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    • HBS Book

    Structured Empowerment: How to Achieve Growth While Promoting Agility

    By: Tatiana Sandino

    Structured Empowerment: How to Achieve Growth While Promoting Agility addresses one of the most critical challenges growing ventures face: how to scale effectively without stifling the innovation and entrepreneurial spirit that fuel them. Based on her research and work with retail and service organizations across multiple markets, Professor Sandino introduces the concept of "structured empowerment," a method that allows companies to grow by expertly balancing flexibility with structure. The book examines how to empower employees within a structured framework, enabling them to make choices from curated practices that propel growth while contributing ideas that enhance those practices from the bottom up. Drawing on insights from service and retail companies that have both succeeded and failed, it illustrates the principles of effective growth management—and the costly consequences of getting them wrong.

    • HBS Book

    Structured Empowerment: How to Achieve Growth While Promoting Agility

    By: Tatiana Sandino

    Structured Empowerment: How to Achieve Growth While Promoting Agility addresses one of the most critical challenges growing ventures face: how to scale effectively without stifling the innovation and entrepreneurial spirit that fuel them. Based on her research and work with retail and service organizations across multiple markets, Professor...

    • Political Science Research and Methods 14, no. 2 (April 2026): 255–275.

    Analyzing the Impact of Events Through Surveys: Formalizing Biases and Introducing the Dual Randomized Survey Design

    By: Andrew Bertoli, Laura Jakli and Henry Pascoe

    Social scientists often compare survey responses before and after important events to test how those events impact respondent beliefs, attitudes, and preferences. This article offers a formal analysis of such pre-event/post-event survey comparisons, including designs that seek to reduce bias using quota sampling, rolling cross-sections, and panels. Our analysis distinguishes major sources of bias and clarifies the comparative strengths and weaknesses of each approach. We then introduce a modified panel design—the dual randomized survey—to reduce bias in cases where asking respondents to complete the same survey twice could impact their Wave 2 responses. Our formalization of bias and novel research design improve scholars’ ability to study the causal impact of events through surveys.

    • Political Science Research and Methods 14, no. 2 (April 2026): 255–275.

    Analyzing the Impact of Events Through Surveys: Formalizing Biases and Introducing the Dual Randomized Survey Design

    By: Andrew Bertoli, Laura Jakli and Henry Pascoe

    Social scientists often compare survey responses before and after important events to test how those events impact respondent beliefs, attitudes, and preferences. This article offers a formal analysis of such pre-event/post-event survey comparisons, including designs that seek to reduce bias using quota sampling, rolling cross-sections, and...

    • Strategic Management Journal 47, no. 6 (2026): 1730-1763.

    Strategic Positioning and Accelerating Regulatory Clearance for New Ventures

    By: Emily Cox Pahnke, Tiona Zuzul and Michael Howard

    How do new ventures strategically position their products to accelerate regulatory clearance? We investigate this question in the medical device industry, where regulatory clearance is a prerequisite for market entry. We examine 239 new firms' 510(k) device clearances by the FDA between 2001 and 2019. Our approach combines quantitative analysis of firms' claims of similarity with extensive field research. We find that strategic positioning significantly impacts time to clearance, and that effective strategies evolve over time. For first products, firms accelerate clearance by citing fewer reference products while strategically positioning relative to same-category products and to category exemplars; for second products, firms accelerate clearance by referencing their own products. These findings extend positioning theory into regulatory contexts and reveal how a firm's optimal strategic positioning changes across successive products.

    • Strategic Management Journal 47, no. 6 (2026): 1730-1763.

    Strategic Positioning and Accelerating Regulatory Clearance for New Ventures

    By: Emily Cox Pahnke, Tiona Zuzul and Michael Howard

    How do new ventures strategically position their products to accelerate regulatory clearance? We investigate this question in the medical device industry, where regulatory clearance is a prerequisite for market entry. We examine 239 new firms' 510(k) device clearances by the FDA between 2001 and 2019. Our approach combines quantitative analysis of...

    • Featured Case

    Expanding Production Capacity at Michelin

    By: Elisabeth Kempf, Sebastian Hillenbrand, Vincent Dessain, Carlota Moniz and Emer Moloney

    In December 2022, Michelin was evaluating Project Gemini, a $100 million investment to expand production capacity for agricultural rubber tracks in the United States, following demand growth driven by the shift from tires to tracks in modern farming. Students are asked to assess the incremental cash flows from the project and to determine an appropriate cost of capital. The case also demonstrates how corporate sustainability objectives can be integrated into capital budgeting through internal carbon pricing.

    • Featured Case

    Expanding Production Capacity at Michelin

    By: Elisabeth Kempf, Sebastian Hillenbrand, Vincent Dessain, Carlota Moniz and Emer Moloney

    In December 2022, Michelin was evaluating Project Gemini, a $100 million investment to expand production capacity for agricultural rubber tracks in the United States, following demand growth driven by the shift from tires to tracks in modern farming. Students are asked to assess the incremental cash flows from the project and to determine an...

    • Featured Case

    Insilico's Rentosertib Dilemma: A Star in the Pipeline?

    By: Michael Lingzhi Li, Brian Mao Fu and Billy Chan

    In 2024, the AI biotech firm Insilico Medicine faced a pivotal decision about its new drug, Rentosertib. Discovered and designed using artificial intelligence to treat a lung disease, Rentosertib had successfully advanced to Phase II trials—a first in global pharmaceutical history. Insilico could license the drug, consistent with its low-risk, revenue-generating model, or continue internal development to validate its full-stack AI capabilities. The decision would shape not only the future of Rentosertib, but also how Insilico balanced risk and ambition in deploying its AI tools—defining its identity as either a bold full-stack clinical innovator or a disciplined pioneer in early-stage discovery.

    • Featured Case

    Insilico's Rentosertib Dilemma: A Star in the Pipeline?

    By: Michael Lingzhi Li, Brian Mao Fu and Billy Chan

    In 2024, the AI biotech firm Insilico Medicine faced a pivotal decision about its new drug, Rentosertib. Discovered and designed using artificial intelligence to treat a lung disease, Rentosertib had successfully advanced to Phase II trials—a first in global pharmaceutical history. Insilico could license the drug, consistent with its low-risk,...

    • HBS Working Paper

    Retail Expansion to International Markets: Why Some Retailers Succeed and Many Fail

    By: Srikant Gokhale and Rajiv Lal

    Most international retail expansions fail not in the market—but before entry. The strategic error is not poor localisation. It is an absence of balanced adaptation: the disciplined ability to identify precisely what must never change—the secret sauce that makes the economics work—and to adapt everything else to what the market structurally demands. Retailers that cannot draw that line before entry will have it drawn for them, expensively, after.

    • HBS Working Paper

    Retail Expansion to International Markets: Why Some Retailers Succeed and Many Fail

    By: Srikant Gokhale and Rajiv Lal

    Most international retail expansions fail not in the market—but before entry. The strategic error is not poor localisation. It is an absence of balanced adaptation: the disciplined ability to identify precisely what must never change—the secret sauce that makes the economics work—and to adapt everything else to what the market structurally...

    • HBS Working Paper

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

    By: Victoria Ivashina, Sophie-Dorothee Rotermund and Zachariah Wallace-Wright

    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.

    • HBS Working Paper

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

    By: Victoria Ivashina, Sophie-Dorothee Rotermund and Zachariah Wallace-Wright

    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...

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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
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Gompers, Paul A. "Nuwa Capital: Investing During Uncertainty." Harvard Business School Teaching Plan 226-034, October 2026.

Sarah Robb O‘Hagan: The Rocky Road of Passion (A) and (B)

By: Jon M. Jachimowicz
  • June 2026 |
  • Teaching Note |
  • Faculty Research
Citation
Related
Jachimowicz, Jon M. "Sarah Robb O‘Hagan: The Rocky Road of Passion (A) and (B)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 426-088, June 2026.

How to Help New Faculty Launch a Research Agenda

By: Jesse M. Shapiro
  • June 11, 2026 |
  • Article |
  • Harvard Business Review Digital Articles
Citation
Related
Shapiro, Jesse M. "How to Help New Faculty Launch a Research Agenda." Harvard Business Review Digital Articles (June 11, 2026).

Moss & Associates: 'Empower to Create the Exceptional'

By: Boris Groysberg and Sarah L. Abbott
  • June 2026 |
  • Teaching Note |
  • Faculty Research
Citation
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Related
Groysberg, Boris, and Sarah L. Abbott. "Moss & Associates: 'Empower to Create the Exceptional'." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 426-085, June 2026.

AI-Native Firms

By: Hyunjin Kim and Rembrand Koning
  • 2026 |
  • Working Paper |
  • Faculty Research
We study how firms built around AI capabilities—“AI-native” firms—are organized. Drawing on Y Combinator batches W20–F24 and U.S. venture-backed startups whose first financing closed between 2020 and 2024, we classify each firm’s AI-native status and link it to workforce microdata on team size, function, seniority, and hierarchy. Relative to non-AI startups in the same industry-cohort, AI-native firms are 25% smaller. Their share of engineers is 13% greater, and the shares of entry-level workers and managers are each roughly 15% lower. Their hierarchies are half a seniority level flatter—yet valuations are comparable, suggesting higher value created per employee. We argue these patterns reflect two channels: a process channel, in which AI changes how people work inside the firm, and a product channel, in which AI capabilities are built into what the firm sells. Using text from product descriptions and job postings, we find that embedding AI into the product, beyond layering on AI tools into existing workflows, is a primary way startups are scaling “knowledge work” without large teams of knowledge workers.
Citation
Related
Kim, Hyunjin, and Rembrand Koning. "AI-Native Firms." Harvard Business School Working Paper, No. 26-090, June 2026.

AI and the Collapse of the www

By: Alex Chan
  • 2026 |
  • Working Paper |
  • Faculty Research
This paper studies market design for generative AI intermediation. AI answer systems can improve user experience while diverting visits that finance publisher content and generate source-level quality signals. I show that an AI platform that underinternalizes future content reproduction retains too little referral traffic and can make costly open-web information subcritical, even with truthful content, accurate answers, and rational users. The mechanism can be self-reinforcing: less source-level measurement weakens conventional search, inducing further AI reliance. Sustainable repair requires replacing displaced revenue and deleted measurement through visitor-replacement royalties, audited provenance, human-information audits, and keystone-topic compensation.
Citation
Related
Chan, Alex. "AI and the Collapse of the www." Harvard Business School Working Paper, No. 26-088, June 2026.

Optimal Medical Liability for AI

By: Alex Chan
  • 2026 |
  • Working Paper |
  • Faculty Research
I study medical liability when artificial intelligence acts as a doctor rather than as a passive clinical tool. The central object is the legally usable medical record: the inputs, logs, warnings, prescriptions, follow-up instructions, and outcomes on which courts, contracts, insurers, and regulators can condition responsibility. I show that AI medical liability is an institutional design problem under imperfect legal information. If the record separates AI-controllable error from patient nonadherence and natural disease progression, high-powered AI-fault liability implements the standard accident-law ideal. If the record is coarse, the first best may be infeasible: the same transfer that disciplines the AI also insures the patient’s hidden action. With joint causation, the relevant object is a marginal-responsibility score rather than a posterior cause label. I characterize the feasible set of liability incentives generated by the record and show when the optimal rule is no liability, strict liability, negligence, a safe harbor, comparative fault, or a continuous warranty. I then study algorithmic defensive design, through which AI developers can design not only medical recommendations but also the record on which future liability depends. Adoption, learning, enterprise liability, insurance, no-fault compensation, and regulation enter as ways to change the record, the liable entity, or the financing of compensation. The framework yields conditional implications rather than a one-size-fits-all rule.
Citation
Related
Chan, Alex. "Optimal Medical Liability for AI." Harvard Business School Working Paper, No. 26-087, June 2026.

Edenred Pricing Simulator

By: Chiara Farronato
  • June 2026 |
  • Simulation |
  • Faculty Research
Citation
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Related
Farronato, Chiara. "Edenred Pricing Simulator." Harvard Business School Simulation 626-713, June 2026.
More Publications

In The News

    • 15 Jun 2026
    • Newsweek

    Deal Between US and Iran Offers Hope—but Not for American Drivers

    Re: Willy Shih
    • 15 Jun 2026
    • Inc.

    AI Was Supposed to Replace Sales Teams. Here’s What’s Happening Instead

    By: Lou Shipley
    • 15 Jun 2026
    • Nikkei Asia

    Energy Prices Could Stay High for Months, a Year After US-Iran Deal

    Re: Alberto Cavallo
    • 15 Jun 2026
    • Financial Times

    It is the People You Don’t Know That Might Prove the Most Useful

    Re: Rosabeth Moss Kanter
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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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