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Faculty & Research

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    • HBS Book

    How to Be Bold: The Surprising Science of Everyday Courage

    By: Ranjay Gulati

    What leads people to speak truth to power or act bravely under pressure? While we often assume courage is an innate trait, How to Be Bold reveals it's a skill anyone can develop. Ranjay Gulati delivers a science-backed playbook showing how specific ways of thinking and acting allow us to manage fear—especially in the face of uncertainty—and act decisively. Drawing on compelling stories from extreme situations to everyday challenges, Gulati uncovers the common thread: it's not fearlessness, but the ability to adopt mindsets that make courageous action possible. Cultivate personal and collective courage with actionable strategies for leadership in uncertain times, driving innovation, and achieving a more fulfilling life.

    • HBS Book

    How to Be Bold: The Surprising Science of Everyday Courage

    By: Ranjay Gulati

    What leads people to speak truth to power or act bravely under pressure? While we often assume courage is an innate trait, How to Be Bold reveals it's a skill anyone can develop. Ranjay Gulati delivers a science-backed playbook showing how specific ways of thinking and acting allow us to manage fear—especially in the face of uncertainty—and act...

    • New England Journal of Medicine 394, no. 6 (February 5, 2026): 521-523.

    Health Insurance after Corporatization —What Next?

    By: Leemore S. Dafny

    The corporatization of the U.S. health insurance industry may contribute to poor health care performance for the commercially insured population, but some supply-side and demand-side reforms could help.

    • New England Journal of Medicine 394, no. 6 (February 5, 2026): 521-523.

    Health Insurance after Corporatization —What Next?

    By: Leemore S. Dafny

    The corporatization of the U.S. health insurance industry may contribute to poor health care performance for the commercially insured population, but some supply-side and demand-side reforms could help.

    • Review of Financial Studies 39, no. 2 (February 2026): 427-458.

    Bank Risk-Taking and the Real Economy: Evidence from the Housing Boom and Its Aftermath

    By: Antonio Falato, Giovanni Favara and David Scharfstein

    We present evidence that pressure to maximize short-term stock prices and earnings leads banks to increase risk. We start by showing that banks increase risk when they transition from private to public ownership through a public listing or an acquisition. The increase in risk is greater than for a control group of banks that intended but failed to transition from private to public ownership, a result that is robust to using a plausibly exogenous instrument for failed transitions. The increase in risk is also greater than for a control group of banks that were acquired but did not change their listing status. We establish that pressure to maximize short-term stock prices helps to explain these findings by showing that the increase in risk is larger for newly public banks that are more focused on short-term stock prices and performance.

    • Review of Financial Studies 39, no. 2 (February 2026): 427-458.

    Bank Risk-Taking and the Real Economy: Evidence from the Housing Boom and Its Aftermath

    By: Antonio Falato, Giovanni Favara and David Scharfstein

    We present evidence that pressure to maximize short-term stock prices and earnings leads banks to increase risk. We start by showing that banks increase risk when they transition from private to public ownership through a public listing or an acquisition. The increase in risk is greater than for a control group of banks that intended but failed to...

    • Featured Case

    NBIM's Wirecard Investment (A)

    By: Jonas Heese, Carlota Moniz and Tonia Junker

    In November 2019, Morten Molde, senior portfolio manager at Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM), came across troubling signs that Wirecard, a German payment processor and a long-time holding of the Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global—the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund, which NBIM managed on behalf of the Norwegian people—was inflating its financials. As his suspicion of large-scale fraud mounted, Molde grappled with a high-stakes decision: should NBIM act on its suspicions? And if so, how? Should it escalate concerns to regulators, auditors, or maybe even to the public? Should it short the stock, shielding itself from major losses but risking reputational fallout and regulatory scrutiny should his analysis be wrong? Or should the fund stay put, and risk heavy losses if Molde’s analysis was right after all?

    • Featured Case

    NBIM's Wirecard Investment (A)

    By: Jonas Heese, Carlota Moniz and Tonia Junker

    In November 2019, Morten Molde, senior portfolio manager at Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM), came across troubling signs that Wirecard, a German payment processor and a long-time holding of the Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global—the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund, which NBIM managed on behalf of the Norwegian people—was...

    • Featured Case

    Eli Lilly and Indiana's Innovation Strategy

    By: Christopher T. Stanton, Alicia Dadlani and Mel Martin

    Between 2022 and 2025, Eli Lilly announced over $13 billion in investments in central Indiana’s LEAP Innovation District—the largest commitment in the state’s history. For Lilly, the expansion reflected urgency to scale production of its diabetes and obesity medicines. For state leaders, it was the centerpiece of a strategy to seed an innovation ecosystem around corporate anchors. Yet the initiative drew criticism over land use, subsidies, and water infrastructure, echoing past failures of place-based economic development. By early 2025, with nearly $1 billion in public funds already committed, stakeholders faced a central question: Would Lilly’s record-setting investment catalyze a lasting regional innovation engine, or remain narrowly tied to one company’s needs?

    • Featured Case

    Eli Lilly and Indiana's Innovation Strategy

    By: Christopher T. Stanton, Alicia Dadlani and Mel Martin

    Between 2022 and 2025, Eli Lilly announced over $13 billion in investments in central Indiana’s LEAP Innovation District—the largest commitment in the state’s history. For Lilly, the expansion reflected urgency to scale production of its diabetes and obesity medicines. For state leaders, it was the centerpiece of a strategy to seed an innovation...

    • HBS Working Paper

    Selling Self-Disruptive Technologies: Identity-Compatible Advantage and the Role-Level Microfoundations of Automation Adoption

    By: Das Narayandas and Shunyuan Zhang

    Despite massive investment in artificial intelligence and automation, many high value technology projects stall after approval or are adopted only symbolically, especially in B2B markets where adoption depends on the endorsement of managers whose roles are disrupted by the technology. We argue that dominant adoption theories focused on firm level readiness, usefulness, and institutional pressure overlook a central marketing problem: selling and governing technologies that undermine the approving role itself. We introduce Self Disruptive Technologies (SDTs), offerings that enhance organizational performance while eroding the authority, discretion, or span of control of the role responsible for approving them.

    • HBS Working Paper

    Selling Self-Disruptive Technologies: Identity-Compatible Advantage and the Role-Level Microfoundations of Automation Adoption

    By: Das Narayandas and Shunyuan Zhang

    Despite massive investment in artificial intelligence and automation, many high value technology projects stall after approval or are adopted only symbolically, especially in B2B markets where adoption depends on the endorsement of managers whose roles are disrupted by the technology. We argue that dominant adoption theories focused on firm level...

    • Working Paper

    Hitting Rock Bottom: Economic Hardship and Cheating

    By: Livia Alfonsi, Michal Bauer, Julie Chytilová and Edward Miguel

    This paper investigates whether economic hardship undermines preferences for honesty. We use controlled, high-stake measures of cheating for private benefit in a large sample of 5,664 Kenyans, exploiting three complementary sources of variation: experimentally manipulated monetary incentives to cheat, a randomized increase in the salience of one’s own financial situation, and the Covid-19 income shock (exploiting randomized survey timing, with respondents interviewed before vs. during the crisis). We find that cheating behavior is highly responsive to financial incentives in the experiment. Covid-19 economic hardship—marked by a 51% drop in monthly earnings—leads to a sharp increase in the prevalence of cheating, and the effect increases gradually with prolonged hardship. The effects are largest among the most economically impacted and are amplified when the salience of one’s own financial situation is experimentally increased.

    • Working Paper

    Hitting Rock Bottom: Economic Hardship and Cheating

    By: Livia Alfonsi, Michal Bauer, Julie Chytilová and Edward Miguel

    This paper investigates whether economic hardship undermines preferences for honesty. We use controlled, high-stake measures of cheating for private benefit in a large sample of 5,664 Kenyans, exploiting three complementary sources of variation: experimentally manipulated monetary incentives to cheat, a randomized increase in the salience of one’s...

Initiatives & Projects

Health Care

The Health Care Initiative serves as a gateway for health care research, educational programs, and collaboration across all sectors of the health care industry.
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Seminars & Conferences

Apr 22
  • 22 Apr 2026

Garima Sharma, Northwestern University

Apr 22
  • 22 Apr 2026

Juliane Begenau, Stanford GSB

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Recent Publications

Nuwa Capital: Investing During Uncertainty

By: Paul A. Gompers
  • October 2026 |
  • Teaching Plan |
  • Faculty Research
Teaching Plan for HBS Case No. 224-016. Nuwa Capital (Nuwa) was a venture capital firm based in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates and Riyadh in Saudi Arabia. The business was founded in 2020 by Khaled Talhouni and his partners Sarah Abu Risheh, and Stephanie Nour Prince (they were later joined by Nitin Reen and Victor Sunyer). Together, they had a combined experience of nearly 20 years investing in over 300 companies, including some of the Middle East and North Africa’s most successful startups. In a startup ecosystem as nascent as theirs, their track record eclipsed most other firms. By August 2021, Nuwa had achieved a first close on its fund and, in response to changing market conditions, pivoted their investment thesis to earlier stage startups. One of the industries they decided to invest in was foodtech, and they had been in advanced stages of conversations with Calo, a Bahrain based foodtech player. The team was conducting their already accelerated due diligence when they received word that another investor had just met Calo and was willing to take Nuwa’s spot. Promising founders like Calo’s were hard to come by and Nuwa had to decide quickly. The problem was that Calo did not, on the surface, fit Nuwa’s thesis. However, it had the potential to only after a pivot.
Citation
Purchase
Related
Gompers, Paul A. "Nuwa Capital: Investing During Uncertainty." Harvard Business School Teaching Plan 226-034, October 2026.

Heterogeneous Treatment Effects in Panel Data

By: Retsef Levi, Elisabeth Paulson, Georgia Perakis and Emily Zhang
  • 2024 |
  • Working Paper |
  • Faculty Research
We address a core problem in causal inference: estimating heterogeneous treatment effects using panel data with general treatment patterns. Many existing methods either do not utilize the potential underlying structure in panel data or have limitations in the allowable treatment patterns. In this work, we propose and evaluate a new method that first partitions observations into disjoint clusters with similar treatment effects using a regression tree, and then leverages the (assumed) low-rank structure of the panel data to estimate the average treatment effect for each cluster. Our theoretical results establish the convergence of the resulting estimates to the true treatment effects. Computation experiments with semi-synthetic data show that our method achieves superior accuracy compared to alternative approaches, using a regression tree with no more than 40 leaves. Hence, our method provides more accurate and interpretable estimates than alternative methods.
Citation
Related
Levi, Retsef, Elisabeth Paulson, Georgia Perakis, and Emily Zhang. "Heterogeneous Treatment Effects in Panel Data." Working Paper, June 2024.

El modelo económico de China

By: Meg Rithmire
  • April–June 2026 |
  • Article |
  • La Vanguardia
Citation
Related
Rithmire, Meg. "El modelo económico de China." La Vanguardia, no. 99 (April–June 2026).

Asymmetric Mass Mobilization and the Vincibility of Democracy in Hungary

By: Laura Jakli, Béla Greskovits and Jason Wittenberg
  • May 2026 |
  • Article |
  • Comparative Political Studies
Using an original dataset of partisan protest events in Hungary (n = 4836) spanning 1989 to 2011, we argue that left-liberal parties’ neglect in cultivating civil society during the post-communist period had deleterious downstream effects on Hungarian liberal democracy. First, it enabled the growth of an illiberal, right-wing civil society that facilitated Fidesz-KDNP’s 2010 landslide electoral victory. Second, it deprived the left-liberals of mobilization resources that could have been used to carry out contentious collective action to counter Fidesz-KDNP’s early maneuvers at democratic backsliding, in particular their constitutional overhaul. The data allow us to trace patterns in partisan protest over time and across cities, illustrating the dangers of asymmetric mass mobilization (AMM) during the prevention and containment periods.
Citation
Related
Jakli, Laura, Béla Greskovits, and Jason Wittenberg. "Asymmetric Mass Mobilization and the Vincibility of Democracy in Hungary." Comparative Political Studies 59, no. 6 (May 2026): 1254–1289.

Staffing the Private Debt Boom: Skills, Talent, and Consequences

By: Victoria Ivashina, Sophie-Dorothee Rotermund and Zachariah Wallace-Wright
  • 2026 |
  • Working Paper |
  • Faculty Research
This paper examines the human capital drawn to the private debt industry and its implications for the banking sector. Using a novel dataset of 2,336 professionals who entered private debt funds between 2000 and 2024, we show that entrants are drawn disproportionately from top universities. Only about a quarter come directly from banks, as private debt is recruited broadly across finance, including private equity, asset management, and insurance. We find that structuring expertise, high-yield debt experience, proactive deal-making, and industry specialization—rather than traditional commercial lending—are central to the private debt model. At the same time, private debt constitutes a sustained drain of talent from megabanks, with clustered senior departures leading to measurable declines in banks’ leveraged loan market share.
Citation
Related
Ivashina, Victoria, Sophie-Dorothee Rotermund, and Zachariah Wallace-Wright. "Staffing the Private Debt Boom: Skills, Talent, and Consequences." Harvard Business School Working Paper, No. 26-081, April 2026.

Joe Mazzulla and the Boston Celtics (A) (Abridged)

By: Linda A. Hill, James I. Cash and Lydia Begag
  • April 2026 |
  • Case |
  • Faculty Research
Joe Mazzulla's leadership journey with the Boston Celtics began in 2016 when he served as an assistant coach for their NBA G-League affiliate. In 2019, he was promoted to a "behind-the-bench" assistant coaching role with the Celtics, before being asked to become the interim head coach in September 2022 following the suspension of the head coach. All throughout the 2022-2023 NBA season, Mazzulla discovered the demands of the role, learning what his players and coaching staff needed from him as well as how to manage relationships with the Boston sports fanbase and the media. Despite the Celtics falling short in the 2023 NBA Eastern Conference Finals, Mazzulla used the offseason to recalibrate and refine his leadership and communication strategies for the upcoming 2023-2024 season. By June 2024, Mazzulla's hard work and evolution had paid off, with the Celtics reaching the NBA Finals for the second time in three years. As Game 4 of the Finals approaches (with the Celtics being up 3-0), Mazzulla finds himself at a crossroads, contemplating his pre-game message to the team. Should he rally them with an aggressive “go for the kill” mindset, or choose language that is more aligned with their “joyous intensity” culture? Mazzulla knows his rhetoric matters and how he communicates could determine if the franchise secures their 18th championship or not.
Citation
Educators
Related
Hill, Linda A., James I. Cash, and Lydia Begag. "Joe Mazzulla and the Boston Celtics (A) (Abridged)." Harvard Business School Case 426-064, April 2026.

Overallocated Investors and Secondary Transactions

By: Josh Lerner, Aleksandar Andonov and Rustam Abuzov
  • 2026 |
  • Working Paper |
  • Faculty Research
Citation
Related
Lerner, Josh, Aleksandar Andonov, and Rustam Abuzov. "Overallocated Investors and Secondary Transactions." Working Paper, 2026. (Revise and resubmit, Journal of Financial Economics.)

Walmart Goes Global (A) & (B)

By: Juan Alcácer
  • April 2026 |
  • Teaching Note |
  • Faculty Research
Teaching Note for HBS Case Nos. 722-385 and 722-386.
Citation
Purchase
Related
Alcácer, Juan. "Walmart Goes Global (A) & (B)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 726-475, April 2026.
More Publications

In The News

    • 30 Apr 2026
    • Fox News

    Happier and healthier people do these 6 things every day, says wellness expert

    Re: Arthur Brooks
    • 21 Apr 2026
    • Cold Call

    The Challenges of Scaling a Technology for Social Good

    Re: Maria Roche
    • 17 Apr 2026
    • Unleash

    HR Leaders Must Prioritize Experimentation Over Engagement, Says Amy Edmondson

    Re: Amy Edmondson
    • 17 Apr 2026
    • New York Times

    Conversation Starters That Aren’t ‘How’s It Going?’

    Re: Leslie John & Alison Wood Brooks
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The Case Method

Introduced by HBS faculty to business education in 1925, the case method is a powerful interactive learning process that puts students in the shoes of a leader faced with a real-world management issue and challenges them to propose and justify a resolution.
Today, HBS remains an authority on teaching by the case method. The School is also the world’s leading case-writing institution, with HBS faculty members contributing hundreds of new cases to the management curriculum a year via the School’s unique case development and writing process.
→Browse HBS Case Collection
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Faculty Positions

Harvard Business School seeks candidates in all fields for full time positions. Candidates with outstanding records in PhD or DBA programs are encouraged to apply.
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