Quick Takes on Big Ideas
Sessions you need to know about
One of the hallmarks of any Wharton Global Forum is the auspicious nature of the conversations. Though the keynotes and fireside chats were long-planned, speakers seized the moment and took on the timeliest issues and headlines in business, geopolitics, and economics. Here is a snapshot of some of the key takeaways and perspectives from the Forum.
Diversity: Matching Actions to Values

Speakers:
- Janet Cowell, C’90, G’95, WG’95
CEO of Girls Who Invest - Scott Mills, W’90
President, BET - Ikdeep Singh, WG’07
President, L’Oreal USA - Bonita Stewart
Vice President, Global Partnerships for Google - Stephanie Creary
Assistant Professor of Management (moderator)
Continually questioning and challenging the status quo is at the heart of meaningful diversity and inclusion initiatives. Wharton’s Stephanie Creary asked executives on the Leading for Diversity panel about what drives them to keep diversity a priority as leaders.
The panelists held a wide-ranging discussion that explored the advances and areas in need of improvement throughout corporate culture. Drawing on their experiences, they gave the audience action items to start embracing diversity in incremental efforts while setting a leadership example:
- Singh: Start with intensive recruiting from diverse backgrounds — then assume that people you have hired have potential and support them.
- Stewart: Try the “plus one” approach: Bring someone to a meeting or opportunity who may not otherwise be represented, or offer to swap your place with her.
- Cowell: Many companies can’t answer percentage questions regarding diversity. “We need metrics that matter.”
- Mills: Diversity and inclusion are coming to the forefront because it is a business imperative from the consumer perspective. “You actions have to match up with your values.”
All Bets are on for the Future on Money

Speakers:
- Karen Finerman, W’87
Co-Founder, Metropolitan Capital - Brian Kelly
Founder and CEO, BKCM LLC - Michael Vaughan, W’97
COO, Venmo - Robin Wigglesworth
US Markets Editor, Financial Times
The Future of Money: Panel Discussion
Kelly, an early adopter of Bitcoin, kicked off the panel with a short masterclass on blockchain:
- Blockchain is a secure database infrastructure that allows for file transfer without a third party.
- Bitcoin is a game changer that allows value to be sent around the world; its price is driven by its use.
- Ethereum and other decentralized platforms function as “smart contracts” that are triggers for getting paid.
“The premise in 2009 was that we needed an alternative financial system,” Kelly said. “Now [cryptocurrency] is used as a speculative instrument.”
Echoing many skeptics, Wigglesworth called Bitcoin a “Rube Goldberg mechanism for something we already do. Visa can handle 155,000 transactions a minute while Bitcoin can process seven.”
While Kelly maintains that banks will without a doubt be disrupted, Wigglesworth said that we will see the de factoend of cash in our lifetime, “but it won’t be because we are using Bitcoin.”
Vaughan said that disruption and chaos around cryptocurrencies will lead to innovation, but in the meantime, mobile payments are already upending daily life: “Street musicians in New York now post their Venmo handles.”