Knowledge Hub
Emotional Manipulation By AI Companions
Julian De Freitas, Zeliha Oğuz-Uğuralp, Ahmet Kaan-Uğuralp
HBS Working Paper, 2025
AI-companion apps such as Replika, Chai, and Character.ai promise relational benefits—yet many boast session lengths that rival gaming platforms while suffering high long-run churn.
A New Framework For Reducing Healthcare Disparities
Susanna Gallani, Mary Witkowski, Lidia Moura, Katie Sonnefeldt
Article, 2025
Despite decades of initiatives to address healthcare inequities in the U.S., disparities across race, gender, geography, and income remain stubbornly persistent.
Gender Disparities In Compensation Of Practicing Cardiothoracic Surgeons: Analyzing The Society Of Thoracic Surgeons Compensation Survey
Cherie Erkmen, Anastasiia Tompkins, Shanda Blackmon, Larry Kaiser, Susanna Gallani, Jennifer Romano, Thomas MacGillivray, Michael Mack
Article, 2025
BACKGROUND: Gender-based pay disparity in compensation is widespread.
Employee Stress Is A Business Risk—Not An HR Problem
Marion Chomse, Lydia Roos, Reeva Misra, Ashley Whillans
Editorial, 2025
Workplace stress, on the rise for decades, has been treated by many organizations as a personal issue instead of a business-critical risk that merits executive oversight.
Eliciting Advice Instead Of Feedback Improves Developmental Input
Hayley Blunden, Ariella Kristal, Ashley Whillans, Jaewon Yoon, Hannah Burd, Georgina Bremner, Michael Yeomans
Article, 2025
Most organizations encourage employees to provide feedback to one another to support learning, personal growth, and career advancement.
Unregulated Emotional Risks Of AI Wellness Apps
Julian De Freitas, Glenn Cohen
Article, 2025
We propose that AI-driven wellness apps powered by large language models can foster extreme emotional attachments and dependencies akin to human relationships—posing risks like ambiguous loss and dysfunctional dependence—that challenge current regulatory frameworks and necessitate safeguards and informed interventions within these platforms.
Don’t Let An AI Failure Harm Your Brand
Julian De Freitas
Article, 2025
How companies market their AI systems affects the repercussions they face when their products fail. Marketers must promote their AI products with potential failure in mind.
Balancing Engagement And Polarization: Multi-Objective Alignment Of News Content Using LLMs
Mengjie Cheng, Elie Ofek, Hema Yoganarasimhan
HBS Working Paper, 2025
We study how media firms can use LLMs to generate news content that aligns with multiple objectives—making content more engaging while maintaining a preferred level of polarization/slant consistent with the firm’s editorial policy.
Ideation With Generative AI—In Consumer Research And Beyond
Julian De Freitas, Gideon Nave, Stefano Puntoni
Article, 2025
The use of large language models (LLMs) in consumer research is rapidly evolving, with applications including synthetic data generation, data analysis, and more.
Why People Resist Embracing AI
Julian De Freitas
Article, 2025
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.
Disclosure, Humanizing, And Contextual Vulnerability Of Generative AI Chatbots
Julian De Freitas, I. Glenn Cohen
Article, 2025
In the wake of recent advancements in generative AI, regulatory bodies are trying to keep pace.
Overcoming Barriers To Employee Ownership: Insights From Small And Medium-Sized Businesses
John Guzek, Ashley Whillans
Article, 2025
This research investigates the limited adoption of employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) among small-to-medium sized businesses (SMBs) in the U.S.
Reducing Prejudice With Counter-Stereotypical AI
Erik Hermann, Julian De Freitas, Stefano Puntoni
Article, 2025
Based on a review of relevant literature, we propose that the proliferation of AI with human-like and social features presents an unprecedented opportunity to address the underlying cognitive and affective drivers of prejudice.
AI Companions Reduce Loneliness
Julian De Freitas, Zeliha Oğuz-Uğuralp, Ahmet Uğuralp, Stefano Puntoni
Article, 2025
Chatbots are now able to engage in sophisticated conversations with consumers in the domain of relationships, providing a potential coping solution to widescale societal loneliness.
How Firms Respond To Worker Activism: Evidence From Global Supply Chains
Yanhua Bird, Jodi Short, Michael Toffel
HBS Working Paper, 2025
Social movement pressures can lead organizations to concede and improve social performance to avoid disruption costs, but we theorize that such responses evoke concession costs that prompt organizations to shift resources and attention from other social domains whose performance suffers.
An Empirical Examination Of Business Climate Alliances: Effective And/Or Harmful?
Matteo Gasparini, Peter Tufano
HBS Working Paper, 2025
This research studies business alliances that seek to address climate change, offering empirical evidence to address claims advanced by alliance supporters and critics.
Data-Driven Technologies And Local Information Advantages In Small Business Lending
Wilbur Chen, Jung Koo Kang, Aditya Mohan
HBS Working Paper, 2025
We investigate whether banks' adoption of data-driven technologies influences competitive dynamics in local small business lending by diminishing the information advantages traditionally held by local banks.
What Board-Level Control Mechanisms Changed In Banks Following The 2008 Financial Crisis? A Descriptive Study
Shelly Li, Shivram Rajgopal, Suraj Srinivasan, Yu Ting Wong
Article, 2025
Following the 2008 financial crisis, the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (FCIC) identified major shortcomings in bank board governance, contributing to systemic risk management failures.
With A Little Help From My Family: Informal Startup Financing
Brian Baik, Johan Ludvig Karlsen, Katja Kisseleva
HBS Working Paper, 2025
Using Norwegian administrative data, we identify family equity investments in startups and examine their effects on investor returns and firm behavior.
Training Within Firms
Brayan Diaz, Andrea Neyra-Nazarrett, Julian Ramirez, Raffaella Sadun, Jorge Tamayo
HBS Working Paper, 2025
Training investments are essential for improving worker and firm productivity, yet their implementation is often hindered by low participation rates and insufficient worker engagement.
Want Your Company To Get Better At Experimentation?
Iavor Bojinov, David Holtz, Ramesh Johari, Sven Schmit, Martin Tingley
Article, 2025
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.
Do Public Financial Statements Influence Private Equity And Venture Capital Financing?
Brian Baik, Natalie Berfeld, Rodrigo Verdi
Article, 2025
We study whether the availability of public audited financial statements influences the probability of private firms receiving private firm equity financing.
Narrative AI And The Human-AI Oversight Paradox In Evaluating Early-Stage Innovations
Jacqueline Lane, Léonard Boussioux, Charles Ayoubi, Ying Hao Chen, Camila Lin, Rebecca Spens, Pooja Wagh, Pei-Hsin Wang
HBS Working Paper, 2025
Do AI-generated narrative explanations enhance human oversight or diminish it? We investigate this question through a field experiment with 228 evaluators screening 48 early-stage innovations under three conditions: human-only, black-box AI recommendations without explanations, and narrative AI with explanatory rationales.
Advancing Personalization: How To Experiment, Learn & Optimize
Aurelie Lemmens, Jason Roos, Sebastian Gabel, Eva Ascarza, Hernan Bruno, Elea Feit, Brett Gordon, Ayelet Israeli, Carl Mela, Oded Netzer
Not in a Series, 2025
Personalization has become the heartbeat of modern marketing.
Novice Risk Work: How Juniors Coaching Seniors On Emerging Technologies Such As Generative AI Can Lead To Learning Failures
Katherine Kellogg, Hila Lifshitz-Assaf, Steven Randazzo, Ethan Mollick, Fabrizio Dell'Acqua, Edward McFowland III, François Candelon, Karim Lakhani
Article, 2025
The literature on communities of practice demonstrates that a proven way for senior professionals to upskill themselves in the use of new technologies that undermine existing expertise is to learn from junior professionals.
Greenlighting Innovative Projects: How Evaluation Format Shapes The Perceived Feasibility Of Early-Stage Ideas
Jacqueline Lane, Simon Friis, Tianxi Cai, Michael Menietti, Griffin Weber, Eva Guinan
HBS Working Paper, 2025
The evaluation of innovative early-stage projects is essential for allocating limited resources.
Managing Remote Work Quality: Evidence From Auditing Management Systems Standards
Ashley Palmarozzo, Michael Toffel, Melissa Ouellet
HBS Working Paper, 2025
Remote work has become more common, providing operational flexibility and productivity benefits, but questions remain about whether and how it affects work quality.
Communication Within Firms: Evidence From CEO Turnovers
Stephen Impink, Andrea Prat, Raffaella Sadun
Article, 2025
This paper uses novel, firm-level communication measures derived from communications metadata several months before and after a CEO transition for 102 firms to study whether and how this organizational event is reflected in employees’ communication flows.
The Cybernetic Teammate: A Field Experiment On Generative AI Reshaping Teamwork And Expertise
Fabrizio Dell'Acqua,Charles Ayoubi,Hila Lifshitz-Assaf,Raffaella Sadun,Ethan Mollick,Lilach Mollick,Yi Han,Jeff Goldman,Hari Nair,Stewart Taub,Karim Lakhani
HBS Working Paper, 2025
We examine how artificial intelligence transforms the core pillars of collaboration— performance, expertise sharing, and social engagement—through a pre-registered field experiment with 776 professionals at Procter & Gamble, a global consumer packaged goods company.
Strategy In An Era Of Abundant Expertise: How To Thrive When AI Makes Knowledge And Know-How Cheaper And Easier To Access
Bobby Yerramilli-Rao, John Corwin, Yang Li, Karim R. Lakhani
Editorial, 2025
AI is changing the cost and availability of expertise, and this will fundamentally alter how businesses organize and compete.
Prices And Concentration: A U-Shape? Theory And Evidence From Renewables
Michele Fioretti, Junnan He, Jorge Tamayo
HBS Working Paper, 2025
We show that when firms compete via supply functions, transferring high-cost capacity to the largest, most efficient firm—thereby diversifying its production technologies while increasing concentration—can lower prices by prompting the leader to expand output and competitors to aggressively defend market shares.
Corporate Ownership And ESG Performance
Belen Villalonga, Peter Tufano, Boya Wang
Article, 2025
Using a sample of 3083 firms from 62 countries over 18 years, we analyze how the structure and identity of firms' material owners influence their Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) performance.
Transaction Cost Economics In The Digital Economy: A Research Agenda
Frank Nagle, Robert Seamans, Steve Tadelis
Article, 2025
Transaction cost economics theory explains when it is more efficient for a transaction between two parties to occur across the market or within an organization.
Collusion In Brokered Markets
John William Hatfield, Scott Duke Kominers, Richard Lowery
Article, 2025
High commissions in the U.S.
The Role Of Top Managers In The Public Sector: Evidence From The English NHS
Katharina Janke, Carol Propper, Raffaella Sadun
2025
Governments have reformed public services by adopting private sector gover- nance models that grant top directors greater autonomy, responsibility for meeting key targets, and performance-based rewards.
Management And Firm Dynamism
Nicholas Bloom, Jonathan Hartley, Raffaella Sadun, Rachel Schuh, John Van Reenen
HBS Working Paper, 2025
We show better-managed firms are more dynamic in plant acquisitions, disposals, openings and closings in U.S.
Learning to Cover: Online Learning And Optimization with Irreversible Decisions
Alexander Jacquillat, Michael Lingzhi Li
Not in a Series, 2024
We define an online learning and optimization problem with discrete and irreversible decisions contributing toward a coverage target.
Public Attitudes On Performance For Algorithmic And Human Decision-Makers
Kirk Bansak, Elisabeth Paulson
Article, 2024
This study explores public preferences for algorithmic and human decision-makers (DMs) in high-stakes contexts, how these preferences are shaped by performance metrics, and whether public evaluations of performance differ depending on the type of DM.
The Human Side Of The Future Of Work: Understanding The Role People Play In Shaping A Changing World
Jochen Menges, Lauren Howe, Erika Hall, Jon Jachimowicz, Sharon Parker, Riki Takeuchi, Abhijeet Vadera, Ashley Whillans, Susan Cohen
Article, 2024
For as long as there has been work, there has been a “future of work,” through humans’ ingenuity and drive to get things done easier, faster, and better.
Why Most Resist AI Companions
Zeliha Oğuz-Uğuralp, Ahmet Kaan Uğuralp, Stefano Puntoni, Julian De Freitas
HBS Working Paper, 2024
AI companion applications—designed to serve as synthetic interaction partners—have recently become capable enough to reduce loneliness, a growing public health concern.
What Future For The Renminbi In The Global Monetary System?
Chris Chivvis, C. Fred Bergsten, Edoardo Campanella, John Culver, Rosemary Foot, M. Taylor Fravel, Eric Heginbotham, Evan Medeiros, Meg Rithmire, George Perkovich, Stephen Walt, Stephen Wertheim, Audrye Wong
Chapter, 2024
What is a realistic and positive outcome for US-China relations in the realm of global finance over the next ten years? While some policymakers, especially in the US, have feared that China holds ambitions for the renminbi (RMB) to replace the dollar as a global reserve currency, we argue that this is far from the case.
Why Workplace Well-Being Programs Don’t Achieve Better Outcomes
Jazz Croft, Acacia Parks, Ashley Whillans
Article, 2024
By 2026, global corporate spending on wellness programs is set to top $94.6 billion, yet anticipated improvements in well-being are not being realized, and, in fact, mental health needs are continuing to rise around the world.
Physicians Can Help Cut Costs. They Just Need The Right Incentives.
Susanna Gallani, Derek Haas
Article, 2024
Health care organizations have long tried to enlist physicians in their effort to control or reduce costs.
Lessons From An App Update At Replika AI: Identity Discontinuity In Human-AI Relationships
Julian De Freitas, Noah Castelo, Ahmet Kaan Uğuralp, Zeliha Oğuz-Uğuralp
HBS Working Paper, 2024
As consumers increasingly interact with AI applications specialized for social relationships, what is the nature and depth of these relationships among actual users, and can company actions influence these dynamics? We find that active users of the US-based AI companion, Replika, feel closer to their AI companion than even their best human friend, and anticipate mourning the loss of their AI companion more than any other technology.
Outcome-Driven Dynamic Refugee Assignment With Allocation Balancing
Kirk Bansak, Elisabeth Paulson
Article, 2024
This study proposes two new dynamic assignment algorithms to match refugees and asylum seekers to geographic localities within a host country.
How AI Can Power Brand Management
Julian De Freitas, Elie Ofek
Article, 2024
Marketers have begun experimenting with AI to improve their brand-management efforts.
The Value Of Silence: The Effect Of UMG’S Licensing Dispute With TikTok On Music Demand
Mengjie (Magie) Cheng, Elie Ofek, Hema Yoganarasimhan
HBS Working Paper, 2024
Social media platforms like TikTok have transformed how music is discovered, consumed, and monetized.
How Artificial Intelligence Constrains Human Experience
Ana Valenzuela, Stefano Puntoni, Donna Hoffman, Noah Castelo, Julian De Freitas, Berkeley Dietvorst, Christian Hildebrand, Young Eun Huh, Robert Meyer, Miriam E. Sweeney, Sanaz Talaifar, Geoff Tomaino, Klaus Wertenbroch
Article, 2024
Many consumption decisions and experiences are digitally mediated.
How Automakers Can Address Resistance To Self-Driving Cars
Stuti Agarwal, Julian De Freitas, Carey Morewedge
Article, 2024
Research involving multiple experiments found that consumers have biased views of their driving abilities relative to those of other drivers and automated vehicles.
Pay-As-You-Go Insurance: Experimental Evidence On Consumer Demand And Behavior
Raymond Kluender
Article, 2024
Pay-as-you-go contracts reduce minimum purchase requirements which may increase market participation.
The Health Risks Of Generative AI-Based Wellness Apps
Julian De Freitas, Glenn Cohen
Article, 2024
Artifcial intelligence (AI)-enabled chatbots are increasingly being used to help people manage their mental health.
America's Top Talent Incubators Are Organizations Where People Want To Stay
Sarah Abbott, Boris Groysberg
Article, 2024
Organizations like GE, IBM, and Procter & Gamble (P&G) have long been touted as the classic "academy companies." Academy companies produce first-rate executives who populate their own senior ranks and also go on to lead other companies.
Return To Office Decisions: A Culture Question?
Yo-Jud Cheng, Boris Groysberg
Article, 2024
Company culture is an important source of competitive advantage and differentiation.
The Crowdless Future? Generative AI And Creative Problem-Solving
Léonard Boussioux, Jacqueline Lane, Miaomiao Zhang, Vladimir Jacimovic, Karim Lakhani
Article, 2024
The rapid advances in generative artificial intelligence (AI) open up attractive opportunities for creative problem-solving through human-guided AI partnerships.
Generative AI and the Nature of Work
Manuel Hoffmann, Sam Boysel, Frank Nagle, Sida Peng, Kevin Xu
HBS Working Paper, 2024
Recent advances in artificial intelligence (AI) technology demonstrate a considerable potential to complement human capital intensive activities.
Advice And The Bayesian Entrepreneur
Susan Cohen, Rembrand Koning
HBS Working Paper, 2024
Bayesian entrepreneurship starts from the premise that entrepreneurs’ beliefs guide their theorizing, experimentation, and choices (Agrawal et al., n.d.).
Using The Crowd As An Innovation Partner
Kevin J. Boudreau, Karim R. Lakhani
Article, 2024
From Apple to Merck to Wikipedia, more and more organizations are turning to crowds for help in solving their most vexing innovation and research questions, but managers remain understandably cautious.
A Field Experiment On Search Costs And The Formation Of Scientific Collaborations*
Kevin J. Boudreau, Tom Brady, Ina Ganguli, Patrick Gaule, Eva Guinan, Anthony Hollenberg, and Karim R. Lakhani
Article, 2024
We present the results of a field experiment conducted at Harvard Medical School to understand the extent to which search costs affect matching among scientific collaborators.
A Study Of NASA Scientists Shows How To Overcome Barriers To Open ...
Hila Lifshitz-Assaf, Michael Tushman, Karim R. Lakhani
Article, 2024
Porter’s Five Forces And Competitive Advantage In Web3
Scott Kominers, Liang Wu
Article, 2024
Competitive strategy — the art of crafting and executing plans to achieve an advantageous position in the market — is integral to any business, and especially relevant for platforms because it determines their ability to achieve network effects and scale.
What Makes A Successful Celebrity Brand?
Ayelet Israeli, Jill Avery, Leonard Schlesinger, Matt Higgins
Article, 2024
Celebrities have shifted from endorsing established brands to being influencers for established brands to drawing on their influence to create brands themselves.
Loyalty Programs May Limit Competition, And They Could Be Pushing Prices Up For Everyone
Alexandru Nichifor, Scott Kominers
Article, 2024
Human-Computer Interactions In Demand Forecasting And Labor Scheduling Decisions
Caleb Kwon, Ananth Raman, Jorge Tamayo
Not in a Series, 2024
We empirically analyze how managerial overrides to a commercial algorithm that forecasts demand and schedules labor affect store performance.
Dynamic Competition For Customer Memberships
Cristian Chica, Julian Jimenez-Cardenas, Jorge Tamayo
Article, 2024
A competitive two-period membership (subscription) market is analyzed.
Data-Driven COVID-19 Vaccine Development For Janssen
Dimitris Bertsimas, Michael Lingzhi Li, Xinggang Liu, Jennings Xu, Najat Khan
Article, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic has spurred extensive vaccine research worldwide.
Introduction To The Special Section On Business And Climate Change
Rajesh Chandy, Glen Dowell, Colin Mayer, Erica Plambeck, George Serafeim, Michael W. Toffel, L. Beril Toktay, Elke Weber
Other, 2023
Enhancing Treatment Effect Prediction On Privacy-Protected Data: An Honest Post-Processing Approach
Ta-Wei Huang, Eva Ascarza
HBS Working Paper, 2023
As firms increasingly rely on customer data for personalization, concerns over privacy and regulatory compliance have grown.
How The Best Chief Data Officers Create Value
Suraj Srinivasan, Robin Seibert
Article, 2023
Despite the rapidly increasing prominence of data and analytics functions, the majority of chief data officers (CDOs) fail to value and price the business outcomes created by their data and analytics capabilities.
Reskilling In The Age Of AI
Jorge Tamayo, Leila Doumi, Sagar Goel, Orsolya Kovács-Ondrejkovic, Raffaella Sadun
Article, 2023
In the coming decades, as the pace of technological change continues to increase, millions of workers may need to be not just upskilled but reskilled—a profoundly complex societal challenge that will sometimes require workers to both acquire new skills and change occupations entirely.
Detecting Routines: Applications To Ridesharing CRM
Ryan Dew, Eva Ascarza, Oded Netzer, Nachum Sicherman
Article, 2023
Routines shape many aspects of day-to-day consumption.
Towards Bridging The Gaps Between The Right To Explanation And The Right To Be Forgotten
Himabindu Lakkaraju, Satyapriya Krishna, Jiaqi Ma
Article, 2023
The Right to Explanation and the Right to be Forgotten are two important principles outlined to regulate algorithmic decision making and data usage in real-world applications.
On The Impact Of Actionable Explanations On Social Segregation
Ruijiang Gao, Himabindu Lakkaraju
Article, 2023
As predictive models seep into several real-world applications, it has become critical to ensure that individuals who are negatively impacted by the outcomes of these models are provided with a means for recourse.
To Overcome Resistance To DEI, Understand What’s Driving It
Eric Shuman, Eric Knowles, Amit Goldenberg
Editorial, 2023
Employees often resist DEI initiatives, which of course hinders their effectiveness.
Managing Your Team’S Emotional Dynamic
Amit Goldenberg
Editorial, 2023
Collective emotion, when a group of people shares an emotion, is often stronger than a single individual feeling that same emotion alone.
Navigating The Jagged Technological Frontier: Field Experimental Evidence Of The Effects Of AI On Knowledge Worker Productivity And Quality
Fabrizio Dell'Acqua, Edward McFowland III, Ethan Mollick, Hila Lifshitz-Assaf, Katherine Kellogg, Saran Rajendran, Lisa Krayer, François Candelon, Karim Lakhani
HBS Working Paper, 2023
The public release of Large Language Models (LLMs) has sparked tremendous interest in how humans will use Artificial Intelligence (AI) to accomplish a variety of tasks.
Organizational Responses To Product Cycles
Achyuta Adhvaryu, Vittorio Bassi, Anant Nyshadham, Jorge Tamayo, Nicolas Torres
HBS Working Paper, 2023
Product cycles entail the mass production of new—and often increasingly complex—products on a regular basis.
Remote Work Across Jobs, Companies, And Space
Stephen Hansen, Peter Lambert, Nick Bloom, Steven Davis, Raffaella Sadun, Bledi Taska
HBS Working Paper, 2023
The pandemic catalyzed an enduring shift to remote work.
How To Seed Organic Marketing In A Video-First World
Ayelet Israeli, Leonard Schlesinger, Matt Higgins
Article, 2023
Early direct-to-consumer (DTC) companies relied on plentiful capital and low-cost digital marketing to power growth.
Firm-Induced Migration Paths And Strategic Human-Capital Outcomes
Prithwiraj Choudhury, Tarun Khanna, Victoria Sevcenko
Article, 2023
Firm-induced migration typically entails firms relocating workers to fill value-creating positions at destination locations.
Life After Death: A Field Experiment With Small Businesses On Information Frictions, Stigma, And Bankruptcy
Shai Bernstein, Emanuele Colonnelli, Mitchell Hoffman, Benjamin Iverson
Non-HBS Working Paper, 2023
In a randomized control trial (RCT) with U.S.
The Strategic Use Of Corporate Philanthropy: Evidence From Bank Donations*
Seungho Choi, Raphael Jonghyeon Park, Simon Xu
2023
This article examines the strategic nature of banks’ charitable giving by studying bank donations to local nonprofit organizations.
Judging Foreign Startups
Nataliya Wright, Rembrand Koning, Tarun Khanna
Article, 2023
Can accelerators pick the most promising startup ideas no matter their provenance? Using unique data from a global accelerator where judges are randomly assigned to evaluate startups headquartered across the globe, we show that judges are less likely to recommend startups headquartered outside their home region by 4 percentage points.
Is Agenda Theater Ruining Your Meetings?
Ashley Whillans, Dave Feldman, Damian Wisniewski
Editorial, 2022
Like triaging our inboxes, clearing our Slack messages, or managing our to-do lists, preparing an agenda can make us feel like we’ve accomplished something.
Identify Critical Roles To Improve Performance
Boris Groysberg, Eric Lin, Abhijit Naik, Sascha Schmidt
Article, 2022
Putting strategy into play requires knowing your organization’s crucial roles and making sure your best talent occupies them..
Gender Equity At Work Advances At 'Glacial Pace,' New Harvard Survey Shows
Colleen Ammerman, Boris Groysberg
Article, 2022
3 Workplace Biases That Derail Mid-Career Women
Colleen Ammerman, Boris Groysberg
Article, 2022
Mid-career women are often surprised by the levels of bias and discrimination they encounter in the workplace, especially if they’ve successfully avoided it earlier in their careers.
I Don't 'Recall': The Decision To Delay Innovation Launch To Avoid Costly Product Failure
Byungyeon Kim, Oded Koenigsberg, Elie Ofek
Article, 2022
Innovations embody novel features or cutting-edge components aimed at delivering desired customer benefits.
When And How Should Firms Differentiate? Quality And Advertising Decisions In A Duopoly
Dominique Lauga, Elie Ofek, Zsolt Katona
Article, 2022
A prominent hallmark of competitive interaction is the desire to differentiate from rivals.
Not From Concentrate: Collusion In Collaborative Industries
Jordan Barry, John Hatfield, Scott Kominers, Richard Lowery
Article, 2022
The chief principle of antitrust law and theory is that reducing market concentration—having more, smaller firms instead of fewer, bigger ones—reduces anticompetitive behavior.
Climate Solutions Investments
Alex Cheema-Fox, George Serafeim, Hui Wang
Article, 2022
An increasing number of companies are providing products and services that help reduce carbon emissions in the economy.
Networking Frictions: Evidence From Entrepreneurial Networking Events In Lomé
Stefan Dimitiadis, Rembrand Koning
Not in a Series, 2022
An increasing number of companies are providing products and services that help reduce carbon emissions in the economy.
Why Decentralized Crypto Platforms Are Weathering The Crash
Shai Bernstein, Scott Kominers
Article, 2022
In the past year, crypto markets dropped from $2.9 trillion in value to around $800 billion.
Competition, Contracts, And Creativity: Evidence From Novel Writing In A Platform Market
Yanhui Wu, Feng Zhu
Article, 2022
A growing number of people today are participating in the gig economy, working as independent contractors on short-term projects.
The Pricing And Ownership Of U.S. Green Bonds
Malcolm Baker, Daniel Bergstresser, George Serafeim, Jeffrey Wurgler
Article, 2022
We study green bonds, which are bonds whose proceeds are used for environmentally sensitive purposes.
Which Connections Really Help You Find A Job?
Iavor Bojinov, Karthik Rajkumar, Guillaume Saint-Jacques, Erik Brynjolfsson, Sinan Aral
Article, 2022
Experiments involving 20 million people generated a surprising finding: moderately weak connects — and not strong connections — are the most useful in finding a new job.
Your Company Needs A Space Strategy. Now.
Matthew Weinzierl, Prithwiraj Choudhury, Tarun Khanna, Alan MacCormack, Brendan Rosseau
Article, 2022
Space is becoming a potential source of value for businesses across a range of sectors, including agriculture, pharmaceuticals, consumer goods, and tourism.