Topics
Corporate Leadership & Transformation
Issue 21: Leadership
The Endurance Entrepreneur
His first startup launched at the dawn of this century, and Simon Rogerson has been launching others ever since, while also raising children, running triathlons and contemplating the purpose of business. By Susan Gilchrist.
13 min read
Issue 21: Leadership
Goodbye, Angela Merkel
As her reign nears its end, Carl Hohenthal recalls the politician he knew long before her 16 years as German Chancellor.
13 min read
Issue 21: Leadership
Neal Wolin
In an interview, Brunswick’s CEO assesses the challenges facing leadership in a time of crisis.
13 min read
Issue 20: The WFH Issue
Introduction: WFH
One legacy of the pandemic is the arrival in general parlance of “WFH.” So named, this edition of our magazine brings you Brunswick Review stories posted online during the first months of the pandemic.
3 min read
Issue 20: The WFH Issue
Too Black & Not Black Enough
Brunswick’s Hayley Singleton, a woman of mixed race, reflects on the conversations, judgments and perspective that come with “existing in two worlds.”
5 min read
Issue 20: The WFH Issue
The George Floyd Outrage: US Workers Speak
Brunswick Insight’s poll of employees reveals how they would like their companies to respond. By Mara Riemer.
5 min read
Issue 20: The WFH Issue
Zegna
The global menswear brand’s CEO, grandson of its founder, tells Brunswick’s Natasha Aleksandrov, Lidia Fornasiero and Brendan Riley how his grandfather’s commitment to social value still guides the company.
10 min read
Issue 20: The WFH Issue
The Age of Acceleration
There are moments in history when everything seems to accelerate. Ten years in one. 2020 is such a moment. By Alan Parker.
10 min read
Issue 20: The WFH Issue
In Millennials We Trust
Left holding the bag, they will correct the mistakes of their predecessors, says Brunswick’s Jennifer Huffman.
8 min read
Issue 20: The WFH Issue
Inside IBM’s COVID-19 Response
CIO Fletcher Previn and his team “compressed 10 years of strategy into 10 weeks of execution,” reports Philip Delves Broughton.
14 min read