Financial literacy should be a lifelong education because economic factors change over time, including the amount needed for retirement, says Wharton’s Olivia Mitchell. This episode is part of a series on “Financial Literacy.”
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Customer Reviews
Insightful Podcast
This is an insightful podcast. The issues are important, relevant and scholarship is discussed in ways that are accessible.
Very good so far but …
I give up.
It’s Wharton! I figured they be great. So after several disappointments, I gave them one more shot. The topic was great, consumer behavior. I listened to Faber, Bernstein and Santiago (going by memory so apologies if I got it wrong).
I defy any senior business person to get any useful takeaways from this. Fabers recommendations could be summed up as buy my book and everyone doing retail (vs. I who just study and consult on it) is a moron. This is so consulting from the 90s. Bernstein (though less obnoxious) was similar. Lots about trends that you can hear anywhere and recommendations like CFOs need to look carefully at the numbers. Santiago may have been a bit better, but I was dozing by that point. They just don’t understand how podcasts work.
Bye.
**** previous review **
Sometimes very good; sometimes meh. Working from home was filled with the obvious and lots of opinion but little research mentioned. Diversity training was excellent with good descriptions of experiments, generative AI was lots of general arm waving (this is what I think and I don’t need to support it) and it was all obvious. Given it’s Wharton, where’s the data?!! I may drop it soon; we’ll see. And btw, no one cares about why a prof got into his or her area of research. Ok, that was a cheap shot. [my comment below from a couple weeks ago] I’ve listened to only 3 so far. Good insight, well produced, interesting topics (I looked over others). However could use more depth in some areas. For example, in the episode on the debt, the speaker mentioned taxing just people asking over 400K, was not enough. Well, what does that mean? It’s not enough to solve the problem, but does it make a dent? How bout if it’s part of cuts? It could turn out to be another NPR biased broadcast, but I’ll listen to more. The psychology safety one was filled with simplistic and unrealistic bias. Their was one example of minorities not being allowed to voice opinions in meetings, because they are minorities (my words, but I think close to what they said). Have either one of the speakers ever been in a corporate meeting? People fall over themselves to compliment even the most ridiculous opinions of a minority (and everyone has ridiculous opinions). And they do this because every professional dreads any hint that they are racist. Nice episode on housing too. It’s definitely worth my time listening to more. If the psychological safety one was a burp, I’ll update this. There are always people who see everything in terms of race.
Amazing insights from experienced faculty
Love the first month’s focus on women & work