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Faculty & Research

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    • HBS Book

    We the Possibility: Harnessing Public Entrepreneurship to Solve Our Most Urgent Problems

    By: Mitchell Weiss

    The huge public challenges we face are daunting. At the same time, many of us have come to accept the notion that government can't do new things or solve tough challenges—it's too big and slow and bureaucratic. Not so. Entrepreneurial savvy in government is growing, transforming the public sector's response to big problems at all levels. The key is a shift from a mindset of "Probability Government"—overly focused on safe solutions and mimicking "best" practices—to "Possibility Government."

    • HBS Book

    We the Possibility: Harnessing Public Entrepreneurship to Solve Our Most Urgent Problems

    By: Mitchell Weiss

    The huge public challenges we face are daunting. At the same time, many of us have come to accept the notion that government can't do new things or solve tough challenges—it's too big and slow and bureaucratic. Not so. Entrepreneurial savvy in government is growing, transforming the public sector's response to big problems at all levels. The key...

    • Journal of Financial Economics 139, no. 2 (February 2021): 389–404.

    A Dynamic Theory of Multiple Borrowing

    By: Daniel Green and Ernest Liu

    Multiple borrowing—a borrower obtains overlapping loans from multiple lenders—is a common phenomenon in many credit markets. We build a highly tractable, dynamic model of multiple borrowing and show that, because overlapping creditors may impose default externalities on each other, expanding financial access by introducing more lenders may severely backfire.

    • Journal of Financial Economics 139, no. 2 (February 2021): 389–404.

    A Dynamic Theory of Multiple Borrowing

    By: Daniel Green and Ernest Liu

    Multiple borrowing—a borrower obtains overlapping loans from multiple lenders—is a common phenomenon in many credit markets. We build a highly tractable, dynamic model of multiple borrowing and show that, because overlapping creditors may impose default externalities on each other, expanding financial access by introducing more lenders may...

    • Health Care Initiative

    1928 Diagnostics: Fighting Antibiotics Resistance

    By: Ariel D. Stern and Daniela Beyersdorfer

    In 2019, the co-founders of the Swedish medical start-up 1928 Diagnostics, CEO Dr. Kristina Lagerstedt and COO Dr. Susanne Staaf, had to pick the right business model to commercialize their novel technology to hospitals and health care providers. Developed in partnership with research hospitals to help fight the global antibiotic resistance crisis, the firm’s cloud-based technology platform helped partners identify resistant genes and mutations in bacteria more quickly and accurately, allowing for easier outbreak cluster tracking in support of hospital infection control management, as well as better diagnostics and antibiotic selection. By 2019, they had raised $5 million, employed 16 people, and had their tool deployed at 24 partner sites in 10 different countries.

    • Health Care Initiative

    1928 Diagnostics: Fighting Antibiotics Resistance

    By: Ariel D. Stern and Daniela Beyersdorfer

    In 2019, the co-founders of the Swedish medical start-up 1928 Diagnostics, CEO Dr. Kristina Lagerstedt and COO Dr. Susanne Staaf, had to pick the right business model to commercialize their novel technology to hospitals and health care providers. Developed in partnership with research hospitals to help fight the global antibiotic resistance...

    • Featured Case

    Zameer Kassam Fine Jewelry: Engaging Clients

    By: Ryan W. Buell and Amy Klopfenstein

    Zameer Kassam Fine Jewelry (ZKFJ) designs custom engagement rings that tell the story of a couple’s relationship. The case describes the company’s process for engaging clients, which has historically been a relatively offline, high-touch experience. Obliged by social-distancing guidelines with the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020, Zameer Kassam and his team had been forced to take many facets of the business online. Although clients still seemed delighted by their rings, Kassam wondered what might be being lost for his clients and employees in this new virtual medium. On the other hand, perhaps there were aspects of the process that could be improved through online delivery? Such a transition could represent an opportunity to grow the business.

    • Featured Case

    Zameer Kassam Fine Jewelry: Engaging Clients

    By: Ryan W. Buell and Amy Klopfenstein

    Zameer Kassam Fine Jewelry (ZKFJ) designs custom engagement rings that tell the story of a couple’s relationship. The case describes the company’s process for engaging clients, which has historically been a relatively offline, high-touch experience. Obliged by social-distancing guidelines with the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020,...

    • Featured Case

    Egon Zehnder: Beyond Search?

    By: Ashish Nanda and Margaret Cross

    In 2019, Egon Zehnder chair Jill Ader and CEO Edilson Camara faced a critical question: how should the global executive search firm approach its burgeoning advisory service offering? Since 2003, the firm’s advisory practice had grown as a conglomeration of grassroots experiments driven by the enthusiasm of some partners and the needs of some markets. Yet, in 2019, partners’ attitudes toward the practice varied greatly, with some viewing advisory as a natural extension of search that would position Egon Zehnder for future growth, and others perceiving it as a risky distraction from the firm’s core business. Ader and Camara believed the time was ripe for EZ partners to develop a shared perspective on the future of the practice within the firm.

    • Featured Case

    Egon Zehnder: Beyond Search?

    By: Ashish Nanda and Margaret Cross

    In 2019, Egon Zehnder chair Jill Ader and CEO Edilson Camara faced a critical question: how should the global executive search firm approach its burgeoning advisory service offering? Since 2003, the firm’s advisory practice had grown as a conglomeration of grassroots experiments driven by the enthusiasm of some partners and the needs of some...

    • HBS Working Knowledge

    In the Red: Overdrafts, Payday Lending, and the Underbanked

    By: Marco Di Maggio, Angela Ma, and Emily Williams

    Low-income customers turn to payday lenders and check cashers for basic financial needs when traditional banks push them out of the system through high overdraft fees and other penalties. Reducing overdraft fees improves consumers’ overall financial health and access to cheaper credit.

    • HBS Working Knowledge

    In the Red: Overdrafts, Payday Lending, and the Underbanked

    By: Marco Di Maggio, Angela Ma, and Emily Williams

    Low-income customers turn to payday lenders and check cashers for basic financial needs when traditional banks push them out of the system through high overdraft fees and other penalties. Reducing overdraft fees improves consumers’ overall financial health and access to cheaper credit.

    • HBS Working Paper

    Information Avoidance and Image Concerns

    By: Christine L. Exley and Judd B. Kessler

    A rich literature finds that individuals avoid information, even information that is instrumental to their choices. A common hypothesis posits that individuals strategically avoid information to hold particular beliefs or to take certain actions--such as behaving selfishly--with lower image costs. Building off of the classic "moral wiggle room" design, this paper provides the first direct test of whether individuals avoid information because of image concerns. We analyze data from 4,626 experimental subjects. We find that image concerns play a role in driving information avoidance, but a role that is substantially smaller than the common approach in the literature would suggest.

    • HBS Working Paper

    Information Avoidance and Image Concerns

    By: Christine L. Exley and Judd B. Kessler

    A rich literature finds that individuals avoid information, even information that is instrumental to their choices. A common hypothesis posits that individuals strategically avoid information to hold particular beliefs or to take certain actions--such as behaving selfishly--with lower image costs. Building off of the classic "moral wiggle room"...

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

Mar 08
  • 08 Mar 2021

Sean Cao, Georgia State University

Mar 09
  • 09 Mar 2021

Aseem Kaul, University of Minnesota (Carlson)

→More Seminars & Conferences

Recent Publications

Does Observability Amplify Sensitivity to Moral Frames? Evaluating a Reputation-Based Account of Moral Preferences

By: Valerio Capraro, Jillian J. Jordan and Ben Tappin
  • 2021 |
  • Working Paper |
  • Faculty Research
A growing body of work suggests that people are sensitive to moral framing in economic games involving prosociality, suggesting that people hold moral preferences for doing the “right thing”. What gives rise to these preferences? Here, we evaluate the explanatory power of a reputation-based account, which proposes that people respond to moral frames because they are motivated to look good in the eyes of others. Across four pre-registered experiments (total N = 9,601), we investigated whether reputational incentives amplify sensitivity to framing effects. Studies 1-3 manipulated (i) whether moral or neutral framing was used to describe a Trade-Off Game (in which participants chose between prioritizing equality or efficiency) and (ii) whether Trade-Off Game choices were observable to a social partner in a subsequent Trust Game. These studies found that observability does not significantly amplify sensitivity to moral framing. Study 4 ruled out the alternative explanation that the observability manipulation from Studies 1-3 is too weak to influence behavior. In Study 4, the same observability manipulation did significantly amplify sensitivity to normative information (about what others see as moral in the Trade-Off Game). Together, these results suggest that moral frames may tap into moral preferences that are relatively deeply internalized, such that the power of moral frames is not strongly enhanced by making the morally-framed behavior observable to others.
Citation
Related
Capraro, Valerio, Jillian J. Jordan, and Ben Tappin. "Does Observability Amplify Sensitivity to Moral Frames? Evaluating a Reputation-Based Account of Moral Preferences." Working Paper, January 2021.

Why Do Successful Women Feel So Guilty

By: Debora Spar
  • June 2012 |
  • Editorial |
  • The Atlantic
Citation
Related
Spar, Debora. "Why Do Successful Women Feel So Guilty." The Atlantic (June 2012).

Homing and Platform Responses to Entry: Historical Evidence from the U.S. Newspaper Industry

By: K. Francis Park, Robert Seamans and Feng Zhu
  • April 2021 |
  • Article |
  • Strategic Management Journal
We examine how heterogeneity in customers’ tendencies to single-home or multi-home affects a platform’s competitive responses to new entrants in the market. We first develop a formal model to generate predictions about how a platform will respond. We then empirically test it, leveraging a historical setting: TV station entry into local U.S. newspaper markets from 1945 to 1963. A notable feature of this setting is a quasi-natural experiment: the staggered geographic and temporal rollout of TV stations that was temporarily halted during the Korean War. We find that platform firms indeed take their customers’ homing tendencies into account in their responses to competition: after a TV station enters the newspaper market, newspaper firms with more single-homing consumers had lower subscription prices, circulations, and advertising rates.
Citation
Related
Park, K. Francis, Robert Seamans, and Feng Zhu. "Homing and Platform Responses to Entry: Historical Evidence from the U.S. Newspaper Industry." Strategic Management Journal 42, no. 4 (April 2021): 684–709.

Building Cities' Collaborative Muscle

By: Jorrit De Jong, Amy C. Edmondson, Mark Moore, Hannah Riley-Bowles, Jan Rivkin, Eva Flavia Martínez Orbegozo and Santiago Pulido-Gomez
  • Spring 2021 |
  • Article |
  • Stanford Social Innovation Review (website)
The most pressing social problems facing cities today require multiagency and cross-sector solutions. We offer tools and techniques to facilitate the process of diagnosing and solving problems by breaking down silos to build up cities.
Citation
Related
De Jong, Jorrit, Amy C. Edmondson, Mark Moore, Hannah Riley-Bowles, Jan Rivkin, Eva Flavia Martínez Orbegozo, and Santiago Pulido-Gomez. "Building Cities' Collaborative Muscle." Stanford Social Innovation Review (website) (Spring 2021).

Are Your Managers in Sync with Your Change Strategy?

By: Joseph B. Fuller and Bill Theofilou
  • March 04, 2021 |
  • Article |
  • Harvard Business Review
According to new research conducted by the authors, C-suite executives and upper management often don’t agree on how their organizations need to remake themselves for a post-Covid world. As a result, when CEOs and their teams begin implementing their plans, they are likely to encounter considerable resistance from upper managers — and they’ll need to develop new strategies for overcoming it. The authors close by recommending three approaches to change in this new era.
Citation
Related
Fuller, Joseph B., and Bill Theofilou. "Are Your Managers in Sync with Your Change Strategy?" Harvard Business Review (March 04, 2021).

How to Build a Life: A Counterintuitive Way to Cheer Up When You’re Down

By: Arthur C. Brooks
  • March 4, 2021 |
  • Article |
  • The Atlantic
Citation
Related
Brooks, Arthur C. "How to Build a Life: A Counterintuitive Way to Cheer Up When You’re Down." The Atlantic (March 4, 2021).

Apax Partners and Duck Creek Technologies

By: Josh Lerner, Terrence Shu and Alys Ferragamo
  • March 2021 |
  • Case |
  • Faculty Research
This case follows Jason Wright and Umang Kajaria at Apax Partners as they consider an investment in Duck Creek Technologies, a technology provider for property & casualty insurance companies. The deal required a complex carve-out from Accenture, Duck Creek’s parent organization, and several operational improvements to rejuvenate the company. The case provides the opportunity to evaluate the deal’s investment thesis, structure, and risks, along with calculating Duck Creek’s valuation.
Citation
Educators
Related
Lerner, Josh, Terrence Shu, and Alys Ferragamo. "Apax Partners and Duck Creek Technologies." Harvard Business School Case 221-075, March 2021.

Markets and Marketplaces: Core Concepts

By: Scott Kominers
  • March 2021 |
  • Module Note |
  • Faculty Research
Citation
Purchase
Related
Kominers, Scott. "Markets and Marketplaces: Core Concepts." Harvard Business School Module Note 821-069, March 2021.
More Publications

In The News

    • 03 Mar 2021
    • Harvard Business School

    New Multimedia Case Explores the Tulsa Massacre and the Call for Reparations

    Re: Mihir Desai
    • 03 Mar 2021
    • New York Times

    Return-to-Office Plans Are Set in Motion, but Virus Uncertainty Remains

    Re: Tsedal Neeley
    • 02 Mar 2021
    • Cold Call

    Can Historic Social Injustices be Addressed Through Reparations?

    Re: Mihir Desai
    • 02 Mar 2021
    • CNBC

    Work is the single most important way of proving your worth’ in the U.S., says professor—why it’s making us miserable

    Re: Ashley Whillans
→More Faculty News

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
→Purchase Cases

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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