Best MOOCs In Business For January

United Breaks Guitars

Tell me if youā€™ve heard a version of this clichĆ©. A pebble that falls into the ocean can create a ripple that crosses the globe. Nonsense? Donā€™t say that to United Airlines. Seven years ago, Dave Carroll found his $3,500 Taylor guitar heavily damaged when he picked it up in Unitedā€™s baggage claim. Rather than make amends, United gave him the runaround, eventually denying him compensation on a technicality. In response, Carroll shared his saga in a catchy country tune with a kitschy video ā€“ ā€œUnited Breaks Guitarsā€ ā€“ and placed it on YouTube. Fanned by Facebook and late night comedy, the incident quickly captured the publicā€™s imagination. The video went viral, generating nearly 1.6 million views on YouTube in just three days (and has 15.5 million views to date).

VIRAL MARKETING IS A SCIENCE AS MUCH AS AN ART

ā€œUnited Breaks Guitarsā€ is one example of viral marketing. Despite his misfortune, Carroll became a celebrity on a shoestring budget where word of mouth quickly catapulted him into the mainstream. And Januaryā€™s best new MOOC, Whartonā€™s ā€œContagious: How Things Catch On,ā€ takes this dynamic and applies it to messaging. Donā€™t assume that creating such viral events are freak accidents. There are strong psychological and marketing principles behind them, says Professor Jonah Berger who teaches the class (and authored a best-seller by the same name).

Rather than relying on group-tested, budget-busting campaigns, the course posits an alternative means to build brand: Word of mouth. Here, the goal is to find tools that can spread like a zombie contagion. In Bergerā€™s research, he has found six fundamentals that can help marketers create a groundswell that sparks curiosity (i.e. selling $100 cheesesteaks), entertains or enlightens (growing beards in November for build awareness of menā€™s health), and motivates the audience to pass your effort along to their own social circles. And whatā€™s the payoff? Simple: Your audience does your marking for you so you can coast on a wave of free publicity.

NEARLY 50 BUSINESS MOOCS WILL DEBUT IN JANUARY OF THE NEW YEAR

Viral marketing is just one of nearly 50 new business MOOCs coming out in January. Want to learn more about how analytics can help you better target your advertising strategy? Check out Dardenā€™s marketing analytics course starting on January 4th. Just getting starting in analytics? John Hopkins University offers a self-paced, one week introductory data science course for beginners. If youā€™re struggling to find patterns and key data in your ledgers, Wharton is launching an Accounting Analytics course with ingenious ways to integrate financial metrics with those from operations and marketing to provide a clearer and more strategic view of your business.

And thatā€™s not all. Stanfordā€™s Daniel McFarland returns with ā€œOrganizational Analysis,ā€ ranked among the best MOOCs all-time by the Financial Times. The University of Michiganā€™s Gautam Kaul, an online pioneer whose ā€œIntroduction to Financeā€ MOOC set the bar for those that followed, returns with three courses covering basic (time value and risk and return) and complex (alternative) methods for valuations. The University of Maryland is bringing back a popular trio of courses on entrepreneurship, while Kellogg offers new courses on how to scale operations and how to sharpen leadership skills through interpersonal leadership. Not to mention, youā€™ll also find new sections of old favorites in corporate finance, game theory, and operations.

To learn more about these courses ā€“ and register for them ā€“ click on the links below.

Marketing and Management

Contagious: How Things Catch On / January 18 / Wharton School

Marketing Analytics / January 4 / University of Virginia

Organizational Analysis / Available Anytime / Stanford University

A Crash Course in Data Science / Available Anytime / John Hopkins University

Critical Perspectives on Management / January / IE Business School

Leadership Through Social Influence / January 11 / Northwestern University

Leadership Through Marketing / January / Northwestern University

Gamification / January 4 / Wharton School

Developing Innovative Ideas for New Companies: The First Step in Entrepreneurship / January 11 / University of Maryland

Innovation for Entrepreneurs: From Idea to Marketplace / January 11 / University of Maryland

New Venture Finance: Startup Funding for Entrepreneurs / January 11 / University of Maryland

Foundations of Everyday Leadership / January / University of Illinois

Career Edge: Analytical Problem Solving and Design Thinking / Available Anytime / FulbridgeX

Effective Problem-Solving and Decision-Making / Available Anytime / University of California-Irvine

Subsistence Marketplaces / January 12 / University of Illinois

The Business of Social / January / Northwestern University

Finance and Operations

Scaling Operations: Linking Strategy and Execution / January 11 / Northwestern University

Accounting Analytics / January / Wharton School

Introduction to Corporate Finance / January 4 / Wharton School

Principles of Valuation: Time Value of Money / January 4 / University of Michigan

Principles of Valuation: Risk and Return / January 4 / University of Michigan

Valuation: Alternative Methods / January 4 / University of Michigan

Operations Management / January 11 / University of Illinois

Process Improvement / January 4 / University of Illinois

The Language and Tools of Financial Analysis / January 4 / University of Melbourne

The Role of Global Capital Markets / January 4 / University of Melbourne

Principles of Economics With Calculus / January 5 / Caltech

Additional Courses

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