News
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Why Godzilla is still a monstrous defender of humanity decades later
Fast Company covered an article by the Notre Dame Deloitte Center for Ethical Business' director Jessica McManus Warnell that draws parallels between the original Japanese film "Godzilla" and disaster recovery efforts after the Fukushima nuclear disaster.
Fast Company -
Color complexity in social media posts leads to more engagement, new research shows
Vamsi Kanuri, associate professor of marketing, discusses his research into the role of color complexity in social media engagement in an article for The Conversation.
The Conversation -
Godzilla at 70: The monster’s warning to humanity is still urgent
Management professor Jessica McManus Warnell and Amanda Kennell reflect on the warnings from the original 1954 film "Godzilla" in light of Japanese organization's 2024 Nobel Peace Prize Award.
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US inflation rate fell to 2.4% in September − here’s what that means for interest rates and markets
Jason Reed, associate teaching professor of finance, discusses the U.S. inflation cooldown in an article for The Conversation.
The Conversation -
‘Google knows a lot’: Apps and companies tracking your online activity
"But the reason Facebook and Google and many of the other platforms have these products is so that you spend time with them, so that they can show you ads,” said Kevin Hartman, associate teaching professor of marketing, in a piece from WSBT22 News.
WSBT22 News -
What the Fed’s rate cut means for consumers, businesses and investors
“It’s not going to help very much for the people carrying credit card debts,” said Jeffrey Bergstrand, a professor at the University of Notre Dame and former economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, in an article for the Washington Post.
Washington Post -
Who sells when index funds buy? Corporates, new paper says
Recent research from John Shim, assistant professor of finance at Mendoza College of Business, presents evidence that the biggest single seller of equity to index funds over the past 20 years has been listed companies themselves, far ahead of other players in the secondary market like financial institutions or short sellers.
Bloomberg News -
The Changemaker Interview: Kristen Ferguson, University Of Notre Dame
Forbes interviewed assistant professor of marketing Kristen Ferguson on her study, "The Mobile Giving Gap: The Negative Impact of Smartphones on Donation Behavior.”
Forbes -
No credit score? A grocery list could be the next best thing
Joonhyuk Yang, assistant professor of marketing at Notre Dame's Mendoza College of Business, wrote a piece about their research into alternatives to traditional credit scores.
The Conversation -
Donors less likely to give on smartphones — How fundraisers can combat ‘mobile giving gap’
Donors are less likely to give to charity and also give less money when they’re engaging with their smartphones, according to a new report from Kristen Ferguson, marketing professor at Notre Dame's Mendoza College of Business.
Chronicle of Philanthropy