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Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

author:Smart green fish

<h4 class = "pgc-h-arrow-right" > I heard that watching these 20 movies is equivalent to finishing the School of Economics and Management of Tsinghua University</h4>

In a complex business society, if you want to start a business, you don't understand the economy, you don't understand business, you don't understand the sophistication, you don't understand the edge of the law, you only have courage, only dreams, only naivety, then there is only one void. These 20 films are all required to be seen by business school students when studying business, including "Wall Street", which has always been the first to be promoted by Harvard Business School, "Upside Down" at Wharton, and "Boiler Room", which Stanford requires business students to see. After reading it, you will have a deeper understanding of the nature and rules of business operation, which will also be of great help to your career. Wall Street (1987)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

Internal transactions are illegal, how to get rich without breaking the law, the key is to see how to break the law and cover up at the same time. How can you casually enter the stock market without watching this film? 2. Glengarry Glenn Ross (1992)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

When real estate enters a depression, what are the sales consultants of U.S. real estate agents busy with? See how they use databases, how they sell real estate door-to-door, how they package real estate during a depression, and how they target the housing needs of newlywed families. 3. Trading Places (1983)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

Economics is synonymous with trading behavior. As long as there is a transaction, it is necessary to learn to evaluate whether the transaction is cost-effective, and it is necessary to see through the secrets of the counterparty's heart. The core rules learned in trading apply in any country in the world wherever there is a transaction. 4. Boiler Room (2000)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

It is hard to imagine that illegal transactions are almost inseparable from the securities market. A 19-year-old who witnesses the manipulation of wealth so closely that who gets rich is nothing more than a random choice. 5. Pirates of Silicon Valley (1999)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

Bill Gates and Steve Jobs have opposing views and opinions in almost all respects, and they only have one thing in common, and that is to do everything possible to block the film. How are silicon valley tech companies incubated? What kind of market rules do young people under the age of 25 use, and how do they make market rules, customers, and competitors form a community? Endless conspiracies hang over Silicon Valley. 6. The Coca-Cola Kid (1985)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

It's the story of a boy who creates a career with Coke. As a marketer for carbonated drinks, he had to answer the question, why isn't there a bottle of Coca-Cola in a remote Australian town? Marketing is an integral part of business, especially in entrepreneurship. 7. The Secret of My Success (1987)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

It mainly tells the story of boys in Kansas, USA, wandering in New York. If New York can represent the center of nearly 100 years of human commerce, then any young person of the 21st century will have to face the glitz, bustle, and restlessness of the big city. 8. In Good Company (2004)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

Big companies are grown up through acquisitions, would you buy them? Know what the post-acquisition sales executive thought? Do you know what the salespeople are talking about behind their backs? The core factor in Lenovo's failure to acquire IBM was that it did not understand the film at all. When there is a transaction between companies, where are you as a member of the company? 9. Barcelona (1994)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

Can the Way Americans Sell Really Reach The World? An American salesperson's sales experience in Spain taught us the values of sales, how sales deal with customer culture, and how sales grasp customer relationships. 10. "Mr. Sweetheart" (1996)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

Do business with sincerity. Show me the money, let me see that money is real, and this is true of any business. There is no solid friendship in business, and this is a lesson you must keep in mind before starting a business. 11. "A Worm to Work" (1999)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

Practical textbook for office politics. In the market economy environment, when the company encounters a crisis, the essential motivation for layoffs, and the core significance of the role of employees in the company are the basic rules of the business society that must be learned. 12. The Corporation (2003)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

Just over two centuries after the 18th century U.S. law formally adopted the organizational behavior of an individual, this U.S. corporate law actually affected the whole world, and you can see a similar description in China's company law. This title of legal person is rampant all over the world, and every angle of the world is affected. The greed of the individual, the endless expansion of personal desires, the film reveals the rules of capitalist business from the deepest essence, and ruthlessly reveals its existing ills. 13. The Insider (1999)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

The essence of commercial society is the free exchange of money, as long as you like it, it seems that you can exchange anything. The commercial value in the transaction, the pricing principle in the transaction, and the role of commercial reputation in the transaction are all vividly demonstrated in this film, and the business students must understand the inevitable result of money dominating human society, and the irreversible characteristics of this result. 14. The Hudsucker Proxy (1994)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

A film that doesn't do well at the box office, but people who understand business say yes. The boss of a company commits suicide, but his company is still thriving, and the real power figures on the board of directors begin to act, the purpose of which is, of course, selfishness. Corporate governance, corporate board operation practice, etc. are all rare practical lesson plans in this film. 15. Antitrust (2001)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

After graduating from a Stanford computer genius, he was hired by a tech tycoon to develop a global communications system, and then he discovered that he was being used as a reconnaissance business rival to monopolize the market. The film pays a silent tribute to Microsoft's monopoly and tells a story of opposition to money and high-tech monopolies with distinct era and global significance. 16. Rogue Trader (1998)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

In 1995, The Bank of Bahrain, one of the world's oldest banks, went bankrupt and was once the most trusted financial institution of the British aristocracy, with more than 200 years of excellent operating history, but it could not escape bankruptcy. Shockingly, such a tragic ending came from the hands of an ordinary securities trader, Nick Leyson. This film from a real case is the best lesson plan for everyone to learn about banking, especially investment. Other People's Money (1991)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

This is also a film based on a true story in the United States, from which you can learn about business law, corporate mergers, commercial litigation norms, business processes, mergers and reorganization processes, etc. The American commercial free market is full of conflicts and contradictions between self-interest and altruism, and it is from these conflicts and contradictions that different motivations and dazzling means can be learned. 18. "Disclosure" (1994)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

In one day, an ambitious company executive not only lost his promotion opportunity, but also ushered in his 10-year-old cohabitant girlfriend as his boss. Already with a wife and children, he refused the female boss's request to relive his old dream with him, so the female boss played all kinds of tricks to exclude him in the company, and even falsely accused him of sexually harassing himself. Unable to bear it, he resorted to the law, and with the help of a shrewd female lawyer, he began to fight the company and the domineering female boss... The office politics and interpersonal code of conduct of the company group embodied in the film are rare workplace textbooks. 19. What Women Want (2000)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

A small accident gives the protagonist the ability to read the female mind, which is a film that reveals the thoughts and thoughts of women in a clever way. Business psychology, women's behavior, advertising, etc. are all highlights that can be learned in this film. 20 Barbarians At The Gate (1993)

Executive literacy – they're all peeking at these 20 movies

In 1988, KKR's acquisition of Renault-Nabesco was a major financial event that shocked the world on Wall Street. Professionals analyzed afterwards that the transaction was a scam on a legal basis. Because KKR's leveraged buyout method not only does not require cash, it does not need to see cash, and no one even knows where the money comes from, the whole process is simply a trap. The KKR executives, as well as those on Wall Street in the trading process, have also been dubbed "barbarians" for showing unprecedented greed and cunning skills