The heir to the Roche pharmaceuticals dynasty on how corporate power can be harnessed in the quest for sustainability
Brigid Schulte makes a convincing case for a drastic overhaul of the way we earn a living
The business of femtech, taming artificial intelligence, and personal efficiency for the 2020s
Judges of the £30,000 annual prize select the year’s most compelling and enjoyable title
John Kay takes a brilliantly erudite look at shifts in business thinking and the battle for consumer trust
Tales of Trump’s finances, AI advances and Amazon’s dominance join the chosen titles
The science and art of risk, understanding young people, and the unrecognised workforces powering AI
Life advice from a former Teen Vogue editor, supply chain crises, and reportage from the Reddit trading floor
Andrew Hill selects his best mid-year reads
A selection of the most insightful titles on the race for Downing Street by FT experts
Lessons from venture capital, problems with innovation, and the tips and tricks to learn something new
Dana Mattioli’s important book looks at the winner-takes-all dynamic that built a competition-squashing behemoth
A look back to celebrate the 20th edition of the Financial Times and Schroders award
Gregory Makoff’s book is a fair and comprehensive look at what became the trial of the century for sovereign debt
Getting familiar with AI, motorsports history, and how to thrive under pressure
How rich men with big egos brought turbulence to the social media platform now rebranded as X
The power of place, women starting start-ups and the good, bad and ugly of management
Corporate morality, the magic of dishabituating and tackling the tyranny of being constantly on the clock
The secrets of supercycles; how to build a thriving tech ecosystem; and a deep dive into mining for rare earth metals
US manufacturing woes, having a good time at work and thinking strategically with or without numbers
A dramatised account of the tycoon’s acquisition and the rebrand as X attempts to get inside his head — but takes liberties
Her book ‘Right Kind of Wrong’ aims to reframe failure and promote intelligent risk taking
Management title ‘Right Kind of Wrong’ praised as ‘highly readable and relevant’
Richard Langlois reframes the economic, institutional and intellectual development of the managerial era
Two books on sensible risk-taking urge innovators to learn from ‘intelligent failures’