Peter Cohan

Peter Cohan

Peter Cohan is president of Peter S. Cohan & Associates, a management consulting and venture capital firm he founded in 1994. By conducting over 150 consulting projects, he has helped governments and businesses to identify, evaluate and profit from growth opportunities that spring from new technologies. Three of his portfolio companies were sold for a total of $2 billion.

He teaches business strategy to undergraduate and graduate students at Babson College — BusinessWeek ranked its undergraduate strategy department #2 in the U.S.

AchieveMax ranked his eighth book, You Can’t Order Change: Lessons From Jim McNerney’s Turnaround at Boeing, the #1 business book of 2009. His ninth book, co-authored with Srini Rangan, is Capital Rising: How Capital Flows Are Changing Business Systems All Over the World— that Choice called “important, well-researched, socially-responsible, and groundbreaking.”

He has appeared on ABC’s Good Morning America, CBS’s Evening News and Early Show, CNBC, CNN, and PBS’s Nightly Business Report as well as on NPR’s MarketPlace. And he’s been quoted in the New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Time, BusinessWeek, and Fortune.

Recent Articles

Verizon Looks Good on Artificially Depressed Share Price

Thanks to growth from wireless, Verizon’s high dividend yield and expectations-beating earnings reports could propel its stock higher from strike- and S&P downgrade-depressed levels.

Don’t Load up on Amazon

Despite rapid growth, Amazon’s low margins, high capital costs and lofty valuation make it a risky stock.

Bargain Hunters, Rejoice — It’s Time to Go Shopping

Now that stocks have taken a tumble, some attractive stocks have gotten much cheaper relative to their earnings growth. Here are three companies to add to your shopping list.

Pitney Bowes Might Beat a Bank Account

PBI's 7.17% dividend yield might be sustainable, and it sure beats earning 0.05% in a checking account -- if the stock price doesn’t plunge.

InterDigital Could Be a Supercharged Stock

If a bidding war among Samsung, Apple and Google results in a deal, telecom patent holder InterDigital could ignite.