Skip to main content

All Insights Articles

  • What Critics Get Wrong About Dual-Class Shares

    The SpaceX IPO has renewed debate over dual-class share structures, which give founders outsized voting power. Yale SOM’s Jeffrey Sonnenfeld and co-author Steven Tian argue that these structures can create long-term shareholder value under the right conditions.

    Screens in Times Square during the SpaceX IPO
  • You Probably Need a Mission Statement

    Professor James Baron says a genuine mission statement can help organizations of all kinds cultivate thriving internal cultures and credibility in the outside world.

    A soccer team arm in arm made up of various corporate roles, with "Mission" on their jerseys
  • Leadership Lessons from a Lifetime Investing in Tech

    Anne Glover ’78 traces her journey from shop-floor foreman to deep-tech investor and discusses the challenges facing the UK and Europe in building homegrown tech giants.

    Anne Glover speaking on stage
  • Inside the 25-Year Mission to Give India’s City Dwellers a Voice in Government

    Drawing on his experience at Yale SOM, his career in finance, and his first encounter with a New England town meeting, Ramesh Ramanathan ’89 returned to India with his wife, Swati, to help citizens shape the future of their communities.

    An aerial view of Bangalore, India.
  • Mobilizing a System to Treat People with Sickle Cell Disease

    Cece Calhoun ’21, medical director of Yale’s Sickle Cell Program, reflects on the challenges of building teams and structures to support patients facing both chronic illness and systemic inequities.

    Cece Calhoun with members of her team
  • How Dr. Bronner’s Turned a Soap Company into a Blueprint for Regenerative Business

    Darcy Shiber-Knowles ’13 has helped grow Dr. Bronner’s from a cult favorite to a force reshaping how industries think about sustainability.

    Workers loading and transporting fresh fruit bunches
  • Too Many Pro-Democracy Groups Are Weakening the Cause

    Yale SOM’s Jeffrey Sonnenfeld argues that the proliferation of organizations fighting for democracy has divided resources, muddled messaging, and discouraged potential allies.

    A pro-democracy protest including an upside-down American flag reading "Save our Democracy"
  • How Trump Rewrites Defeat as Victory

    Yale SOM’s Jeffrey Sonnenfeld and co-author Steven Tian argue that after falling short of his stated objectives in Iran, President Trump has turned to a familiar set of political and rhetorical tactics: declaring victory, redirecting public attention, and recasting friends as foes and foes as friends.

    Vice President J.D. Vance with Pakistani prime minister Shehbaz Sharif and Qatari prime minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim al-Thani, during negotiations in Lucerne, Switzerland
  • Wisdom of the Few? Prediction Markets Are Driven by a Small Number of Skilled Traders

    A new study co-authored by Yale SOM’s Theis Jensen finds that a small group of informed traders drive prices—and take home a large portion of the profits.

    A herd of sheep led by a small group with glasses, maps, and binoculars
  • Will Banning Personalized Pricing Work?

    With AI making it easier for businesses to tailor prices to individual customers, Maryland recently became the first state to prohibit the use of personal data in setting prices. We asked Yale SOM economist Jidong Zhou whether such restrictions are likely to work as intended—and whether they will benefit consumers.

    A robot cashier at a supermarket