Sandra J. Sucher
MBA Class of 1966 Professor of Management Practice
MBA Class of 1966 Professor of Management Practice
Sandra Sucher, professor of management practice at Harvard Business School, is an internationally recognized trust researcher. The Power of Trust, her third book, is based on two decades of global research on how companies build stakeholder trust and how, if lost, they can restore it. Sandra studies trust in action and how it affects the success of leaders and companies in innovating with AI and new technologies, restructuring and leading turnarounds, managing sustainability and ecosystems, entering and exiting markets, and navigating controversy.
Sandra is a member of the Edelman Trust Institute Advisory Board, advising them on Trust Barometer research. She also collaborates with Deloitte on TrustIQ™, a proprietary tool that measures key elements of trust in major corporations and public sector organizations.
At Harvard, Sandra studies how organizations become trusted and the vital role leaders play in building and restoring trust. She also studies workforce change and best practices in managing layoffs and restructuring. She has authored 110 business cases, technical notes, video interviews, teaching notes, and three books.
Sandra was a business executive for 20 years before joining Harvard. As a senior executive at Fidelity Investments, she measured customer loyalty, redesigned back-office operations, and improved the quality of service. In retailing, she helped build new businesses. Sandra has served on corporate and nonprofit boards and as Chair of the Better Business Bureau.
Sandra’s research has been featured in the Financial Times, Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Bloomberg, Barron’s, Forbes, Business Insider, CNBC, NPR, and Marketplace.
- Featured Work
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How Companies Build It, Lose It, Regain It
Trust is the most powerful force underlying the success of every business. Yet it can be shattered in an instant, with a devastating impact on a company’s market cap and reputation. How to build and sustain trust requires fresh insight into why customers, employees, community members and investors decide whether an organization can be trusted.
Based on two decades of research and illustrated through vivid storytelling, Sandra Sucher and Shalene Gupta examine the economic impact of trust, the science behind it and conclusively prove that trust is built from the inside-out. Trust emerges from a company being the "real deal": creating products and services that work, having good intentions, treating people fairly, and taking responsibility for all the impacts an organization creates, whether intended or not.
When trust is in the room great things can happen. Sucher and Gupta’s innovative foundation for executing the elements of trust - competence, motives, means, impact – explains how trust can be woven into the day-to-day and the long term. Most importantly, even when lost, trust can be regained, as illustrated through their accounts of companies across the globe who pull themselves out of scandal and corruption by doing the right things right.
Student TextbookSuccessful leaders – at any level and in any arena – are inevitably presented with moral and ethical choices. This unique and innovative textbook is designed to encourage students and managers to confront those fundamental moral challenges, to develop skills in moral analysis and judgment, and to come to terms with their own definition of moral leadership and how it can be translated into action. Drawing on the inspiration of major literary and historical figures such as Machiavelli, Achebe, Sir Thomas More, U.S. President Harry S. Truman, and based upon an impressive array of literary sources, including novels, plays, history and biography, the book centers on four questions implicitly asked of all leaders:
- What is the nature of a moral challenge?
- How do people 'reason morally'?
- How do leaders contend with the moral choices they face?
- How is moral leadership different from leadership in general?
The Moral Leader is based upon the renowned course of the same name taught at Harvard Business School for over two decades. With an emphasis on decision-making and action, students learn to identify moral problems, to address them systematically, and to develop skills that aid them throughout their studies and their professional lives. At times challenging, insightful, and always illuminating, this book is essential reading for all serious students of leadership, management, business ethics or policy.
Visit the companion website at www.routledge.com/textbooks/9780415400640
Instructor ManualThis book is a comprehensive, practical manual to help instructors integrate moral leadership in their own courses, drawing from the experience and resources of the Harvard Business School course 'The Moral Leader', an MBA elective taken by thousands of HBS students over nearly twenty years. Through the close study of literature--novels, plays, and historical accounts-- followed by rigorous classroom discussion, this innovative course encourages students to confront fundamental moral challenges, to develop skills in moral analysis and judgment, and to come to terms with their own definition of moral leadership.
Using the guide's background material and detailed teaching plans, instructors will be well prepared to lead their students in the study of this vital and important subject. Featuring a website to run alongside that links the manual with the textbook and provides a wealth of extra resources, including on-line links to Harvard Business School case studies and teaching notes this manual forms a perfect complement to The Moral Leader core text also by Sandra Sucher.
- Books
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- Sucher, Sandra J., and Shalene Gupta. The Power of Trust: How Companies Build It, Lose It, Regain It. New York: PublicAffairs, 2021. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. The Moral Leader: Challenges, Tools, and Insights. Routledge, 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. Teaching the Moral Leader: A Literature-Based Leadership Course. Routledge, 2007. View Details
- Journal Articles
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- Bersoff, David M., Sandra J. Sucher, and Peter Tufano. "How Companies Should Weigh in on a Controversy: A Better Approach to Stakeholder Management." Harvard Business Review 102, no. 2 (March–April 2024): 108–119. View Details
- Brokerhof, Inge M., Sandra J. Sucher, P. Matthijs Bal, Frank Hakemulder, Paul G. W. Jansen, and Omar N. Solinger. "Developing Moral Muscle in a Literature-based Business Ethics Course." Academy of Management Learning & Education 22, no. 1 (March 2023): 63–87. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Marilyn Morgan Westner. "What Companies Still Get Wrong about Layoffs." Harvard Business Review (website) (December 8, 2022). View Details
- Sucher, Sandra. "CEOs Didn't Make the Roe Decision. It's Still Their Problem to Solve." Barron's (June 25, 2022). View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Shalene Gupta. "3 Steps to Help Companies Rebuild Trust During the Pandemic." Harvard Business School Working Knowledge (January 20, 2022). View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Shalene Gupta. "The Breach of the U.S. Capitol Was a Breach of Trust." Harvard Business Review Digital Articles (January 11, 2021). View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Shalene Gupta. "How to Make Furloughs More Humane." Harvard Business Review Digital Articles (April 24, 2020). View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Shalene Gupta. "The Elements of a Good Company Apology." Special Issue on Broken Trust. Harvard Business Review: The Big Idea (July 2019). View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Shalene Gupta. "Leading with Trust." Special Issue on Broken Trust. Harvard Business Review: The Big Idea (July 2019). View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Shalene Gupta. "The Trust Crisis." Special Issue on Broken Trust. Harvard Business Review: The Big Idea (July 2019). View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "How Boeing Should Have Responded to the 737 Max Safety Crisis." Harvard Business Review Digital Articles (March 14, 2019). View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Shalene Gupta. "Layoffs That Don't Break Your Company: Better Approaches to Workforce Transition." Harvard Business Review 96, no. 3 (May–June 2018): 122–129. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Matthew Preble. "Case Study: Follow Dubious Orders or Speak Up?" Harvard Business Review 95, no. 4 (July–August 2017): 139–141. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Susan J. Winterberg. "Leadership Lessons of the Great Recession: Options for Economic Downturns." Harvard Business School Working Knowledge (September 9, 2015). View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "The Quest for Better Layoffs." Harvard Business School Working Knowledge (January 7, 2015). View Details
- Cases and Teaching Materials
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- Sucher, Sandra J., Marilyn Morgan Westner, and Bethelehem Y Araya. "Recruit Holdings Co. Ltd.: Managing Innovation and Trust in the Age of AI (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 324-026, October 2023. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Marilyn Morgan Westner, and Bethelehem Y Araya. "Recruit Holdings Co. Ltd.: Managing Innovation and Trust in the Age of AI." Harvard Business School Case 324-025, October 2023. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Marilyn Morgan Westner, and Fares Khrais. "Kaspi.kz (C): The 2014 Run on the Bank: Actions and Results." Harvard Business School Supplement 324-024, August 2023. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Marilyn Morgan Westner, and Fares Khrais. "Kaspi.kz (B): The 2014 Run on the Bank." Harvard Business School Supplement 324-023, August 2023. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Fares Khrais, and Marilyn Morgan Westner. "Kaspi.kz: Building Trust through Innovation." Harvard Business School Case 324-022, September 2023. (Revised June 2024.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Shalene Gupta, and Tom Quinn. "Twiddy & Company: Trust in a Chaotic Environment." Harvard Business School Case 324-021, September 2023. (Revised December 2023.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Marilyn Morgan Westner. "Layoffs in the Tech Industry: 2022–2023." Harvard Business School Case 323-095, March 2023. (Revised June 2023.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Marilyn Morgan Westner, and Christopher Diak. "Economic Analysis: The Hidden Costs of Layoffs and Managing Staff Reductions." Harvard Business School Background Note 323-073, March 2023. (Revised December 2023.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Sarah Livick-Moses, and Dave Habeeb. "Leading with Trust: Sarah Al-Suhaimi Video Supplement." Harvard Business School Multimedia/Video Supplement 323-701, June 2023. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Marilyn Morgan Westner. "LCA Action Planning: Responsibility and Accountability." Harvard Business School Technical Note 323-060, January 2023. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Fares Khrais, Shalene Gupta, and Menna Hassan. "Women in the Saudi Arabian Workforce." Harvard Business School Background Note 323-017, August 2022. (Revised October 2024.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Shalene Gupta, and Susan J. Winterberg. "Michelin’s Green Gold Bahia Program: Leaving With Grace." Harvard Business School Case 322-132, June 2022. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "The Impact of Layoffs: Malika Amrani." Harvard Business School Multimedia/Video Supplement 922-707, March 2022. View Details
- Keenan, Elizabeth A., Sandra J. Sucher, and Shalene Gupta. "Tommy Hilfiger Adaptive: Fashion for All." Harvard Business School Case 522-053, November 2021. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Gamze Yucaoglu, Shalene Gupta, and Fares Khrais. "The NCB Capital Turnaround: Waking the Sleeping Giant." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 322-071, November 2021. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Shalene Gupta. "Globalizing Japan's Dream Machine: Recruit Holdings Co., Ltd." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 322-072, November 2021. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Gamze Yucaoglu, Shalene Gupta, and Fares Khrais. "The NCB Capital Turnaround: Waking the Sleeping Giant." Harvard Business School Case 322-043, August 2021. (Revised November 2021.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Nien-he Hsieh, Susan J. Winterberg, Nancy Hua Dai, and Shalene Gupta. "Suzhou Good-Ark Electronics: Creating and Implementing a Sage Culture." Harvard Business School Case 321-085, June 2021. (Revised December 2021.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "A Framework for Interpersonal Skills Development." Harvard Business School Technical Note 320-040, October 2019. (Revised February 2020.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Shalene Gupta. "Globalizing Japan's Dream Machine: Recruit Holdings Co., Ltd." Harvard Business School Case 318-130, April 2018. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "An Intern's Dilemma (A) and (B)." Harvard Business School Teaching Plan 317-117, April 2017. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Matthew Preble. "An Intern's Dilemma (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 316-129, December 2015. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Matthew Preble. "An Intern's Dilemma (A)." Harvard Business School Case 316-128, December 2015. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Susan J. Winterberg. "Nokia's Bridge Program (A) & (B)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 316-114, December 2015. View Details
- Nohria, Nitin, Sandra J. Sucher, Joseph Badaracco, and Bridget Gurtler. "Ethical Analysis: Situation versus Character." Harvard Business School Background Note 316-078, September 2015. (Revised January 2023.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Susan J. Winterberg. "Honeywell and the Great Recession (A) & (B)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 315-048, April 2015. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Susan J. Winterberg. "Nokia's Bridge Program: Outcome and Results (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 315-003, February 2015. (Revised May 2015.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Susan J. Winterberg. "Nokia's Bridge Program: Redesigning Layoffs (A)." Harvard Business School Case 315-002, February 2015. (Revised August 2016.) View Details
- Ramanna, Karthik, Sandra J. Sucher, and Ian McKown Cornell. "Business and Government: Campaign Contributions and Lobbying in the United States." Harvard Business School Technical Note 113-037, March 2013. (Revised January 2015.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Susan J. Winterberg. "Honeywell and the Great Recession: The Economic Recovery (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 315-023, October 2014. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Susan J. Winterberg. "Honeywell and the Great Recession (A)." Harvard Business School Case 315-022, October 2014. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Susan J. Winterberg. "Furloughs: An Alternative to Layoffs for Economic Downturns." Harvard Business School Background Note 314-097, February 2014. View Details
- Ramanna, Karthik, and Sandra Sucher. "Business and Government: Campaign Contributions and Lobbying in the United States." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 113-138, June 2013. (Revised March 2015.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Henry McGee. "A Brief History of the U.S. Tobacco Industry Controversy." Harvard Business School Background Note 613-044, September 2012. (Revised August 2013.) View Details
- Margolis, Joshua D., and Sandra J. Sucher. "Guide to ISDL Reflections." Harvard Business School Technical Note 613-077, January 2013. (Revised October 2019.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Clayton S. Rose. "On Weldon's Watch: Recalls at Johnson & Johnson from 2009 to 2010 (TN)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 613-064, November 2012. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Elena Corsi. "Global Diversity and Inclusion at Royal Dutch Shell (A)." Harvard Business School Case 613-063, October 2012. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Chris and Alison Weston (A), (B), (C)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 613-018, November 2012. (Revised January 2018.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Generation Investment Management, Video." Harvard Business School Video Supplement 612-704, July 2012. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Matthew Preble. "Generation Investment Management." Harvard Business School Case 613-002, July 2012. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "The Impact of Layoffs ." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 612-024, August 2011. (Revised November 2014.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Managing the Layoff Process: France." Harvard Business School Background Note 612-083, March 2012. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Managing the Layoff Process: The United States." Harvard Business School Background Note 612-067, March 2012. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Managing the Layoff Process: India." Harvard Business School Background Note 612-068, March 2012. View Details
- Deshpande, Rohit, Sandra J. Sucher, and Laura Winig. "Cipla 2011." Harvard Business School Case 511-050, April 2011. (Revised April 2015.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Celia Moore. "Chris and Alison Weston (C)." Harvard Business School Supplement 612-021, December 2011. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Nien-he Hsieh. "A Framework for Ethical Reasoning." Harvard Business School Background Note 610-050, January 2010. (Revised December 2011.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., David Rosales, and Elana Green. "The Impact of Layoffs." Harvard Business School Video Supplement 612-702, November 2011. (Revised January 2014.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Celia Moore. "Chris and Alison Weston (A)." Harvard Business School Case 612-019, October 2011. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Celia Moore. "Chris and Alison Weston (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 612-020, October 2011. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Celia Moore. "Ethical Analysis: Moral Disengagement." Harvard Business School Background Note 612-043, October 2011. (Revised December 2022.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Phillip Andrews. "Anne Riley: Laid Off." Harvard Business School Case 612-008, September 2011. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Global Diversity and Inclusion at Royal Dutch Shell (A) and (B)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 612-023, August 2011. (Revised February 2015.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work Series (TN)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 611-077, June 2011. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Differences at Work: The Individual Experience." Harvard Business School Background Note 608-068, November 2007. (Revised June 2016.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Daniel Baer. "Yahoo! in China (A)." Harvard Business School Case 609-051, February 2009. (Revised April 2011.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Rebecca M. Henderson, and Matthew Preble. "Shell Nigeria: The WikiLeaks Cables." Harvard Business School Case 311-084, April 2011. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Elana Sara Green, and David Alberto Rosales. "Layoffs: Management Implications and Best Practices." Harvard Business School Background Note 611-029, December 2010. (Revised March 2011.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Daniela Beyersdorfer. "Global Diversity and Inclusion at Royal Dutch Shell (B): The Impact of Restructuring." Harvard Business School Supplement 611-051, January 2011. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Matthew Preble. "An Intern's Dilemma." Harvard Business School Case 611-041, January 2011. (Revised August 2013.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Elana Sara Green, David Alberto Rosales, and Susan J. Winterberg. "Layoffs: Effects on Key Stakeholders." Harvard Business School Background Note 611-028, December 2010. (Revised September 2014.) View Details
- Rose, Clayton S., Sandra J. Sucher, Rachel Gordon, and Matthew Preble. "On Weldon's Watch: Recalls at Johnson & Johnson from 2009 to 2010." Harvard Business School Case 311-029, October 2010. (Revised August 2016.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Social Identity Profile." Harvard Business School Exercise 608-091, November 2007. (Revised September 2010.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Generation Investment Management (TN)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 611-006, August 2010. (Revised June 2020.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Module II: Moral Reasoning Class Summaries." Harvard Business School Module Note 605-046, November 2004. (Revised April 2010.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Daniel Baer. "Yahoo! in China (A) and (B)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 610-067, February 2010. (Revised September 2013.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Module III: Moral Leadership Class Summaries." Harvard Business School Module Note 605-052, December 2004. (Revised December 2009.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., Daniela Beyersdorfer, and Ian McKown Cornell. "Note on Socially Responsible Investing." Harvard Business School Background Note 609-060, February 2009. (Revised August 2012.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Module I: Moral Challenge Class Summaries." Harvard Business School Module Note 605-036, September 2004. (Revised November 2012.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Daniel Baer. "Yahoo! in China (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 609-073, February 2009. (Revised September 2009.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Martin (A)." Harvard Business School Case 408-019, November 2007. (Revised July 2009.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Martin (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 408-052, November 2007. (Revised July 2009.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Differences at Work: The Leadership Challenge." Harvard Business School Background Note 609-056, November 2008. (Revised September 2014.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Sameer (A)." Harvard Business School Case 609-053, November 2008. (Revised December 2008.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Sameer (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 609-054, November 2008. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Will (A)." Harvard Business School Case 408-013, November 2007. (Revised October 2008.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Will (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 408-045, November 2007. (Revised October 2008.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Jason (A)." Harvard Business School Case 408-016, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Jason (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 408-049, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Jenny (A)." Harvard Business School Case 408-017, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Jenny (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 408-050, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Emily (A)." Harvard Business School Case 408-014, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Emily (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 408-046, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Emily (C)." Harvard Business School Supplement 408-047, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Ben (C)." Harvard Business School Supplement 408-044, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Allie (A)." Harvard Business School Case 408-037, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Sam (A)." Harvard Business School Case 408-021, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Sam (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 408-054, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Allie (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 408-055, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Allie (C)." Harvard Business School Supplement 408-056, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Erica (A)." Harvard Business School Case 408-015, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Erica (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 408-048, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Alex (A)." Harvard Business School Case 408-011, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Alex (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 408-042, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Ben (A)." Harvard Business School Case 408-012, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Rachel Gordon. "Differences at Work: Ben (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 408-043, November 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Aldo Sesia. "Restoring Trust at WorldCom (TN)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 307-025, September 2006. (Revised July 2007.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Blessed Assurance: The Challenge of a Moral Dilemma." Harvard Business School Module Note 607-067, February 2007. (Revised March 2007.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Antigone: The Challenge of Right Versus Right." Harvard Business School Module Note 607-066, February 2007. (Revised March 2007.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Things Fall Apart Summary: The Challenge of New Principles." Harvard Business School Module Note 607-068, February 2007. (Revised March 2007.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "The Sweet Hereafter Summary: Reasoning from Personal Perspective." Harvard Business School Module Note 607-070, February 2007. (Revised March 2007.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Truman and the Bomb Summary: Balancing Benefits and Harms." Harvard Business School Module Note 607-075, February 2007. (Revised March 2007.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Endurance Summary: The Challenge of Right Versus Wrong." Harvard Business School Module Note 607-065, February 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Trifles Summary: Reasoning from Moral Theory." Harvard Business School Module Note 607-069, February 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "The Remains of the Day Summary: Reasoning From a Moral Code." Harvard Business School Module Note 607-071, February 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "A Man for All Seasons Summary: Reasoning from Multiple Moralities." Harvard Business School Module Note 607-072, February 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "The Prince Summary: Exercising Authority." Harvard Business School Module Note 607-073, February 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "The Secret Sharer Summary: Earning Legitimacy." Harvard Business School Module Note 607-074, February 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Katharine Graham Summary: Taking a Stand." Harvard Business School Module Note 607-076, February 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "American Ground Summary: Assuming Leadership." Harvard Business School Module Note 607-077, February 2007. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Aldo Sesia. "James Burke: A Career in American Business Series (LCA) (TN)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 307-028, September 2006. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Reading the Material." Harvard Business School Background Note 605-027, August 2004. (Revised August 2006.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Moral Reasoning: A Practical Guide for Leaders." Harvard Business School Background Note 604-054, October 2003. (Revised April 2006.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Stacy McManus. "Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company, The." Harvard Business School Case 601-163, March 2001. (Revised September 2005.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Stacy McManus. "Novartis: The Challenge of Success (A)." Harvard Business School Case 603-043, April 2003. (Revised October 2004.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Stacy McManus. "Novartis: The Challenge of Success (B)." Harvard Business School Case 603-044, April 2003. (Revised October 2004.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Stacy McManus. "Novartis: The Challenge of Success (C)." Harvard Business School Case 603-045, June 2003. (Revised October 2004.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Stacy McManus. "Novartis: The Challenge of Success (D)." Harvard Business School Case 603-046, June 2003. (Revised October 2004.) View Details
- Reiling, Henry B., M. Diane Burton, and Sandra J. Sucher. "Crimson Greetings Simulation (TN)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 603-051, August 2002. (Revised August 2004.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Herman Miller (A): Innovation by Design (TN)." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 604-056, October 2003. View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Stacy McManus. "Herman Miller (A): Innovation by Design." Harvard Business School Case 602-023, October 2001. (Revised November 2002.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Stacy McManus. "Herman Miller(B): Creating Innovation Streams." Harvard Business School Case 602-024, October 2001. (Revised November 2002.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Four Principles of Biomedical Ethics: Definitions and Examples." Harvard Business School Compilation 603-079, November 2002. View Details
- MacCormack, Alan D., Sandra J. Sucher, and Suraj Rangashayi. "Le Petit Chef." Harvard Business School Case 602-080, October 2001. (Revised September 2022.) View Details
- MacCormack, Alan D., and Sandra J. Sucher. "Le Petit Chef TN." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 602-117, January 2002. (Revised November 2002.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Daniel Galvin. "WingspanBank.com (A)." Harvard Business School Case 600-035, October 1999. (Revised July 2002.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J., and Stacy McManus. "WingspanBank.com (B): Should This Bird Still Fly?" Harvard Business School Case 601-071, March 2001. (Revised July 2002.) View Details
- Sucher, Sandra J. "Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company, The TN." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 602-113, January 2002. View Details
- Gittell, Jody H., and Sandra J. Sucher. "Reading Rehabilitation Hospital: Implementing Patient-Focused Care TN." Harvard Business School Teaching Note 899-139, May 1999. (Revised July 2000.) View Details
- Other Publications and Materials
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- Sucher, Sandra J., and Susan J. Winterberg. "Michelin: Socially Responsible Industrial Restructuring." Report, 2016. View Details
- Presentations
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- Sucher, Sandra J. "The Power of Trust." Institute of Business Ethics (IBE), June 27, 2022. View Details
- Research Summary
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In this research, I aim to provide a practical orientation to trust—how to build it, how it can be damaged, how it might be repaired—grounded in my experience as an executive and in the research on organizational trust and moral philosophy. As a case researcher, I study trust qualitatively. In fact, like the person who discovered they had been speaking in prose all their life, it appears that I have been studying organizational trust for decades, both at HBS and before. I introduced this work as a “Big Idea” series for Harvard Business Review in 2019, and followed it in July 2021 with the publication of my third book, The Power of Trust: How Companies Build It, Lose It, Regain It, by Public Affairs.
This research examines the science behind trust, grounding our understanding of why we humans trust in the first place, describing how customers, employees, community members and investors decide whether an organization or a person can be trusted. It shows that creating and sustaining trust does not come from reputation-building and PR but by being the “real deal,” creating products, services, and technologies that work, having good intentions, treating people fairly, and taking responsibility for all the impacts an organization creates, whether intended or not. The research also corrects a common misperception: lost trust can, in fact, be regained, and delves into the process of how to do this, including the three steps of an effective apology.
Keywords: Power; Globalization; Leadership; Corporate Culture; Future Of Work; Innovation; Human Resources; Technology Strategy; Automation; Stakeholder Engagement; Employee Attitude; Customer Behavior; Shareholder Value; Government And Business; Impact Investing; Corporate Accountability; Corporate Change And Sustainability; Asia; Europe; South America; Middle East; North And Central America; Trust; Asia; Europe; South America; Middle East; North and Central AmericaThis research encompasses layoffs, furloughs and restructuring, global practices that affect millions of employees and thousands of companies every year. In this work I aim to replace bad practice that damages trust with good (or at least better) practice through cases, notes, and articles. The most recent articles include “Layoffs can be Bad Business: 5 Strategies to Consider Before Cutting Staff,” (HBS Working Knowledge 2023) and “What Companies Still Get Wrong about Layoffs,” (HBR website 2023), which builds on “Layoffs That Don’t Break Your Company: Better Approaches to Workforce Change,” (HBR 2018) and “How to Make Furloughs More Humane,” (HBR Digital 2020). The new 2023 HBS case, “Layoffs in the Tech Industry: 2022-2023” chronicles the most recent layoff practices of tech companies, and the 2023 HBS note, “Economic Analysis: The Hidden Costs of Layoffs and Managing Staff Reductions” describes the compelling evidence that these practices may be common and if managed well, can pave a sustainable path to the future, but if not, can undermine company functioning in damaging and predictable ways.
In this research I develop cases and articles that provide thought-provoking, real-world examples of the ways in which social identity differences emerge and are managed in the workplace, and the skills needed to constructively engage with differences to create and nurture trust. The most recent case is about Sarah Al-Suhaimi, who at 34 became the first woman to head up an investment bank in Saudi Arabia (“The NCB Capital Turnaround: Waking the Sleeping Giant”), and article “Coming Out as Trans at Work,” (HBR October 2021). Other materials include "Differences at Work," 11 mini-cases based on HBS students' own experiences of social identity challenges in the workplace, conceptual notes on the individual experience and leadership challenges of managing differences, and "Global Diversity and Inclusion at Royal Dutch Shell," a case that examines the challenges of managing differences in 100 countries around the world.
Can we get better at moral decision making? How is the capacity to exercise moral leadership developed? One answer to these questions is the notion of “moral muscle,” which is a combination of moral awareness (the ability to recognize situations that can be legitimately considered from a moral point of view), motivation for day-to-day practice, and the desire to build moral character in the long term. Moral muscle emerged from research into student experiences in “The Moral Leader,” a literature-based course on leadership I have taught for two decades at Harvard Business School (for a description, see The Moral Leader: Challenges, Tools, and Insights, a student textbook, and Teaching ‘The Moral Leader,’ an instructor manual).
This research identifies how students acquire moral muscle beginning from different starting points, and charts the paths through which moral muscle develops. The research has promise for helping managers and employees get better at making decisions with moral consequences in all the areas where trust can be built or lost.
- Awards & Honors
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Received the 2019–2020 Robert F. Greenhill Award.Received the 2007–2008 Robert F. Greenhill Award.Named a Henry B. Arthur Fellow, 2003–2004.
- Additional Information
- Areas of Interest
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- globalization
- leadership
- managing innovation
- organizational change and transformation
- trust
- business and poverty
- corporate culture
- corporate social responsibility
- developing countries
- economic development
- gender
- innovation
- organizational behavior
- organizational development
- process improvement
- race and ethnicity
- strategic human resources management
- apparel
- banking
- brokerage
- clothing
- fashion
- financial services
- furniture
- hotels & motels
- retail financial services
- retailing
- service industry
- Africa
- Europe
- France
- Ireland
- North America
- Switzerland
- United States
- Western Europe
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