Tuck Dean Paul Danos Announces Plan to Step Down in 2015
Dartmouth College, Tuck School of BusinessDean Paul Danos announced he will not seek reappointment for a sixth term in June 2015.
Dean Paul Danos announced he will not seek reappointment for a sixth term in June 2015.
Vijay Govindarajan named First Coxe Distinguished Professorship of Management.
Tuck Announces Next Iteration of Online Executive Program on Strategic Reputation Management
Former AmeriCares president and CEO Curt Welling D’71, T’77 has joined Dartmouth’s Tuck School of Business as a senior fellow in its Center for Global Business and Government and the Center for Business & Society.
Tuck Professor Paul Argenti announces his end-of-year list of Top 5 Communication Blunders of 2013.
Sydney Finkelstein, professor of strategy and leadership at the Tuck School of Business, compiled his lists of Worst and Best CEOs of 2013.
New Offering: Essentials of Management Leadership Program (EMLP)
Tuck School of Business professors Vijay Govindarajan and Chris Trimble have released their latest book, “Beyond the Idea: How to Execute Innovation in Any Organization.” (St. Martin’s Press).
A strategic communications course designed by Tuck professor of corporate communication Paul Argenti for the Public Relations Society of America (PRSA) has been added to the curricula of three additional business schools during the 2014-15 academic year.
Tuck professor Kevin Lane Keller named Executive Director of the Marketing Science Institute.
Former U.S. Senator Judd Gregg, former New Hampshire Governor John Lynch, and former White House speechwriter Matthew Rees will join the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth July 1 as senior fellows at the Center for Global Business and Government.
Brand leadership is unlikely to be regained once lost.
People lie about their health related behaviors. It’s a problem that has long bedeviled health research on issues ranging from diet to exercise to smoking. And it’s not just that we have faulty memories. Many of us stretch the truth to make ourselves seem more virtuous in the eyes of the person in the white coat. That makes drawing conclusions about behaviors that affect health from self-reported records tricky.
Deans from five of the world’s top business schools convened in Paris to provide a global perspective on how the current state of corporate social responsibility and government regulation is affecting business education.
Tuck Executive Education at Dartmouth and Reputation Institute recently partnered to deliver the Executive Program on Strategic Reputation Management.
Like many issues in national politics these days, there’s a stark divide between Democrats and Republicans on tax policy.
Who are the worst CEOs of 2012? For the third time, Tuck School of Business Professor Sydney Finkelstein has compiled his list of Worst CEOs of the year.
The number of MBA entrepreneurs is on the rise, and this is no exception at the Tuck School of Business. Entrepreneurship has always had a long and rich history at Tuck, and to support the growing student interest in entrepreneurship, the school launched the Entrepreneurship Initiative (EI) last fall. The EI is designed to support student entrepreneurship through the creation and coordination of programs, activities and events.
The Tuck School of Business is pleased to announce that Robert E. Rubin will address the centennial class of 2000 at their investiture ceremony on June 10. Mr. Rubin will also be awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws degree by Dartmouth President James Wright.
Global policy makers, ambassadors, trade negotiators, scholars, and business leaders recently convened at the inaugural World Business Forum, hosted by the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth. The forum's agenda was to create a list of issues for inclusion on the agenda at the World Trade Organization Ministerial meeting.
In the midst of the holiday shopping frenzy, toy buyers are wondering if this will be the year when they finally win their bet on which toys will be the hot must-haves and if they will stock enough to satisfy demand.
Twenty-six Vietnamese senior executives are in the U.S. to experience capitalism in action, thanks to a partnership with the world's oldest graduate school of business. The program participants include senior level executives from both state-owned and private Vietnamese corporations. The Amos Tuck School of Business partnered with the Hanoi School of Business so Vietnamese executives can learn U.S. management styles and market-based business skills.
A summer program is helping minority students make their way into the business environment where 90 percent of U.S. managers are currently white. Now in its 17th year of operation, the Leadership Education and Development program, or LEAD, will soon begin teaching high school minority students how to become America's future executives.
Colleges and universities measure loyalty by alumni giving. Using that yardstick, alumni of the Amos Tuck School of Business Administration at Dartmouth College are the most faithful of the nation's graduate business school degree recipients.
Blacks are less likely than whites to "buy" excuses from co-workers who have wronged them on the job. That's one conclusion from research co-authored by Martin N. Davidson, assistant professor of business administration at Dartmouth College's Amos Tuck School of Business Administration.