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  • All HBS Web  (759)
    • News  (73)
    • Research  (620)
    • Events  (8)
    • Multimedia  (3)
  • Faculty Publications  (443)

Show Results For

  • All HBS Web  (759)
    • News  (73)
    • Research  (620)
    • Events  (8)
    • Multimedia  (3)
  • Faculty Publications  (443)
← Page 10 of 759 Results →
  • December 2014
  • Article

The Distinct Effects of Information Technology and Communication Technology on Firm Organization

By: Nicholas Bloom, Luis Garicano, Raffaella Sadun and John Van Reenen
Empirical studies on information communication technologies (ICT) typically aggregate the "information" and "communication" components together. We show theoretically and empirically that this is problematic. Information and communication technologies have very... View Details
Keywords: Communication Technology; Information Technology; Organizational Structure
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Bloom, Nicholas, Luis Garicano, Raffaella Sadun, and John Van Reenen. "The Distinct Effects of Information Technology and Communication Technology on Firm Organization." Management Science 60, no. 12 (December 2014): 2859–2885.
  • Research Summary

Diversity Orientations: Construct, Antecedents, and Consequences

Researchers have identified a number of different methods with which a group can handle its diversity. Some of the methods gaining the most attention mirror popular ideologies around colorblindness, pride in one's own subgroup, or integrative cultural pluralism.... View Details

    When Can the Market Identify Stale News?

    Why do investors react to old information? We conjecture that it is cognitively difficult to identify old content combined from multiple sources. We use a unique dataset of news passing through the Bloomberg terminal to differentiate "recombination" stories that draw... View Details
    • Article

    Beyond Good Intentions: Prompting People to Make Plans Improves Follow-through on Important Tasks

    By: Todd Rogers, Katherine L Milkman, Leslie K. John and Michael I. Norton
    Many intend to stay fit but fail to exercise or eat healthfully; students intend to earn good grades but study too little; citizens intend to vote but fail to turnout. How can policymakers help people follow through on intentions like these? Plan-making, a tool that... View Details
    Keywords: Behavior; Success; Planning
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    Rogers, Todd, Katherine L Milkman, Leslie K. John, and Michael I. Norton. "Beyond Good Intentions: Prompting People to Make Plans Improves Follow-through on Important Tasks." Behavioral Science & Policy 1, no. 2 (December 2015): 33–41.
    • 2007
    • Book

    The CEO Within: Why Inside Outsiders Are the Key to Succession Planning

    By: Joseph L. Bower
    With rising CEO turnover, companies are increasingly looking outside for qualified candidates. Sure, externally recruited CEOs bring fresh perspectives and connections. But they lack the in-depth knowledge of the company's culture and history that they need to succeed.... View Details
    Keywords: Recruitment; Knowledge Use and Leverage; Leadership Development; Management Succession
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    Bower, Joseph L. The CEO Within: Why Inside Outsiders Are the Key to Succession Planning. Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2007.
    • Research Summary

    Team, Individual, and Organizational Learning From Experience in Two High-Hazard Industries

    High-hazard industries such as nuclear power and chemical process plants must learn and improve without sole reliance on trial-and-error. Considerable attention and resources are placed on learning from operating experience, including exchange of best practices, peer... View Details
    • January 10, 2022
    • Article

    The Secret Ingredient of Thriving Companies? Human Magic

    By: Hubert Joly
    The traditional corporate approach to motivating people has been a combination of carrots and sticks: a system of financial incentives designed to mobilize everyone around a plan designed by a few smart people at the top. Multiple studies have confirmed that, for any... View Details
    Keywords: Meaning; Purpose; Organizational Culture; Employees; Motivation and Incentives; Performance
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    Joly, Hubert. "The Secret Ingredient of Thriving Companies? Human Magic." Harvard Business Review (website) (January 10, 2022).
    • 09 Nov 2007
    • Working Paper Summaries

    Recognizing the New: A Multi-Agent Model of Analogy in Strategic Decision-Making

    Keywords: by Giovanni M. Gavetti & Massimo Warglien
    • June 2024
    • Article

    The Diversity Heuristic: How Team Demographic Composition Influences Judgments of Team Creativity

    By: Devon Proudfoot, Zachariah Berry, Edward H. Chang and Min B. Kay
    Despite mixed evidence for the relationship between demographic diversity and creativity, we propose that observers hold a lay belief that demographic diversity increases creativity and apply this lay belief in judgments about teams and their creative work. Across... View Details
    Keywords: Diversity; Race; Gender; Groups and Teams; Perception; Creativity
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    Proudfoot, Devon, Zachariah Berry, Edward H. Chang, and Min B. Kay. "The Diversity Heuristic: How Team Demographic Composition Influences Judgments of Team Creativity." Management Science 70, no. 6 (June 2024): 3879–3901.
    • November 2013
    • Case

    Ministry of Supply: Will Professionals Demand Its Performance?

    By: Mukti Khaire and Hannah Catzen
    Ministry of Supply is an entrepreneurial venture in the apparel sector. The firm focuses on a specific segment—'performance professional wear'—within the sector, specializing in clothes that use fabrics with high-tech performance features (such as moisture-wicking,... View Details
    Keywords: Fashion And Creative Industries; Entrepreneurship; Fashion Industry
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    Khaire, Mukti, and Hannah Catzen. "Ministry of Supply: Will Professionals Demand Its Performance?" Harvard Business School Case 814-042, November 2013.
    • February 1997
    • Background Note

    Errors in Social Judgment: Implications for Negotiation and Conflict Resolution, Part 1

    For the past quarter-century, the field of social cognition has documented a number of ways in which individuals and groups are prone to make characteristic errors when judging others. This note examines the ways in which these tendencies pose difficulties for... View Details
    Keywords: Prejudice and Bias; Negotiation; Conflict and Resolution
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    Robinson, Robert J. "Errors in Social Judgment: Implications for Negotiation and Conflict Resolution, Part 1." Harvard Business School Background Note 897-103, February 1997.
    • 10 Jan 2022
    • News

    The Secret Ingredient of Thriving Companies? Human Magic.

    • 2023
    • Working Paper

    Complexity and Time

    By: Benjamin Enke, Thomas Graeber and Ryan Oprea
    We provide experimental evidence that core intertemporal choice anomalies -- including extreme short-run impatience, structural estimates of present bias, hyperbolicity and transitivity violations -- are driven by complexity rather than time or risk preferences. First,... View Details
    Keywords: Decision Choices and Conditions; Motivation and Incentives
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    Enke, Benjamin, Thomas Graeber, and Ryan Oprea. "Complexity and Time." NBER Working Paper Series, No. 31047, March 2023.
    • February 1997
    • Background Note

    Errors in Social Judgment: Implications for Negotiation and Conflict Resolution--Part 2: Partisan Perceptions

    For the past quarter-century, the field of social cognition has documented a number of ways in which individuals and groups are prone to make characteristic errors when judging others. This note examines the ways in which these tendencies pose difficulties for... View Details
    Keywords: Prejudice and Bias; Negotiation; Conflict and Resolution
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    Robinson, Robert J. "Errors in Social Judgment: Implications for Negotiation and Conflict Resolution--Part 2: Partisan Perceptions." Harvard Business School Background Note 897-104, February 1997.
    • 1995
    • Article

    The Positive Impact of Creative Activity: Effects of Creative Task Engagement and Motivational Focus on College Student's Learning

    By: R. Conti, T. M. Amabile and S. Pollack
    This study assessed the effectiveness of engaging students in a creative activity on a topic as a means of encouraging an active cognitive set toward learning that topic area. This technique was examined in three motivational contexts. Before reading a short... View Details
    Keywords: Creativity; Cognition and Thinking; Behavior; Performance; Motivation and Incentives; Training
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    Conti, R., T. M. Amabile, and S. Pollack. "The Positive Impact of Creative Activity: Effects of Creative Task Engagement and Motivational Focus on College Student's Learning." Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 21 (1995): 1107–1116.
    • September 2020
    • Article

    How Multimedia Shape Crowdfunding Outcomes: The Overshadowing Effect of Images and Videos on Text in Campaign Information

    By: J Yang, Y Li, Goran Calic and Anton Shevchenko
    This study aims to explore the moderating effect of the number of images and videos on the relationship between text length in crowdfunding campaign descriptions and crowdfunding outcomes. We use data from 13,622 technology campaigns on the Kickstarter website to test... View Details
    Keywords: Crowdfunding; Media; Cognition and Thinking; Performance Effectiveness; Entrepreneurial Finance
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    Yang, J., Y Li, Goran Calic, and Anton Shevchenko. "How Multimedia Shape Crowdfunding Outcomes: The Overshadowing Effect of Images and Videos on Text in Campaign Information." Journal of Business Research 117 (September 2020): 6–18.
    • 14 Aug 2012
    • Working Paper Summaries

    Rainmakers: Why Bad Weather Means Good Productivity

    Keywords: by Jooa Julia Lee, Francesca Gino & Bradley R. Staats

      Jan W. Rivkin

      Jan W. Rivkin is a Professor in the Strategy Unit at Harvard Business School. In the past, he has served as Faculty Chair of the MBA Program, Senior Associate Dean for Research, and head of the Strategy Unit. His research, course development, and teaching focus on... View Details

      Keywords: airline; computer; internet; music; transportation
      • 09 Sep 2014
      • First Look

      First Look: September 9

      discussing how insights from the study of hybrid organizing in social enterprises may contribute to organization theory. Publisher's link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19416520.2014.893615   Working Papers Dangerous Expectations: Breaking Rules to Resolve View Details
      Keywords: Sean Silverthorne
      • Article

      Scaling Up Analogical Innovation with Crowds and AI

      By: Aniket Kittur, Lisa Yu, Tom Hope, Joel Chan, Hila Lifshitz - Assaf, Karni Gilon, Felicia Ng, Robert Kraut and Dafna Shachaf
      Analogy—the ability to find and apply deep structural patterns across domains—has been fundamental to human innovation in science and technology. Today there is a growing opportunity to accelerate innovation by moving analogy out of a single person’s mind and... View Details
      Keywords: Innovation; Artificial Intelligence; Crowdsourcing; Analogy; Innovation and Invention; Technology; Science
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      Kittur, Aniket, Lisa Yu, Tom Hope, Joel Chan, Hila Lifshitz - Assaf, Karni Gilon, Felicia Ng, Robert Kraut, and Dafna Shachaf. "Scaling Up Analogical Innovation with Crowds and AI." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 116, no. 6 (February 5, 2019): 1870–1877.
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