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Faculty & Research

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    • HBS Book

    Retiring: Creating a Life That Works for You

    By: Teresa M. Amabile, Lotte Bailyn, Marcy Crary, Douglas T. Hall and Kathy E. Kram

    Retirement, as a major life transition, can be both thrilling and challenging in unexpected ways. Written by acclaimed authors in the fields of business leadership, careers, and work, this book goes beyond the typical financial and health-related advice on retirement, providing insights to guide you in broader areas of your life – identity issues, relationship challenges, and questions about creating a new retirement life structure that works for you. With lively, engaging writing, the book tells the detailed retirement transition stories of 14 people – and draws on over 200 interviews with 120 people – to explore how retiring involves a reconstruction of both the person and their life structure.

    • HBS Book

    Retiring: Creating a Life That Works for You

    By: Teresa M. Amabile, Lotte Bailyn, Marcy Crary, Douglas T. Hall and Kathy E. Kram

    Retirement, as a major life transition, can be both thrilling and challenging in unexpected ways. Written by acclaimed authors in the fields of business leadership, careers, and work, this book goes beyond the typical financial and health-related advice on retirement, providing insights to guide you in broader areas of your life – identity issues,...

    • American Economic Review: Insights 6, no. 4 (December 2024): 558–574.

    Large Shocks Travel Fast

    By: Alberto Cavallo, Francesco Lippi and Ken Miyahara

    We document a sizeable increase in the frequency of price adjustments following the large energy shocks of 2022. We use a tractable New Keynesian model, calibrated to the pre-shock data, to interpret such a pattern. The calibration highlights the state-dependence of firms' decisions: prices are adjusted rapidly when markups are misaligned. In the model, a large cost shock triggers a swift increase in the frequency of price adjustments, causing a rapid pass-through from costs to prices. Time-dependent models, such as the Calvo model, miss this frequency response, failing to capture the sudden inflation surge after a large shock.

    • American Economic Review: Insights 6, no. 4 (December 2024): 558–574.

    Large Shocks Travel Fast

    By: Alberto Cavallo, Francesco Lippi and Ken Miyahara

    We document a sizeable increase in the frequency of price adjustments following the large energy shocks of 2022. We use a tractable New Keynesian model, calibrated to the pre-shock data, to interpret such a pattern. The calibration highlights the state-dependence of firms' decisions: prices are adjusted rapidly when markups are misaligned. In the...

    • 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

    Dishoom: From Bombay with Love

    By: Anjali M. Bhatt and Thomas J. DeLong

    Shamil and Kavi Thakrar, co-founders of Dishoom, faced critical decisions as they looked to expand the UK-based restaurant group. Shamil, the CEO, was confident in Dishoom's potential for growth but he was concerned about preserving the culture and values centered around the notion of "seva" or selfless service. He knew that this strong culture underpinned the nostalgic and culturally rich customer experience that defined the organization's success to date. At the same time, Thakrar wondered if Dishoom's culture was a double-edged sword, contributing to employee burnout. How could he ensure that Dishoom’s organization and culture were set up for the growth ahead? This case considers the challenge of how leaders design and manage culture in the face of organizational scaling.

    • Featured Case

    Dishoom: From Bombay with Love

    By: Anjali M. Bhatt and Thomas J. DeLong

    Shamil and Kavi Thakrar, co-founders of Dishoom, faced critical decisions as they looked to expand the UK-based restaurant group. Shamil, the CEO, was confident in Dishoom's potential for growth but he was concerned about preserving the culture and values centered around the notion of "seva" or selfless service. He knew that this strong culture...

    • Featured Case

    Ranger Energy Services: Bridging Public & Private Markets

    By: Joseph Pacelli, Ravi Ramniklal Gondalia and James Weber

    In August of 2017, CSL Capital, a private equity fund founded and operated by Charlie Leykum (HBS’04), was deciding to take one of its portfolio companies, Ranger Energy Services, public. Founded in 2014, Ranger Energy was an oilfield service company providing high-spec rig services to E&P customers. With 150% growth in top line and improving margin performance over the last two years, Ranger was still generating negative net income and hence Leykum was worried if public markets would be able to understand Ranger’s business strategy and value the business fairly. How can investors value a growth business like Ranger fairly? What are the advantages and disadvantages of taking a company public? How can investors assess whether Ranger Energy would continue to be a top performer in the high-spec rig market? Students are encouraged to decide as to whether they agree with CSL’s strategy of taking Ranger public or should they have explored other means of raising growth capital.

    • Featured Case

    Ranger Energy Services: Bridging Public & Private Markets

    By: Joseph Pacelli, Ravi Ramniklal Gondalia and James Weber

    In August of 2017, CSL Capital, a private equity fund founded and operated by Charlie Leykum (HBS’04), was deciding to take one of its portfolio companies, Ranger Energy Services, public. Founded in 2014, Ranger Energy was an oilfield service company providing high-spec rig services to E&P customers. With 150% growth in top line and improving...

    • HBS Working Paper

    Determinants of Top-Down Sabotage

    By: Hashim Zaman and Karim R. Lakhani

    We investigate the conditions that motivate managers to impede the growth of talented subordinates due to fears of future competition for their own positions. Our research expands on existing tournament and contest theory literature that considers peer-to-peer sabotage as an unintended consequence of relative performance evaluation (RPE) to sabotage across hierarchical levels. Drawing on survey data from 335 U.S. corporate executives, we find that top-down sabotage (TDS) is not driven by RPE systems, but thrives in environments where subjective managerial discretion dominates the performance evaluation process. Weak management control systems create opportunities for such discretion, undermining RPE's effectiveness as a self-monitoring tool. Notably, our results reveal that organizational culture emerges as the most significant factor in mitigating TDS.

    • HBS Working Paper

    Determinants of Top-Down Sabotage

    By: Hashim Zaman and Karim R. Lakhani

    We investigate the conditions that motivate managers to impede the growth of talented subordinates due to fears of future competition for their own positions. Our research expands on existing tournament and contest theory literature that considers peer-to-peer sabotage as an unintended consequence of relative performance evaluation (RPE) to...

    • Working Paper

    Ponzi Funds

    By: Philippe van der Beck, Jean-Philippe Bouchaud and Dario Villamaina

    Many active funds hold concentrated portfolios. Flow-driven trading causes price pressure, which pushes up the funds’ existing positions resulting in realized returns. We decompose fund returns into a price pressure (self-inflated) and a fundamental component and show that when allocating capital across funds, investors are unable to identify whether realized returns are self-inflated or fundamental. Because investors chase self-inflated fund returns at a high frequency, even short-lived impact meaningfully affects fund flows at longer time scales. The combination of price impact and return chasing causes an endogenous feedback loop and a reallocation of wealth to early fund investors, which unravels once the price pressure reverts. We find that flows chasing self-inflated returns predict bubbles in ETFs and their subsequent crashes, and lead to a daily wealth reallocation of $500 Million from ETFs alone. We provide a simple regulatory reporting measure – fund illiquidity – which captures a fund’s potential for self-inflated returns.

    • Working Paper

    Ponzi Funds

    By: Philippe van der Beck, Jean-Philippe Bouchaud and Dario Villamaina

    Many active funds hold concentrated portfolios. Flow-driven trading causes price pressure, which pushes up the funds’ existing positions resulting in realized returns. We decompose fund returns into a price pressure (self-inflated) and a fundamental component and show that when allocating capital across funds, investors are unable to identify...

Initiatives & Projects

Race, Gender & Equity

The Race, Gender & Equity Initiative catalyzes and translates cutting-edge research to transform practice, enable leaders to drive change, and eradicate gender, race, and other forms of inequality in business and society.
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Seminars & Conferences

Feb 04
  • 04 Feb 2025

Anocha Aribarg, University of Michigan

Feb 11
  • 11 Feb 2025

Brett Hollenbeck, University of California, Los Angeles

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Recent Publications

Want Your Company to Get Better at Experimentation?: Learn Fast By Democratizing Testing

By: Iavor Bojinov, David Holtz, Ramesh Johari, Sven Schmit and Martin Tingley
  • January–February 2025 |
  • Article |
  • Harvard Business Review
For years, online experimentation has fueled the innovations of leading tech companies, enabling them to rapidly test and refine new ideas, optimize product features, personalize user experiences, and maintain a competitive edge. The widespread availability and lower cost of experimentation tools today mean that most organizations—even outside the technology sector—conduct tests. After initial adoption, however, many of them restrict experimentation to just a handful of carefully selected projects. That’s because their data scientists are the only ones who can design, run, and analyze tests. Vastly increasing the capacity to conduct online experiments is becoming more critical as the expanding capabilities and applications of artificial intelligence—particularly generative AI—reshape innovation. Scaling up experimentation entails moving away from a data-scientist-centric approach to one that empowers everyone else on the product, marketing, and sales teams to run experiments. The authors suggest how to do that.
Citation
Related
Bojinov, Iavor, David Holtz, Ramesh Johari, Sven Schmit, and Martin Tingley. "Want Your Company to Get Better at Experimentation? Learn Fast By Democratizing Testing." Harvard Business Review 103, no. 1 (January–February 2025): 96–103.

Tracing the Early History of IB Teaching at Harvard Business School

By: Louis T. Wells
  • 2025 |
  • Chapter |
  • Faculty Research
Citation
Related
Wells, Louis T. "Tracing the Early History of IB Teaching at Harvard Business School." Chap. 4 in The Historical Evolution of International Business: Growth Trajectories of International Business Thought, by Louis T. Wells, L. Nachum, and A. Yaprak. Palgrave Macmillan, 2025. (Wells, L. "Commentary" on Teresa da Silva Lopes.)

Why People Resist Embracing AI

By: Julian De Freitas
  • January–February 2025 |
  • Article |
  • Harvard Business Review
The success of AI depends not only on its capabilities, which are becoming more advanced each day, but on people’s willingness to harness them. Unfortunately, many people view AI negatively, fearing it will cause job losses, increase the likelihood that their personal data will be misused, and even attack humanity someday. Behind this resistance are perceptions that AI is too opaque, emotionless, rigid, and independent and that interacting with humans is preferable. This article explores each one of those psychological barriers to adoption and describes interventions managers can undertake to counter them and make employees more comfortable with using AI tools.
Citation
Related
De Freitas, Julian. "Why People Resist Embracing AI." Harvard Business Review 103, no. 1 (January–February 2025): 52–56.

Everyone Steps Back?: The Widespread Retraction of Crowd-Funding Support for Minority Creators When Migration Fear Is High

By: John (Jianqui) Bai, William R. Kerr, Chi Wan and Alptug Yorulmaz
  • January 2025 |
  • Article |
  • Research Policy
We study funding gaps on Kickstarter across multiple ethnic groups from 2009 to 2021. Scaling the concept of racially salient events, we quantify the close co-movement of minority funding gaps in crowd-funding to inflamed political rhetoric surrounding migration. The funding gap for minorities more than doubles in the most inflamed periods compared to baseline. Results are especially acute for Hispanic creators. Distant, mostly white backers are typically important for projects reaching a critical threshold of funding support. Retractions in support for minority creators during tense periods are even spatially, as present in liberal cities as in conservative ones.
Citation
Related
Bai, John (Jianqui), William R. Kerr, Chi Wan, and Alptug Yorulmaz. "Everyone Steps Back? The Widespread Retraction of Crowd-Funding Support for Minority Creators When Migration Fear Is High." Research Policy 54, no. 1 (January 2025).

What People Still Get Wrong About Negotiations: They Assume the Size of the Pie is Fixed—and So Miss Opportunities to Create Value

By: Max Bazerman
  • January–February 2025 |
  • Article |
  • Harvard Business Review
Most executives leave value on the negotiating table, for two main reasons: First, many executives mistakenly believe that they’re negotiating over a fixed pie and that gains for one side necessarily mean losses for the other. Second, they focus exclusively on how to claim value for themselves (by taking as much as they can of that mythical fixed pie) rather than coming up with ways to increase the size of the pie. All too often, negotiators fail to share information with their counterparts about preferences on the various issues, fearful that they will be exploited if the other side knows what they value. They keep all their cards hidden and assume that this is the secret to being a tough negotiator. To elicit the information necessary to create value, resolve conflicts, and reach efficient agreements, negotiators should use four key strategies: building trust, asking questions, sharing information, and making multiple offers simultaneously. A fifth strategy is also introduced: the concept of post-settlement set­tlements (PSS) to improve deals even after initial agreements have been made.
Citation
Related
Bazerman, Max. "What People Still Get Wrong About Negotiations: They Assume the Size of the Pie is Fixed—and So Miss Opportunities to Create Value." Harvard Business Review 103, no. 1 (January–February 2025): 71–77.

Overcoming Barriers to Employee Ownership: Insights From Small and Medium-Sized Businesses

By: John Guzek and Ashley Whillans
  • January 2025 |
  • Article |
  • Compensation & Benefits Review
This research investigates the limited adoption of employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) among small-to-medium sized businesses (SMBs) in the U.S. Through interviews with 30 SMB owners across various industries, we identify the key barriers to ESOP adoption as lack of time, money, and skills on the part of the owners. In doing so, the study suggests that a “shared ownership light” model, which involves sharing profits, information, and decision-making opportunities with employees, appears more feasible for SMBs than ESOPs. For SMBs that are interested in ESOP adoption, our research suggests that organizations providing employee ownership services could better assist SMBs by offering templatized models and best practices for profit-sharing plans, open-book management, and structured employee participation. The paper aims to broaden the discussion around shared ownership by considering a spectrum of options that have the potential to increase both value creation by and value-sharing among employees.
Citation
Related
Guzek, John, and Ashley Whillans. "Overcoming Barriers to Employee Ownership: Insights From Small and Medium-Sized Businesses." Compensation & Benefits Review 57, no. 1 (January 2025): 64–81.

Shouldice Hospital Today

By: James Heskett
  • December 2024 |
  • Teaching Note |
  • Faculty Research
Citation
Related
Heskett, James. "Shouldice Hospital Today." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 925-303, December 2024.

The Shouldice Hospital Today

By: James Heskett and Roger Hallowell
  • December 2024 |
  • Case |
  • Faculty Research
Citation
Educators
Related
Heskett, James, and Roger Hallowell. "The Shouldice Hospital Today." Harvard Business School Case 925-302, December 2024.
More Publications

In The News

    • 02 Jan 2025
    • Washington Post

    Why Not Enlist an Army of Volunteer Retirees?

    Re: Teresa Amabile
    • 24 Dec 2024
    • Cold Call

    Scaling a Family Business While Maintaining Founding Values

    Re: Henry McGee
    • 18 Dec 2024
    • Harvard Business School

    New Faculty Profiles: Awa Ambra Seck

    Re: Awa Ambra Seck
    • 17 Dec 2024
    • Marketplace

    In Many Cities, a Century-Old Dinner Model Is Getting New Life

    Re: Michael Kaufman
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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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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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