alumni

Vishal Gaur stands with two conference attendees.
SC Johnson College BusinessFeed

Artificial Intelligence Could Soon Make Management Decisions

AI chatbots can help with customer service, financial transactions, and more. Soon business leaders will use AI to make management decisions.

Three Johnson alumni
Johnson BusinessFeed

Johnson to Honor Distinguished Alumni at Diversity Awards Ceremony

Johnson alumni James Nixon, Christine Marie Monjer and Michael Beck will be honored at the upcoming diversity alumni awards.

students walking into statler hall
Nolan School BusinessFeed

Alumni: Nolan gift offers ‘incredible opportunities’ for Hotelies

A $50 million naming gift from Peter Nolan ’80, MBA ’82, and Stephanie Nolan ’84 is doing the greatest good for Hotelies.

silhouette of man running with a brief case at airport
Johnson BusinessFeed

From The Archives: Jon Moeller ’86, MBA ’88 Is Running Strong

Procter & Gamble’s new CEO Jon Moeller ’86, MBA ’88 is no stranger to leadership–read his profile from the Fall 2011 issue of Cornell Enterprise.

mentoring
Nolan School BusinessFeed

Life is service

Last fall Ben Okon ’10, a senior manager at Bain & Company, began mentoring Liam O’Brien ‘20 on how to navigate the consulting industry job market.

Go Fauci's donated means from local restaurants delivered to healthcare workers
Nolan School BusinessFeed

SHA alumni project salutes Dr. Fauci, supports restaurants and healthcare providers

GoFauci.com, a partnership with the Feeding People Foundation, supports restaurants and frontline healthcare workers across New York City.

photo of Hilary Lashley Renison standing and leaning between middle-school-aged children who are sitting at a table and looking at a computer monitor, looking at and pointing to the screen
Enterprise

Full STEAM Ahead

Hilary Lashley Renison’s startup, Tinker & Fiddle, encourages children to learn and apply technology at the intersection of culinary arts, music, fashion, and gaming.

portrait of Alaa Halawa
Enterprise

Investing for good

Mubadala Ventures investor Alaa Halawa focuses on early-growth, deep-tech life science companies that are disrupting traditional industries.