This is the official RU-vid channel of the Tepper School of Business at Carnegie Mellon University, highlighting student events, alumni testimonials, faculty research and more.
The Tepper School of Business consistently ranks among the top business schools in the world, and the school’s legacy is closely tied to our pioneering work in introducing management science to the marketplace and business school arena. We offer an MBA degree, undergraduate degrees in business administration and economics, doctoral degrees, and executive education programs.
I was in his class room during 2013~2014. His lectures mainly related to “frames related to financial regulation and contracts of types of asset”. Strongly recommend walking through his insights and way of thinking.
here we are in 2024, the true bitcoin BSV is the system this can all happen on. capable of 1 million transactions per second, inherently auditable securities on the true web3 layer 1, inherently auditable companies and foundations.. In December i saw 180k transactions for 8 cents.. this means that instead of ever risking your books to your CPA, having your CPA's assistant accidentally not file taxes or filings, mistakes, and many forms of fraud that took the big 6 accounting firms to the big 4 which now get a free pass to overlook fraud from time to time market to market.. we have the technology for fractions of a fraction of a penny which can conclusively keep all the data indefinitely auditable and you don't have to worry about anything but classifying all expenditures at some frequency either as the executive or through your accounting division.. and yet.. the masses thing bitcoin is BTC which only handles 8 transactions per second and a 1mb block size..
I am assuming OrgBe is Organizational Behavior. Why is it unpopular? I know it doesn't sound as cool as strategy or tech, but I've seen Managing Directors at large Fortune 500 companies come in and out of a department, always making fruitless restructuring... Even small companies can't determine how to structure themselves and don't know what business continuity means which results in inefficiencies and loss of knowledge.
Despite the lowkey delivery, it was inspirational to hear them talk of their early collaboration at CMU. Nice to hear Rick Green here too. RIP to a good man.