Post by account_disabled on Jan 11, 2024 5:59:30 GMT -5
By using and applying the principles of storytelling (which is a classic persuasive communication structure), you are able to communicate what you discovered in the data and the actions that need to occur from the data. This will speed up decision-making in any organization. Nancy Duarte, on MIT Sloan Management Review’s latest podcast, Three Takeaways Tags: artificial intelligence automation blockchain cybersecurity digital transformation public policy more like this MIT Connect Reimagined Driver Good Question Elizabeth Heichler Top 10 Articles of the Year Are Projects Ready for Third-Party and Generative.
You must be logged in to leave a comment. First time here? Sign up for a free account: comment on articles and access more articles. Magazine Winter Issue Blockchain isn’t as unbreakable as you think Before exploring ways to use blockchain in business, managers should understand where its vulnerabilities lie. Stuart Madnick Year Month Day Reading Time: Minutes Topics Management Technology Security & Privacy Technology Implementation Technology Innovation Email Lists Database Strategy Subscribe to Access and Share What to Read Next The Five Key Trends in Artificial Intelligence and Data Science Thomas Davenport and Randy Bee How developers can reduce the impact of AI on the climate Eight essential leadership skills Five tips for improving one-on-one meetings Sometimes it seems like everyone believes the hype.
Industries as wide-ranging as real estate and diamond sales have embraced blockchain chain, but have absolutely no idea what it is or how its most touted feature might fail or have unintended consequences. Blockchain assures users that information, once stored, can never be deleted or falsified. This means that when those in the financial community take a closer look at the history of a transaction, they can take satisfaction in knowing that there is nowhere to hide illegal conduct. This means people in a product’s supply chain trust they can check its origin without having to worry about misinformation popping up along the way.
You must be logged in to leave a comment. First time here? Sign up for a free account: comment on articles and access more articles. Magazine Winter Issue Blockchain isn’t as unbreakable as you think Before exploring ways to use blockchain in business, managers should understand where its vulnerabilities lie. Stuart Madnick Year Month Day Reading Time: Minutes Topics Management Technology Security & Privacy Technology Implementation Technology Innovation Email Lists Database Strategy Subscribe to Access and Share What to Read Next The Five Key Trends in Artificial Intelligence and Data Science Thomas Davenport and Randy Bee How developers can reduce the impact of AI on the climate Eight essential leadership skills Five tips for improving one-on-one meetings Sometimes it seems like everyone believes the hype.
Industries as wide-ranging as real estate and diamond sales have embraced blockchain chain, but have absolutely no idea what it is or how its most touted feature might fail or have unintended consequences. Blockchain assures users that information, once stored, can never be deleted or falsified. This means that when those in the financial community take a closer look at the history of a transaction, they can take satisfaction in knowing that there is nowhere to hide illegal conduct. This means people in a product’s supply chain trust they can check its origin without having to worry about misinformation popping up along the way.