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    • HBS Book

    Talk: The Science of Conversation and the Art of Being Ourselves

    By: Alison Wood Brooks

    We all struggle with difficult conversations, but we're often not very good at easy ones either. Though we do it all the time, conversation is one of the most complex, demanding, and delicate of all human tasks, rife with possibilities for misinterpretation and misunderstanding. And yet, conversations can also be a source of great joy, each one offering an opportunity to express who we are and learn who others are—to feel connected, loved, and alive. In TALK, I show why conversing a little more effectively can make a big difference in the quality of our close personal relationships as well as our professional success. Drawing on the new science of conversation, I distill lessons that show how we can better understand, learn from, and delight each other. The key is the TALKmaxims: Topics Asking, Levity, and Kindness.

    • HBS Book

    Talk: The Science of Conversation and the Art of Being Ourselves

    By: Alison Wood Brooks

    We all struggle with difficult conversations, but we're often not very good at easy ones either. Though we do it all the time, conversation is one of the most complex, demanding, and delicate of all human tasks, rife with possibilities for misinterpretation and misunderstanding. And yet, conversations can also be a source of great joy, each one...

    • Review of Accounting Studies 29, no. 4 (December 2024): 3413–3448.

    Human Bias in the Oversight of Firms: Evidence from Workplace Safety Violations

    By: Jonas Heese, Gerardo Pérez Cavazos and Andreya Pérez Silva

    We study the effects of mood as a source of human bias on regulators’ oversight and enforcement decisions. We use weather at facilities at the time of an OSHA inspection to proxy for the OSHA compliance officers’ mood. We find that during periods of good mood due to sunny weather, the number of workplace safety violations and dollar penalties assessed by the officer decrease. These effects are more pronounced when OSHA officers have more discretion. In turn, the effect of mood on oversight and enforcement decisions can be mitigated by increased monitoring by the regional OSHA office. Furthermore, our results suggest that there is a slightly higher incidence of workplace accidents after “good mood” inspections. Overall, our findings show that regulators’ mood results in bias in the oversight of firms.

    • Review of Accounting Studies 29, no. 4 (December 2024): 3413–3448.

    Human Bias in the Oversight of Firms: Evidence from Workplace Safety Violations

    By: Jonas Heese, Gerardo Pérez Cavazos and Andreya Pérez Silva

    We study the effects of mood as a source of human bias on regulators’ oversight and enforcement decisions. We use weather at facilities at the time of an OSHA inspection to proxy for the OSHA compliance officers’ mood. We find that during periods of good mood due to sunny weather, the number of workplace safety violations and dollar penalties...

    • Business & Environment Initiative

    Climate Solutions, Transition Risk, and Stock Returns

    By: Shirley Lu, Edward J. Riedl, Simon Xu and George Serafeim

    Using large language models to measure firms' climate solution products and services, we find that high-climate solution firms exhibit lower stock returns and higher market valuation multiples. Their stock prices respond positively to events signaling increased demand for climate solutions. These firms also show higher future profitability during periods of regulatory uncertainty, unexpected increases in climate concerns, and when a larger share of their sales occurs in states with climate plans and stronger public support for addressing climate change. Overall, our results indicate that high-climate solution firms, whose business benefits as climate transition risks materialize, hedge investors against such risks.

    • Business & Environment Initiative

    Climate Solutions, Transition Risk, and Stock Returns

    By: Shirley Lu, Edward J. Riedl, Simon Xu and George Serafeim

    Using large language models to measure firms' climate solution products and services, we find that high-climate solution firms exhibit lower stock returns and higher market valuation multiples. Their stock prices respond positively to events signaling increased demand for climate solutions. These firms also show higher future profitability during...

    • Featured Case

    Myeloma Investment Fund

    By: Kyle Myers and Scott Sawaya

    This case explores a critical decision facing the Myeloma Investment Fund (MIF) as it evaluates two investment opportunities aimed at accelerating a cure for multiple myeloma. The MIF, a venture philanthropy fund, must choose between two distinct paths. One option is a high-risk academic startup that is developing a new, early-stage technology. This startup’s innovation could lead to breakthroughs in treating myeloma, but it is far from clinical trials and carries significant uncertainty. The other option is an established company with a promising drug already in Phase II trials, offering the potential for quicker patient impact and a lower risk profile. The case highlights several key trade-offs for the MIF: the potential for groundbreaking innovation versus more immediate patient outcomes, higher risk versus greater certainty, and the challenge of balancing financial returns with the fund’s mission. MIF must weigh the long-term potential of supporting early-stage science against the possibility of providing patients with a treatment that could make a difference sooner.

    • Featured Case

    Myeloma Investment Fund

    By: Kyle Myers and Scott Sawaya

    This case explores a critical decision facing the Myeloma Investment Fund (MIF) as it evaluates two investment opportunities aimed at accelerating a cure for multiple myeloma. The MIF, a venture philanthropy fund, must choose between two distinct paths. One option is a high-risk academic startup that is developing a new, early-stage technology....

    • Featured Case

    Google Quantum AI

    By: David B. Yoffie, Michael A. Cusumano and Matt Higgins

    Quantum computing may be the most important nascent computing technology of the 21st century. It has the potential to impact industries ranging from drug discovery to cybersecurity. Google's Quantum AI is one of the leaders in quantum research. This case explores the technological underpinnings of quantum computing and Google's strategy to capitalize on the new technology. Four key questions are posed in the case: 1) what business model(s) should Google adopt to deliver quantum computing? 2) Google is focused on superconducting materials but alternative approaches, such as neutral atoms, have emerged as viable, less expensive, but less effective. Should Google hedge its bets or stick with superconductors? 3) How should quantum computing services/machines be priced? And 4) Could Google accelerate its progress with more resources?

    • Featured Case

    Google Quantum AI

    By: David B. Yoffie, Michael A. Cusumano and Matt Higgins

    Quantum computing may be the most important nascent computing technology of the 21st century. It has the potential to impact industries ranging from drug discovery to cybersecurity. Google's Quantum AI is one of the leaders in quantum research. This case explores the technological underpinnings of quantum computing and Google's strategy to...

    • HBS Working Paper

    Crossing the Design-Use Divide: How Process Manipulation Shapes the Design and Use of AI

    By: Rebecca Karp

    Existing literature often separates research on the design of innovations from their implementation and use, neglecting the role of selection—how organizations choose which innovations to implement. Although scholars suggest scientific approaches for selecting novel technologies, there is limited research on how these methods are practically employed in decision-making. This study addresses this gap by examining how organizations decide which innovations to implement and how the selection process influences their design and use. Drawing on a two-year ethnographic study, the research explores how 13 dyadic pairs of entrepreneurial firms and health system committees piloted AI-based medical diagnostic innovations. Committees, composed of members with polarized views on AI, formed coalitions reflecting these views.

    • HBS Working Paper

    Crossing the Design-Use Divide: How Process Manipulation Shapes the Design and Use of AI

    By: Rebecca Karp

    Existing literature often separates research on the design of innovations from their implementation and use, neglecting the role of selection—how organizations choose which innovations to implement. Although scholars suggest scientific approaches for selecting novel technologies, there is limited research on how these methods are practically...

    • Working Paper

    Assessing Assessors

    By: Huaizhi Chen and Lauren Cohen

    Property tax revenues – the largest discretionary source of revenue for local governments - adjust at a pace that is inconsistent with property values in the US. We show that this form of revenue smoothing may be rooted in the political economy of municipalities. Measures of local budget stressors are positively related to upward assessments of a property’s value. Moreover, municipalities are significantly more likely to reassess in up markets as opposed to down – consistent with maximizing tax base and revenue collected. Using micro-level evidence from just-passing school referenda in Illinois, these shocks to municipal liabilities lead to significant increases in property assessments without any associated increases in market values or transactions.

    • Working Paper

    Assessing Assessors

    By: Huaizhi Chen and Lauren Cohen

    Property tax revenues – the largest discretionary source of revenue for local governments - adjust at a pace that is inconsistent with property values in the US. We show that this form of revenue smoothing may be rooted in the political economy of municipalities. Measures of local budget stressors are positively related to upward assessments of a...

Initiatives & Projects

Impact-Weighted Accounts

The Impact-Weighted Accounts (IWA) Project was established in July of 2019 and concluded in December of 2022. The project was led by faculty Co-Chairs George Serafeim and Ethan Rouen. The mission of the Project was to drive the creation of financial accounts that reflect a company’s financial, social, and environmental performance. The ambition was to create accounting statements that transparently capture external impacts in a way that drives investor and managerial decision making. In 2022 the International Foundation for Valuing Impacts (IFVI) grew out of IWA. The research conducted at IWA, and the former IWA team, are now part of IFVI. The Valuation Technical and Practitioner Committee, which guides, reviews, and approves IFVI’s research agenda is currently chaired by Serafeim.
→All Initiatives & Projects

Seminars & Conferences

Feb 04
  • 04 Feb 2025

Anocha Aribarg, University of Michigan

Feb 11
  • 11 Feb 2025

Brett Hollenbeck, University of California, Los Angeles

→More Seminars & Conferences

Recent Publications

Corporate Actions as Moral Issues

By: Zwetelina Iliewa, Elisabeth Kempf and Oliver Spalt
  • 2024 |
  • Working Paper |
  • Faculty Research
We study how a representative sample of the U.S. population evaluates a broad range of corporate actions from a nonpecuniary perspective. Our core findings, based on large-scale online surveys, are that (i) self-reported nonpecuniary concerns are large, both for stock market investors and non-investors; (ii) concerns about the treatment of workers and CEO pay rank highest, higher than concerns about workforce diversity and fossil energy usage; (iii) moral universalism (Enke (2024)) emerges as a key driver of nonpecuniary preferences, explaining substantial variation both across participants as well as across corporate actions. Combined, our findings provide new evidence on the importance of moral concerns as a driver of nonpecuniary preferences in the context of corporate actions.
Citation
SSRN
Related
Iliewa, Zwetelina, Elisabeth Kempf, and Oliver Spalt. "Corporate Actions as Moral Issues." Working Paper, December 2024.

Transitioning from Responsible and Reactive to Deeply Responsible and Proactive International Business

By: Geoffrey Jones, Teresa da Silva Lopes, Pavida Pananond, Rob van Tulder, Noemi Sinkovics and Rudolf Sinkovics
  • January–March 2025 |
  • Article |
  • Critical Perspectives on International Business
This article aims to explore the role of multinational enterprises in addressing grand societal challenges, emphasizing the need for integrating environmental and social aspects into business models. It offers an analysis of how principles and values can guide engaged international business scholarship and responsible International Business scholarship.
Citation
Related
Jones, Geoffrey, Teresa da Silva Lopes, Pavida Pananond, Rob van Tulder, Noemi Sinkovics, and Rudolf Sinkovics. "Transitioning from Responsible and Reactive to Deeply Responsible and Proactive International Business." Critical Perspectives on International Business 21, no. 2 (January–March 2025): 196–225.

Disclosure, Humanizing, and Contextual Vulnerability of Generative AI Chatbots

By: Julian De Freitas and I. Glenn Cohen
  • February 2025 |
  • Article |
  • New England Journal of Medicine AI
In the wake of recent advancements in generative AI, regulatory bodies are trying to keep pace. One key decision is whether to require app makers to disclose the use of generative AI-powered chatbots in their products. We suggest that some generative AI-based chatbots lead consumers to use them in unintended ways that create mental health risks, making them contextually vulnerable—defined as a temporary state of susceptibility to harm or other adverse mental health effects arising from the interplay between a user’s interactions with a particular system and the system’s response. We argue that for health apps—including “medical devices” and “wellness apps”— disclosure should be mandated. We also show how, even when chatbots are disclosed in these instances, they may still carry risks because of the tendency of app makers to humanize their chatbots. The current regulatory structure does not fully address these challenges. We discuss how app makers and regulators should proactively address this challenge by considering where apps fall along the continuum of perceived humanness, and in spaces connected to health needs either mandating or strongly recommending neutral (non-humanized) chatbots be the default and that deviations from that default be justified. 
Citation
Related
De Freitas, Julian, and I. Glenn Cohen. "Disclosure, Humanizing, and Contextual Vulnerability of Generative AI Chatbots." New England Journal of Medicine AI 2, no. 2 (February 2025).

New Belgium Brewing and Climate Change

By: Michael W. Toffel, Kenneth P. Pucker and Michael Norris
  • January 2025 |
  • Teaching Note |
  • Faculty Research
Citation
Purchase
Related
Toffel, Michael W., Kenneth P. Pucker, and Michael Norris. "New Belgium Brewing and Climate Change." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 625-089, January 2025.

Note on Estate Planning

By: Christina R. Wing, Maryann G Bell and Kara A Perusse
  • January 2025 |
  • Technical Note |
  • Faculty Research
Crafting a comprehensive estate plan is not just about ensuring the smooth transfer of assets; it is about leaving a lasting legacy and protecting your loved ones from unnecessary stress and complications after you are gone. Estate planning is a particularly important process for those who have built a family business. Ownership of the company affects more than just the family: stakeholders include employees, customers, suppliers, and the broader community that the business supports. Planning for an ownership transition may include business leadership transition planning, board representation guidance, as well as the smooth transfer of assets to the next generation. The significance of estate planning cannot be overlooked, and it is important to initiate these conversations early.
Citation
Educators
Related
Wing, Christina R., Maryann G Bell, and Kara A Perusse. "Note on Estate Planning." Harvard Business School Technical Note 625-095, January 2025.

Colbún’s Angostura Dam Project (B)

By: James K. Sebenius and Nicolas Andrade
  • January 2025 |
  • Supplement |
  • Faculty Research
The A case describes Colbún Chile’s plans for the Angostura dam in the Bío Bío River, a hydroelectric construction venture with major challenges given the region’s history of indigenous resistance. This context was especially unfavorable given the highly contentious process surrounding the earlier development of the Ralco dam project by the Chilean subsidiary of Endesa. Ralco was upstream from Angostura’s proposed location on the river and was only built at the cost of severe opposition and controversy, which led to the cancelation of four additional upstream dams that had been planned by Endesa. Bernardo Larraín, the CEO of Colbún, sought to learn from these past experiences in order to design a project that would couple hydroelectric generation with opportunities for the local communities. He sought to set the stage for reaching successful agreements with the families earmarked for resettlement as a result of Angostura and deal with other likely opposition. The B case describes Colbún’s approach, subsequent events, and the outcome of the Angostura project.
Citation
Related
Sebenius, James K., and Nicolas Andrade. "Colbún’s Angostura Dam Project (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 925-017, January 2025.

Colbún’s Angostura Dam Project (A)

By: James K. Sebenius and Nicolas Andrade
  • January 2025 |
  • Case |
  • Faculty Research
The A case describes Colbún Chile’s plans for the Angostura dam in the Bío Bío River, a hydroelectric construction venture with major challenges given the region’s history of indigenous resistance. This context was especially unfavorable given the highly contentious process surrounding the earlier development of the Ralco dam project by the Chilean subsidiary of Endesa. Ralco was upstream from Angostura’s proposed location on the river and was only built at the cost of severe opposition and controversy, which led to the cancelation of four additional upstream dams that had been planned by Endesa. Bernardo Larraín, the CEO of Colbún, sought to learn from these past experiences in order to design a project that would couple hydroelectric generation with opportunities for the local communities. He sought to set the stage for reaching successful agreements with the families earmarked for resettlement as a result of Angostura and deal with other likely opposition. The B case describes Colbún’s approach, subsequent events, and the outcome of the Angostura project.
Citation
Educators
Related
Sebenius, James K., and Nicolas Andrade. "Colbún’s Angostura Dam Project (A)." Harvard Business School Case 925-016, January 2025.

Big Media’s Game of Thrones

By: Emily McComb, Marco Sammon and James Barnett
  • January 2025 |
  • Teaching Note |
  • Faculty Research
Citation
Purchase
Related
McComb, Emily, Marco Sammon, and James Barnett. "Big Media’s Game of Thrones." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 225-060, January 2025.
More Publications

In The News

    • 29 Jan 2025
    • New York Times

    Talk Is Cheap. It Can Make You Rich.

    Re: Alison Wood Brooks
    • 29 Jan 2025
    • Finding Mastery

    The Power of Failure: Transforming Setbacks into Success with Dr. Amy Edmondson

    Re: Amy Edmondson
    • 28 Jan 2025
    • HBS Working Knowledge

    Rethinking Risk: Why Pension Funds Are Betting on Alternative Assets

    Re: Emil Siriwardane
    • 28 Jan 2025
    • NBC

    Harvard Business School Prof: Avoid This Common Mistake When Trying to Make New Friends as an Adult

    Re: Alison Wood Brooks
→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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