News
-
Shh! Companies are fixing accounting errors quietly
The Wall Street Journal cited accountancy associate professor Jeff Burks' research findings that companies are increasingly likely to correct accounting problems by quietly updating past numbers, rather than alerting investors and reissuing financial statements.
Wall Street Journal -
The 5 cybersecurity must-haves for every business
IT, Analytics, and Operations professor Mike Chapple proposes the foundational solutions that all businesses should deploy to keep their data safe in an interview for Biz Tech.
Biz Tech -
The unbelievable business career of Christopher Stevens
Management professor Christopher Stevens shared his experiences as a professor and entrepreneur and speaks about Notre Dame's Inspired Leadership Initiative with WGN Radio’s Karen Conti.
WGN Radio -
Machines and the future of work
Management professor Brett Beasley was a guest on the Ave Maria Radio program "Kresta in the Afternoon" and discussed his Mendoza Business magazine article "Automation Anxiety and the Meaning of Work." His segment starts near the 22:20-minute mark.
Ave Maria Radio -
If your Disney+ account got hacked, it’s probably your own fault
IT, Analytics & Operations professor Mike Chapple wrote a piece for CNN Business Perspectives about the danger of reusing passwords and how it likely contributed to the stolen account information of Disney+ members.
CNN Business -
Study offers first large-sample evidence of the effect of ethics training on financial sector
Science Daily covered new research from accounting professor Zach Kowaleski which offers the first large-sample study on how rules and ethics training affects behavior and employment decisions in the financial sector.
Science Daily -
How feminine is your latte?
Marketing professor James Wilkie weighs in on a Morning Consult survey that explored gender association among activities, mundane objects, and what that means for brand marketers.
Morning Consult -
Can Ethics Be Taught?
In a piece for The Street a new study by accounting professor Zach Kowaleski and his co-researchers show early ethics training can have an effect on the behavior of financial advisers.
The Street -
Liberal or conservative? CEOs’ political leanings skew firms’ logic in structuring initial pay packages
Phys.org covered management professor Timothy Hubbard and his co-researchers' findings of a correlation between the political orientation of new CEOs and their compensation rates in a new study.
Phys.org -
Can ethics be taught? New research from MIT Sloan and Notre Dame offers first large sample evidence on how ethics training affects behavior and employment decisions in the financial sector
New research by accounting professor and his co-researchers which offers the first large sample study on how rules and ethics training affects behavior and employment decisions in the financial sector was covered by Markets Insider.
Markets Insider