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    • HBS Book

    Deals: The Economic Structure of Business Transactions

    By: Guhan Subramanian and Michael Klausner

    Business transactions take widely varying forms—from multibillion-dollar corporate mergers to patent licenses to the signing of an all-star quarterback. Yet every deal shares the same goal, or at least should: to maximize the joint value created and to distribute that value among the parties. Building on decades of experience teaching and advising on business deals, Michael Klausner and Guhan Subramanian show how to accomplish this goal through rigorous attention to designing incentives, conveying information, and specifying parties’ rights and obligations.

    • HBS Book

    Deals: The Economic Structure of Business Transactions

    By: Guhan Subramanian and Michael Klausner

    Business transactions take widely varying forms—from multibillion-dollar corporate mergers to patent licenses to the signing of an all-star quarterback. Yet every deal shares the same goal, or at least should: to maximize the joint value created and to distribute that value among the parties. Building on decades of experience teaching and advising...

    • Academy of Management Journal 67, no. 2 (April 2024): 437-467

    An Integrative Model of Hybrid Governance: The Role of Boards in Helping Sustain Organizational Hybridity

    By: Anne-Claire Pache, Julie Battilana and Channing Spencer

    Hybrid organizations must sustainably attend to multiple goals embedded in different institutional spheres. Past research has highlighted the value for hybrids in recruiting board members representing different logics to avoid attentional drifts; yet, diverse boards have also been prone to conflicts that occasion attentional lapses, thereby jeopardizing these organizations’ pursuit of multiple goals. We draw on a longitudinal comparative case study of five work integration social enterprises with institutionally diverse boards to uncover an integrative model of hybrid governance consisting of a protective board structure and relational leadership processes that, together, prevent distracting cognitive and emotional conflicts and foster attentional engagement of both the board and senior managers to multiple goals.

    • Academy of Management Journal 67, no. 2 (April 2024): 437-467

    An Integrative Model of Hybrid Governance: The Role of Boards in Helping Sustain Organizational Hybridity

    By: Anne-Claire Pache, Julie Battilana and Channing Spencer

    Hybrid organizations must sustainably attend to multiple goals embedded in different institutional spheres. Past research has highlighted the value for hybrids in recruiting board members representing different logics to avoid attentional drifts; yet, diverse boards have also been prone to conflicts that occasion attentional lapses, thereby...

    • Managing the Future of Work

    Immigrant Entrepreneurship: New Estimates and a Research Agenda

    By: Saheel Chodavadia, Sari Pekkala Kerr, William R. Kerr and Louis Maiden

    Immigrants contribute disproportionately to entrepreneurship in many countries, accounting for a quarter of new employer businesses in the US. We review recent research on the measurement of immigrant entrepreneurship, the traits of immigrant founders, their economic impact, and policy levers. We provide updated statistics on the share of US entrepreneurs who are immigrants. We utilize the Annual Business Survey to quantify the greater rates of patenting and innovation in immigrant-founded firms. This higher propensity towards innovation is only partly explained by differences in education levels and fields of study. We conclude with avenues for future research.

    • Managing the Future of Work

    Immigrant Entrepreneurship: New Estimates and a Research Agenda

    By: Saheel Chodavadia, Sari Pekkala Kerr, William R. Kerr and Louis Maiden

    Immigrants contribute disproportionately to entrepreneurship in many countries, accounting for a quarter of new employer businesses in the US. We review recent research on the measurement of immigrant entrepreneurship, the traits of immigrant founders, their economic impact, and policy levers. We provide updated statistics on the share of US...

    • Featured Case

    Expanding the Bicester Collection to New York

    By: Boris Vallee, Kirby Brand, Kristina Brown, Julie McCrimlisk, Chloe Sztabnik and Arthur I Segel

    Secretariat, if anyone remembers, won the triple crown at the Belmont Race Track on Long Island, located at the nexus of La Guardia, JFK Airports, the Long Island Railroad and multiple major highways. Belmont Race Track is now being rebuilt along with an adjacent UBS hockey arena for the New York Islanders which can be transmogrified into a spectacular concert venue with great acoustics and amazing design for the likes of Harry Styles and Bruce Springsteen who have already played there to packed audiences. Adjacent to the new arena is the new Belmont Park Village filled with luxury brands such as Prada, Zegna, Polo and the like. Do people who watch and bet on horses, attend hockey games and rock concerts, shop the luxury brands? Is this the way entertainment and retail will have to work together now in the age of ZOOM and e-commerce shopping?

    • Featured Case

    Expanding the Bicester Collection to New York

    By: Boris Vallee, Kirby Brand, Kristina Brown, Julie McCrimlisk, Chloe Sztabnik and Arthur I Segel

    Secretariat, if anyone remembers, won the triple crown at the Belmont Race Track on Long Island, located at the nexus of La Guardia, JFK Airports, the Long Island Railroad and multiple major highways. Belmont Race Track is now being rebuilt along with an adjacent UBS hockey arena for the New York Islanders which can be transmogrified into a...

    • Featured Case

    Market by Met Council: Revolutionizing Food Pantries in the Digital Age

    By: Elisabeth Paulson and Michael W. Toffel

    In fall 2023, the Food Program of Met Council—America’s largest Jewish charity dedicated to fighting poverty—completed the rollout of the newest version of its digital pantry platform to twelve food pantries in the Met Council food pantry network. The digital initiative coincided with a shift from food pantries’ traditional “pre-packed” model—in which pantry staff and volunteers pre-packed standardized bags of foods and handed them out to long lines of waiting clients (the standard model in the US)—to a “client choice” model, where clients could choose their own food items. Over half of the pantries in Met Council’s network were undergoing the transition to client choice. This case discusses the evolution of the digital pantry; specifically, the pros and cons of each pantry model from an operational efficiency perspective, how operational levers can influence consumers’ purchasing decisions, fairness in resource allocation problems, and “push” versus “pull” inventory distribution models.

    • Featured Case

    Market by Met Council: Revolutionizing Food Pantries in the Digital Age

    By: Elisabeth Paulson and Michael W. Toffel

    In fall 2023, the Food Program of Met Council—America’s largest Jewish charity dedicated to fighting poverty—completed the rollout of the newest version of its digital pantry platform to twelve food pantries in the Met Council food pantry network. The digital initiative coincided with a shift from food pantries’ traditional “pre-packed” model—in...

    • HBS Working Paper

    Investor Influence on Media Coverage: Evidence from Venture Capital-Backed Startups

    By: Brian K. Baik and Albert Shin

    We examine the role of investors on the media coverage of their private firm investments. Specifically, we survey VC investors and find that 78% of the respondents take active steps to increase their portfolio companies’ media coverage. The survey results also demonstrate that increased media coverage supports the companies with better recognition and branding and provides benefits to diverse stakeholders. We extend the survey results using empirical tests. Both active VC monitoring and VC reputation are related to stronger effects. Overall, our findings emphasize the role of investors in media coverage decisions of private firms.

    • HBS Working Paper

    Investor Influence on Media Coverage: Evidence from Venture Capital-Backed Startups

    By: Brian K. Baik and Albert Shin

    We examine the role of investors on the media coverage of their private firm investments. Specifically, we survey VC investors and find that 78% of the respondents take active steps to increase their portfolio companies’ media coverage. The survey results also demonstrate that increased media coverage supports the companies with better recognition...

    • HBS Working Paper

    Business Experiments as Persuasion

    By: Orie Shelef, Rebecca Karp and Robert Wuebker

    Much of the prior work on experimentation rests upon the assumption that entrepreneurs and managers use—or should optimally adopt—a "scientific approach" to test possible decisions before making them. This paper offers an alternative view of experimental strategy, introducing the possibility that at least some business experiments privilege persuasion over generating unbiased information. In this view, actors may craft experiments designed to gain support for their ideas, even if doing so reduces the informativeness of the experiment. However, decision-makers are not naïve—they are aware that the results they are reviewing may be the product of a curated information environment. Using a formal model, this paper shows that under a wide range of conditions, actors prefer to enact a less than fully informative experiment designed to persuade—even when a fully informative experiment is feasible at the same cost.

    • HBS Working Paper

    Business Experiments as Persuasion

    By: Orie Shelef, Rebecca Karp and Robert Wuebker

    Much of the prior work on experimentation rests upon the assumption that entrepreneurs and managers use—or should optimally adopt—a "scientific approach" to test possible decisions before making them. This paper offers an alternative view of experimental strategy, introducing the possibility that at least some business experiments privilege...

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Recent Publications

Bee-ing Better at Bombas

By: Elizabeth A. Keenan and James Barnett
  • July 2024 |
  • Teaching Note |
  • Faculty Research
Citation
Purchase
Related
Keenan, Elizabeth A., and James Barnett. "Bee-ing Better at Bombas." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 524-073, July 2024.

Titan: OceanGate’s Tragedy of Titanic Proportions

By: Aiyesha Dey, Joseph Pacelli, James Barnett and ZeSean Ali
  • July 2024 |
  • Case |
  • Faculty Research
In June 2023, OceanGate’s Titan submersible imploded attempting to reach the Titanic shipwreck site 3,800 meters below sea level. All five passengers aboard died, including OceanGate founder and CEO Stockton Rush. Before the tragedy, many in the deep-sea exploration community made their concern for the Titan’s safety known, including James Cameron and OceanGate employees. What could Rush have done to avoid the implosion? And was the capital-intensive world of ocean exploration ethical?
Citation
Educators
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Dey, Aiyesha, Joseph Pacelli, James Barnett, and ZeSean Ali. "Titan: OceanGate’s Tragedy of Titanic Proportions." Harvard Business School Case 124-016, July 2024.

AI, ROI, and Sales Productivity

By: Frank V. Cespedes
  • July 2024 |
  • Article |
  • Top Sales Magazine
Artificial intelligence (AI) is now a loose term for many different things. But the value proposition at the heart of AI is that the tools can do a task nearly as good or better than people, freeing-up time for people to do the tasks they do best.
Citation
Related
Cespedes, Frank V. "AI, ROI, and Sales Productivity." Top Sales Magazine (July 2024), 12–13.

Research: Speed Matters When Companies Respond to Social Issues

By: Alison Wood Brooks, Jimin Nam, Maya Balakrishnan and Julian De Freitas
  • July 1, 2024 |
  • Article |
  • Harvard Business Review (website)
Citation
Related
Brooks, Alison Wood, Jimin Nam, Maya Balakrishnan, and Julian De Freitas. "Research: Speed Matters When Companies Respond to Social Issues." Harvard Business Review (website) (July 1, 2024).

ECOALF: Fashion for the Future

By: Elizabeth A. Keenan, Diego Aparicio and Sara Coronel Rodriguez
  • July 2024 |
  • Teaching Plan |
  • Faculty Research
Citation
Purchase
Related
Keenan, Elizabeth A., Diego Aparicio, and Sara Coronel Rodriguez. "ECOALF: Fashion for the Future." Harvard Business School Teaching Plan 524-095, July 2024.

The Middle Path to Innovation

By: Regina E. Herzlinger, Duke Rohlen, Ben Creo and Will Kynes
  • July–August 2024 |
  • Article |
  • Harvard Business Review
Too many companies are failing to innovate. One reason, say the authors, is the polarized approach companies take to innovation. At one end of the spectrum, corporate R&D efforts tend to focus on product refreshes and incremental line upgrades that generate modest growth for lower risk. At the other end, venture capitalists favor high-risk “transformational” innovations that seek to upend industries and generate outsize returns. But there’s a better, middle, way. This article presents the growth driver model, a framework that partners corporations with outside investors to identify and develop innovation opportunities, drawing on corporate resources and talent and externally recruited entrepreneurs. The authors illustrate the model with a detailed case study of how it revived innovation at Cordis, a large medical technology device maker. They also illustrate its applicability to other sectors, such as the movie and defense industries.
Citation
Related
Herzlinger, Regina E., Duke Rohlen, Ben Creo, and Will Kynes. "The Middle Path to Innovation." Harvard Business Review 102, no. 4 (July–August 2024): 134–145.

Disclosing Downstream Emissions

By: Robert S. Kaplan and Karthik Ramanna
  • July–August 2024 |
  • Article |
  • Harvard Business Review
An increasing number of companies are using the E-liability carbon-accounting method as an important tool for tracking progress toward reducing global emissions in their supply chains. The system does not require formal accounting for downstream emissions—those occurring after a company sells its products to immediate customers, for several good reasons. Certain companies, however, are accountable for disclosing downstream emissions generated by consumers’ use of their products. Three principles govern accountability: (1) Downstream accountability is limited to companies whose products are directly used by end customers. (2) Accountability for B2C companies is limited to cases where a reasonable causal link exists between product-design decisions and the downstream emissions generated by consumers. (3) Companies are accountable for disclosing emissions produced per unit of use, not for total emissions. This article presents the principles and explains how and to what standards of reliability the companies should disclose downstream emissions.
Citation
Related
Kaplan, Robert S., and Karthik Ramanna. "Disclosing Downstream Emissions." Harvard Business Review 102, no. 4 (July–August 2024): 124–133.

Leading Culture Change at Microsoft Western Europe

By: Amy C. Edmondson and Catherine Huang
  • July 2024 |
  • Teaching Note |
  • Faculty Research
This teaching plan is designed to be used in conjunction with the case study “Leading Culture Change at Microsoft Western Europe,” HBS No. 624-096, to help faculty deepen student understanding of psychological safety and organizational culture transformation through classroom discussion. The case begins with Cindy Rose’s appointment as President of Microsoft Western Europe (MSWE) in 2020. Previously, Rose had served as the CEO of Microsoft UK from 2016-2020, where she successfully doubled the business in three years. This case focuses on the challenges Cindy Rose faced stepping into the President of MSWE role, along with the positive changes she made to transform the culture of the leadership team and of MSWE more broadly. In particular, the case details concrete steps Rose took to create psychological safety in her team and beyond.
Citation
Purchase
Related
Edmondson, Amy C., and Catherine Huang. "Leading Culture Change at Microsoft Western Europe." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 624-103, July 2024.
More Publications

In The News

    • 01 Jul 2024

    Why Do We Perform Rituals?

    Re: Michael Norton
    • 30 Jun 2024
    • WBZ

    Having a Woman Manager Can Improve Productivity With Mixed-Gender Teams, Harvard Study Finds

    Re: Jorge Tamayo
    • 29 Jun 2024
    • Harvard Magazine

    Harvard Professor William Kirby on U.S.-China Relations and Clean Tech

    Re: William Kirby
    • 28 Jun 2024
    • CNBC

    Harvard’s Arthur Brooks on the Biden-Trump Debate: We Got Fear, Not Vision, Aspiration, and Ideas

    Re: Arthur 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.
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