Bartov, Eli

Submitted by sluong on
Biography

Eli Bartov is a Research Professor of Accounting at New York University's Leonard N. Stern School of Business. He served as the Director of the Accounting Doctoral Program from 2001 to 2010. Professor Bartov received his Ph.D. degree at the University of California, Berkeley in 1989 and his C.P.A. certification in 1979.

Kashi R. Balachandran

Submitted by dmoore on
Professor Balachandran joined Stern in 1979. His primary areas of research include optimal operation of service systems, incentive contracts and mechanisms, transfer pricing determinations, conceptualization of unused capacities and their optimal utilization, warranty contracts, quality enhancement programs and reporting, activity based costing systems business measurement systems and optimal performance evaluations. Professor Balachandran has written and published more than 65 articles in leading academic journals of economics, accounting and management science.

Bradley Blanchard, MSBA '15

Submitted by scordell on
Brad had just started the NYU Stern Master of Science in Business Analytics program when he could already see dividends. Shortly after completing the program’s initial module, he was interviewing for a position as data scientist at J. Hilburn, the men’s clothier. “Learning how to articulate and frame a data mining problem was instrumental in preparing me for the interviews,” Brad recalls. “It enabled me to envision how my future growth in the program could help J.Hilburn accomplish the goals it had established.”

Caio C. Banti, MSRM ’13

Submitted by gcastell on
Caio, a senior vice president for Latin America Wholesale Risk at HSBC in Sao Paulo, estimated he would earn back his financial investment in NYU Stern’s Master’s in Risk Management program within two years. As for the experiential return on investment, meanwhile, that started paying dividends immediately.
 

Eric Sherman, MSBA ‘14

Submitted by gcastell on
For Eric, the ROI from NYU Stern’s Master of Science in Business Analytics program derives from being a more knowledgeable, well-rounded analytics professional: “I have a much broader perspective on topics in analytics and business now, and I know where to turn to dive deeper when I need to.  I've also found it valuable working directly with some of the professors at Stern who are responsible for some of the latest research on topics of great professional interest to me.”
 
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