Harvard Business Review

Harvard Business Review

By Harvard Business Review

  • Category: Business
  • Release Date: 2019-01-15
  • Current Version: 31.5.0
  • Adult Rating: 4+
  • File Size: 37.44 MB
  • Developer: Harvard Business Review
  • Compatibility: Requires iOS 13.4 or later.
Score: 4.73457
4.73457
From 14,260 Ratings

Description

Harvard Business Review's all-new mobile app is the industry-leading resource for insights on business, leadership, strategy, and the practice of management. With over 100 years of editorial excellence, HBR dives deep on timely and timeless topics, from AI’s impact on work to managing people, problem solving, and developing skills to help you excel. Use the HBR app to read, share, and engage with content that makes a difference to your day. HBR App Pricing: - Monthly Digital Subscription Rate - USD $12.00 - For non-US app stores, the equivalent currency charges will be applied. - Your app subscription grants you access to the HBR digital-only plan – for seamless online exploration. - Any subscriber can easily gain access to the app by using their existing account credentials. Additional Subscription Information: - Subscription automatically renews unless auto-renew is turned off at least 24-hours before the end of the current period. - Existing app subscribers will be subject to the new pricing rate starting from their next billing cycle upon renewal. Privacy Policy: https://bit.ly/3H2nYFZ Terms of Use: http://bit.ly/48jEblV Need Help? For further assistance in downloading or using the HBR mobile app, please see HBR’s Account FAQ page or contact HBR’s customer service. 

Screenshots

Reviews

  • iPad experience feels like its designed for iPhone

    2
    By kgup
    Sadly, the iPad app is missing the opportunity to take advantage of the form factor and deliver an exceptional experience. The layout of articles on the iPad feels completely off - as if it was designed for an iPhone. It’s unfortunate that while the content is top notch, the experience is lacking. A basic feature that used to exist but is missing now (or really well hidden!) is to read a particular issue (current or a recent one) as a collection of articles, instead they are lost and jumbled in a sea of content; also missing is the ability for offline storage and reading of a particular issue, which was really useful as a way to catch up on articles while traveling without wifi access. These used to exist, so I am at a loss as to why they were removed - the annual subscription is certainly not cheap, so the iPad app is disappointing. I hope someone from the HBR product team is monitoring comments. (Disclaimer: I don’t do a lot of app reviews… but I like the magazine so much, and the iPad app is so atrocious … that I feel compelled to leave a detailed review!)
  • Aging in reverse

    1
    By Tetraowl
    App is aging in reverse. Used to have the ability to download and read the magazine, but that was years ago. Now it's nearing the stage of being a beta app with little to no functionality.
  • I just want to read on a plane - I'm done

    1
    By jefftracy
    After many requests to improve the ability to read issues on a plane as well as listen to audio articles offline I am done. After 25 years as a customer I don't understand why what is considered a world leader in thought can't figure out how to make a functional app. Just cancelled my subscription. Thank you HBR.
  • Why is this application getting worse with each update

    1
    By N Fagan
    I read the HBR whilst traveling on a plane where it is required to DOWNLOAD the magazine before departure. I’ve waited patiently for months for the HBR technical team RESTORE the ability to download editions but nothing seems to be improving. I called support as i assumed it was a technical glitch that they were working on, after all, the ability to do the edition download has been there for years. It is not a technical glitch. They are working on ‘adding’ that functionality with no timeframe give. Amateur.
  • ADA Violations

    1
    By James L. Bond
    Can’t adjust type size for people who have vision disabilities.
  • Made by an intern

    3
    By jimmycanfly247
    Garbage app that cannot sync with the web account. Cannot change address and have to write an email asking for something as simple as an address change only to back and forth with the support team several times. Cannot sync saved articles from the web. Do us a favor and get a real dev team. No wonder Harvard sends brainwashed graduates to the industry that go on to grab leadership positions with no relevant experience or knowledge or technical ability and end up torpedoing every single company they are hired to work at. This is not just the app, it’s the attitude
  • Mediocre App

    2
    By malyckjs
    For a organization with pretty good content, the mobile app is underwhelming (at best). Key friction points at tiers other than free - being warned that I used my final free article - not having any to offer contributors feedback on their articles Do better!
  • They changed for the worse

    1
    By Sergiop68
    The experience with the new App is the worst. First, I paid several years for HBR magazines and I don't know why I don't have them, if I cannot have them, I want my money back, because that action is a scam. Second, HBR never told us "we want to take out from the App the magazines, please downloaded them", so you stolen a product that I bought. And third, the UX/UI in iPad is horrible. If you don't change that in three or four months my subscription will be cancelled.
  • Removed archive of digital issues

    1
    By Scott ASU
    One of the reasons I paid so much for a subscription was to gain digital access to prior magazines. They have removed that feature. Based on other reviews, it seems like this is a temporary issue; however, given the subscription is so expensive and this “temporary” issue has been ongoing for many months now, I find this development unsatisfactory.
  • Absolutely Terrible - Offline Magazines and Content Inaccessible

    1
    By Almonetts
    As a strong advocate for the magazine in both educational and corporate settings, the revised app and push to online articles only instead of magazine downloads is unwelcomed and did not take into consideration preferences of long-established users. HBR should consider refunding annual subscriptions for this inconvenience and make it a priority to addressing this concern.

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