Skip to Main Content
HBS Home
  • About
  • Academic Programs
  • Alumni
  • Faculty & Research
  • Baker Library
  • Giving
  • Harvard Business Review
  • Initiatives
  • News
  • Recruit
  • Map / Directions

Faculty & Research

  • Faculty
  • Research
  • Featured Topics
  • Academic Units
  • …→
  • Harvard Business School→
  • Faculty & Research→
    • HBS Book

    Sales Management That Works: How to Sell in a World That Never Stops Changing

    By: Frank V. Cespedes

    Selling is changing, but the impact on sales of megatrends like ecommerce, big data, and AI is often misunderstood and not supported by empirical data. Managers who fail to separate fact from hype will make decisions based on bad assumptions and, in a competitive market, fall victim to those who do understand cause-and-effect links between buying and selling. This book helps managers and investors distinguish signal from noise in five key areas: People (hiring, training, and performance management), Process (constructing and reconstructing a coherent sales model), Pricing (and price testing in information-rich markets), Partners (crafting a multi-channel response to omni-channel buying behavior), and Productivity (why, in services-oriented economies, sales productivity is about social impact as well as enterprise value).

    • HBS Book

    Sales Management That Works: How to Sell in a World That Never Stops Changing

    By: Frank V. Cespedes

    Selling is changing, but the impact on sales of megatrends like ecommerce, big data, and AI is often misunderstood and not supported by empirical data. Managers who fail to separate fact from hype will make decisions based on bad assumptions and, in a competitive market, fall victim to those who do understand cause-and-effect links between buying...

    • Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 165 (July 2021): 197-212.

    Work Group Rituals Enhance the Meaning of Work

    By: Tami Kim, Ovul Sezer, Juliana Schroeder, Jane L. Risen, Francesca Gino and Michael I. Norton

    The many benefits of finding meaning in work suggest the importance of identifying activities that increase job meaningfulness. The current paper identifies one such activity: engaging in rituals with workgroups. Five studies (N = 1,099) provide evidence that performing group rituals can enhance the meaningfulness of work, and that in turn this meaning can enhance organizational citizenship behaviors (to the benefit of those groups).

    • Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 165 (July 2021): 197-212.

    Work Group Rituals Enhance the Meaning of Work

    By: Tami Kim, Ovul Sezer, Juliana Schroeder, Jane L. Risen, Francesca Gino and Michael I. Norton

    The many benefits of finding meaning in work suggest the importance of identifying activities that increase job meaningfulness. The current paper identifies one such activity: engaging in rituals with workgroups. Five studies (N = 1,099) provide evidence that performing group rituals can enhance the meaningfulness of work, and that in turn this...

    • Health Care Initiative

    Biosimilars and Follow-On Products in the United States: Adoption, Prices, and Users

    By: Ariel Dora Stern, Jacqueline L. Chen, Melissa Ouellet, Mark R. Trusheim, Zeid El-Kilani, Amber Jessup and Ernst R. Berndt

    Biologic drugs account for a disproportionate share of the increase in pharmaceutical spending in the U.S. and worldwide. Against this backdrop, many look to the expanding market for biosimilars—follow-on products to biologic drugs—as a vehicle for controlling pharmaceutical spending. This study explores the early years of entry of biosimilars and related follow-on products in the US. Using monthly sales data from the period 2005–19 for ten drug classes, we examine how quickly biosimilars/follow-on products gained market share and the subsequent trajectory of prevailing (national average invoice) prices. Our analysis suggests that although uptake has been slower than what is typically seen in generic drug markets, the most recent entrants have captured market share more rapidly than comparable earlier biosimilars/follow-on products.

    • Health Care Initiative

    Biosimilars and Follow-On Products in the United States: Adoption, Prices, and Users

    By: Ariel Dora Stern, Jacqueline L. Chen, Melissa Ouellet, Mark R. Trusheim, Zeid El-Kilani, Amber Jessup and Ernst R. Berndt

    Biologic drugs account for a disproportionate share of the increase in pharmaceutical spending in the U.S. and worldwide. Against this backdrop, many look to the expanding market for biosimilars—follow-on products to biologic drugs—as a vehicle for controlling pharmaceutical spending. This study explores the early years of entry of biosimilars and...

    • Featured Case

    Accounting for Bitcoin at Tesla

    By: Charles C.Y. Wang and Siyu Zhang

    In February of 2021, Tesla revealed that it had purchased $1.5 billion of Bitcoin, totaling 7.5% of the company's cash. This announcement came after a series of cryptocurrency-related tweets from Elon Musk, the company's CEO, and a surge in cryptocurrency values. The announcement was met with mixed reactions by stock investors and market participants. This case centers around the accounting treatment of Bitcoin at Tesla: what does the company's choice of accounting treatment say about Bitcoin as an asset, and what are its implications for Tesla's profitability measures under the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles? The case also raises questions about whether investing in Bitcoin is consistent with the company's strategy, and whether Musks' public communications constitute a form of market manipulation.

    • Featured Case

    Accounting for Bitcoin at Tesla

    By: Charles C.Y. Wang and Siyu Zhang

    In February of 2021, Tesla revealed that it had purchased $1.5 billion of Bitcoin, totaling 7.5% of the company's cash. This announcement came after a series of cryptocurrency-related tweets from Elon Musk, the company's CEO, and a surge in cryptocurrency values. The announcement was met with mixed reactions by stock investors and market...

    • Featured Case

    Andela: Africa's AWS for Talent

    By: Caroline M. Elkins, Tarun Khanna and Joyce J. Kim

    Five years after the company’s founding, Andela, a company that built and trained remote engineering teams, became arguably Africa’s greatest technology unicorn. By January 2019, Andela raised $100 million in Series D funding. As Andela looked to scale in an increasingly competitive landscape, its goal was to democratize trust and become an “Amazon Web Services” (AWS) for software engineering talent. With their windfall investment and the advent of COVID, Andela had to figure out their “2.0 model” to permit scaling. How would Andela stack up in a growing landscape of global remote talent companies? Could Andela become not just Africa’s, but the world’s AWS for trusted software engineering talent?

    • Featured Case

    Andela: Africa's AWS for Talent

    By: Caroline M. Elkins, Tarun Khanna and Joyce J. Kim

    Five years after the company’s founding, Andela, a company that built and trained remote engineering teams, became arguably Africa’s greatest technology unicorn. By January 2019, Andela raised $100 million in Series D funding. As Andela looked to scale in an increasingly competitive landscape, its goal was to democratize trust and become an...

    • HBS Working Knowledge

    Cognitive Biases: Mistakes or Missing Stakes?

    By: Benjamin Enke, Uri Gneezy, Brian Hall, David Martin, Vadim Nelidov, Theo Offerman, and Jeroen van de Ven

    This study of field and lab data strongly suggests that people do not necessarily make better decisions when the stakes are very high. Results highlight the potential economic consequences of cognitive biases.

    • HBS Working Knowledge

    Cognitive Biases: Mistakes or Missing Stakes?

    By: Benjamin Enke, Uri Gneezy, Brian Hall, David Martin, Vadim Nelidov, Theo Offerman, and Jeroen van de Ven

    This study of field and lab data strongly suggests that people do not necessarily make better decisions when the stakes are very high. Results highlight the potential economic consequences of cognitive biases.

    • HBS Working Paper

    Proxy Advisory Firms and Corporate Shareholder Engagement

    By: Aiyesha Dey, Joshua White and Austin Starkweather

    We examine the influence of proxy advisors on firms’ shareholder engagement behavior. Our analyses exploit a quasi-natural experiment using Say-On-Pay voting outcomes near a threshold that triggers a review of engagement activities by Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS). Firms receiving ISS treatment exhibit a swift and substantive increase in engagement, especially those with weaker ex-ante governance. The elevated engagement persists beyond the period of ISS scrutiny. Treated firms alter elements of compensation and pay transparency that align with shareholder feedback, and enjoy ex-post economic benefits. Our findings indicate a disciplinary spillover effect of ISS through enhanced and enduring firm-shareholder interactions.

    • HBS Working Paper

    Proxy Advisory Firms and Corporate Shareholder Engagement

    By: Aiyesha Dey, Joshua White and Austin Starkweather

    We examine the influence of proxy advisors on firms’ shareholder engagement behavior. Our analyses exploit a quasi-natural experiment using Say-On-Pay voting outcomes near a threshold that triggers a review of engagement activities by Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS). Firms receiving ISS treatment exhibit a swift and substantive increase...

Initiatives & Projects

Entrepreneurship

The Arthur Rock Center for Entrepreneurship supports Harvard Business School's mission to "educate leaders who make a difference in the world" by infusing this leadership perspective with an entrepreneurial point of view.
→All Initiatives & Projects

Seminars & Conferences

Oct 28
  • 28 Oct 2021

Ralph Koijen, University of Chicago Booth School of Business

→More Seminars & Conferences

Recent Publications

When It’s Time to Expand Beyond the Base

By: Marco Bertini and Nader Tavassoli
  • September–October 2017 |
  • Article |
  • Harvard Business Review
Citation
Related
Bertini, Marco, and Nader Tavassoli. "When It’s Time to Expand Beyond the Base." Harvard Business Review 95, no. 5 (September–October 2017): 143–147.

How Nonprofit Foundations Can Sustainably Fund Disease Research

By: Richard G. Hamermesh and Kathy Giusti
  • September 30, 2020 |
  • Article |
  • Harvard Business Review (website)
Citation
Related
Hamermesh, Richard G., and Kathy Giusti. "How Nonprofit Foundations Can Sustainably Fund Disease Research." Harvard Business Review (website) (September 30, 2020).

What It Takes to Lead a Disease Research Foundation

By: Richard G. Hamermesh and Kathy Giusti
  • August 18, 2020 |
  • Article |
  • Harvard Business Review Digital Articles
Citation
Related
Hamermesh, Richard G., and Kathy Giusti. "What It Takes to Lead a Disease Research Foundation." Harvard Business Review Digital Articles (August 18, 2020).

Rate-Amplifying Demand and the Excess Sensitivity of Long-Term Rates

By: Samuel G. Hanson, David O. Lucca and Jonathan H. Wright
  • August 2021 |
  • Article |
  • Quarterly Journal of Economics
Long-term nominal interest rates are surprisingly sensitive to high-frequency (daily or monthly) movements in short-term rates. Since 2000, this high-frequency sensitivity has grown even stronger in U.S. data. By contrast, the association between low-frequency changes (at 6- or 12-month horizons) in long- and short-term rates, which was also strong before 2000, has weakened substantially. This puzzling post-2000 pattern arises because increases in short rates temporarily raise the term premium component of long-term yields, leading long rates to temporarily overreact to changes in short rates. The frequency-dependent excess sensitivity of long-term rates that we observe in recent years is best understood using a model in which (i) declines in short rates trigger "rate-amplifying" shifts in investor demand for long-term bonds and (ii) the arbitrage response to these demand shifts is both limited and slow. We study, both theoretically and empirically, how such rate-amplifying demand can be traced to mortgage refinancing activity, investors who extrapolate recent changes in short rates, and investors who "reach for yield" when short rates fall. We discuss the implications of our findings for the validity of event-study methodologies and the transmission of monetary policy.
Citation
Related
Hanson, Samuel G., David O. Lucca, and Jonathan H. Wright. "Rate-Amplifying Demand and the Excess Sensitivity of Long-Term Rates." Quarterly Journal of Economics 136, no. 3 (August 2021): 1719–1781.

Don't Take Their Word for It: The Misclassification of Bond Mutual Funds

By: Huaizhi Chen, Lauren Cohen and Umit Gurun
  • August 2021 |
  • Article |
  • Journal of Finance
We provide evidence that bond fund managers misclassify their holdings, and that these misclassifications have a real and significant impact on investor capital flows. In particular, many funds report more investment grade assets than are actually held in their portfolios to important information intermediaries, making these funds appear significantly less risky. This results in pervasive misclassification across the universe of US fixed income mutual funds. The problem is widespread—resulting in up to 31.4% of funds being misclassified with safer profiles, when compared against their true, publicly reported holdings. “Misclassified funds”—i.e., those that hold risky bonds, but claim to hold safer bonds—appear to on-average outperform the low-risk funds in their peer groups. Within category groups, “Misclassified funds” moreover receive higher Morningstar Ratings (significantly more Morningstar Stars) and higher investor flows. However, when we correctly classify them based on their actual risk, these funds are mediocre performers. These Misclassified funds also significantly underperform precisely when junk-bonds crash in returns. Misreporting is stronger following several quarters of large negative returns.
Citation
SSRN
Related
Chen, Huaizhi, Lauren Cohen, and Umit Gurun. "Don't Take Their Word for It: The Misclassification of Bond Mutual Funds." Journal of Finance 76, no. 4 (August 2021): 1699–1730. (Winner of the Best Paper Prize at the University of Cambridge Consortium on Asset Management, 2020; Winner of the Financial Management Association Best Paper Prize in Quantitative Investments, 2020.)

Beefing IT up for Your Investor? Open Sourcing and Startup Funding: Evidence from Github

By: Annamaria Conti, Christian Peukert and M. P. Roche
  • 2021 |
  • Working Paper |
  • Faculty Research
We study the participation of nascent firms in open-source communities and its implications for attracting VC funding. To do so, we exploit unique data on 160,065 US startups linking information from Crunchbase to firms' GitHub accounts. Estimating a within-startup model saturated with a host of relevant fixed effects, we show that startups accelerate their activities on the platform in the twelve months prior to raising their first financing round. The intensity of their involvement on GitHub declines in the twelve months after. Remarkably, startups intensify those activities that rely on external technology sources above and beyond the technologies they themselves control. Applying machine learning to classify GitHub projects, we find that the most prevalent among these external activities are related to software development, data analytics, and integration. Our results indicate that VCs and renowned investors are the most responsive to these activities.
Citation
Related
Conti, Annamaria, Christian Peukert, and M. P. Roche. "Beefing IT up for Your Investor? Open Sourcing and Startup Funding: Evidence from Github." Harvard Business School Working Paper, No. 22-001, July 2021.

Fynd

By: Ranjay Gulati, Kairavi Dey and Rachna Tahilyani
  • July 2021 |
  • Case |
  • Faculty Research
Fynd is a fast-growing venture that in 7 years since its founding has become India's largest omnichannel retail company with real-time access to over 9,000 stores' offline inventory. It started as a B2B business supporting retailers who didn’t have an online business, but pivoted to a B2C platform that allowed customers to shop directly from nearby retail stores through its website and app. Over time, Fynd continued with its B2C platform, scaled up its organization, and added new B2B platforms. But funding this was difficult, with investors raising questions about the business model and growth. In its next phase of growth it sought and failed to receive funding from venture capitalists. In 2018, the founders took a strategic investment from Google. But the subsequent departure of their sponsor from Google they needed to look at other avenues for funding. As they were poised for their next phase of growth, the founders were faced with a series of decisions about the pace of scaling, the business model, and how to fund the expansion.  In 2019, Reliance Retail, a subsidiary of one of India's largest private conglomerates, and one of their key customers offered to invest $42 million for an 87% stake in the company, and is willing to negotiate terms of the deal. Should the founders accept the offer? What should the terms of the agreement be? How will this impact their business model, their growth trajectory, and also the future of the founders at the firm?
Citation
Educators
Related
Gulati, Ranjay, Kairavi Dey, and Rachna Tahilyani. "Fynd." Harvard Business School Case 822-006, July 2021.

A Close Shave at Squire

By: Jeffrey J. Bussgang, Zoë B. Cullen, William R. Kerr, Benjamin N. Roth and Michael Norris
  • July 2021 |
  • Case |
  • Faculty Research
In 2020, just after closing a $34 million Series B financing round, Dave Salvant and Songe LaRon consider how to adjust their business, Squire Technologies, to the new realities posed by the COVID-19 pandemic. Their barbershop technology, including tools to run a shop and a mobile app for customers was growing swiftly, but with nearly all barbershops shut down to prevent the spread of the disease and no revenue coming in, should they cut back, or take the opportunity to build up?
Citation
Educators
Related
Bussgang, Jeffrey J., Zoë B. Cullen, William R. Kerr, Benjamin N. Roth, and Michael Norris. "A Close Shave at Squire." Harvard Business School Case 821-073, July 2021.
More Publications

In The News

    • 13 Jul 2021
    • XTOTVEnlaceBolivia

    El ADN de Las Noticias: The Power of Trust. How Companies Build It, Lose It, And Regain It.

    Re: Sandra Sucher
    • 13 Jul 2021
    • XTOTVEnlaceBolivia

    El ADN de Las Noticias: El Poder de la Confianza

    Re: Sandra Sucher
    • 13 Jul 2021
    • HBS Working Knowledge

    Hate Spreads Faster on Twitter: Evidence from 44 News Outlets

    Re: Amit Goldenberg
    • 13 Jul 2021
    • Cold Call

    Strategies for Underdogs: How Alibaba’s Taobao Beat eBay in China

    Re: Felix Oberholzer
→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.
→Learn More
ǁ
Campus Map
Harvard Business School
Soldiers Field
Boston, MA 02163
→Map & Directions
→More Contact Information
  • Make a Gift
  • Site Map
  • Jobs
  • Harvard University
  • Trademarks
  • Policies
  • Digital Accessibility
Copyright © President & Fellows of Harvard College