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All Insights Articles

  • How Do Impact Investors Know If They Are Having an Impact?

    We talked with Jake Harris ’19, a principal at the impact investing firm DBL Partners, about the challenges of measuring the social and environmental returns on a financial investment.

    An illustration of squares radiating outwards in concentric circles
  • How a New Approach to Store Brands Helped Natural and Organic Foods Go Mainstream

    As Whole Foods expanded in the 1990s, Denis Ring ’84 took on the challenge of developing the grocery chain’s 365 brand. Wooing shoppers with joyful design and affordable prices, he harnessed the power of private labels to expand the scale of organic and all-natural foods.

    Shelves of 365-branded cereal boxes
  • How Innovations in Understanding Everyday Data Can Power More Effective Aid

    For a project in Bangladesh, Prof. Mushfiq Mobarak and his team used machine-learning models applied to mobile phone records to identify the poorest households—faster and at far lower cost than traditional surveys.

    An aid station in a refugee camp
  • Most Startups Fail. These Founders Thought Making an Impact Was Worth the Risk.

    We talked with Nick Callegari ’25, Dianna Liu ’18, and Ariana Yuen ’19 about the unique challenges faced by founders trying to make a difference and the moments that make their work worthwhile.

    Dianna Liu in a workshop with a technician working behind her
  • Case Studies in Innovation

    We shared the stories of two alumni entrepreneurs with Professor Jonathan Feinstein, author of Creativity in Large-Scale Contexts, and asked him to apply his framework for creativity and innovation to help elucidate their paths from idea to impact.

    An abstract image of squares
  • Building a For-Profit Health Model That Reaches the Poorest

    A wellness app created by Nneka Mobisson ’04 aims to help Nigerians manage chronic health conditions—while showing that for-profit innovation can make a difference for low-income populations.

    A group of women with mobile phones gathered around an mDoc staffer
  • ‘Tough Tech’ Requires a Different Kind of Venture Capital

    Engine Ventures, led by Katie Rae ’97, backs science-intensive innovation, including clean energy, quantum computing, and human health—an approach to venture capital defined by long timelines, deep expertise, and the potential for transformative impact.

    A D-shaped toroidal field (TF) magnet, welded into its stainless steel case and surrounded by the team who helped manufacture it, rests in a testing chamber at the Commonwealth Fusion Systems magnet factory.
  • Does a Company’s Collapse Hurt Workers’ Careers?

    A new study co-authored by Yale SOM’s Tristan Botelho suggests that rank-and-file workers usually aren’t tainted by a brush with failure—but if their former employer was plagued by scandal, their careers do seem to suffer.

    An illustration of office workers carrying cardboard boxes approaching an exit
  • Netflix Will Win the Fight Over Warner—Even If It Loses

    Prof. Jeffrey Sonnenfeld and co-author Stephen Henriques write that either Netflix will succeed in acquiring Warner Bros. Discovery and its crown-jewel assets, or it will get to watch as rival Paramount takes on massive debt and risk.

    AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
  • Are Leaders Responsible for Employee Wellbeing?

    We asked Yale SOM leadership expert David Tate how leaders can create environments that support wellbeing without sacrificing rigor, accountability, or results.

    Employees in a workplace