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  • All HBS Web  (1,522)
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← Page 19 of 1,522 Results →
  • 18 Nov 2002
  • Research & Ideas

Where Morals and Profits Meet: The Corporate Value Shift

working in this area, the field was just beginning to emerge. At the time, corporations were being taken to task for a host of moral failings—neglecting consumer and employee safety, ignoring civil rights, polluting the environment,... View Details
Keywords: by Carla Tishler
  • January–February 2021
  • Article

How to Help (Without Micromanaging)

By: Colin M. Fisher, Teresa M. Amabile and Julianna Pillemer
Extensive research shows that when employees get hands-on managerial support, they perform better than when they’re left to their own devices, but unnecessary or unwanted help can be demoralizing and counterproductive. So how do you intervene constructively? The... View Details
Keywords: Helping; Employees; Groups and Teams; Management
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Fisher, Colin M., Teresa M. Amabile, and Julianna Pillemer. "How to Help (Without Micromanaging)." Harvard Business Review 99, no. 1 (January–February 2021): 123–127.

    Uncovering the Mitigating Psychological Response to Monitoring Technologies

    Organizational psychologists have long held that monitoring workers saps them of their autonomy and thereby reduces their effectiveness. Yet technology has intensified such surveillance in recent years: Managers now track everything from clinicians’ handwashing to... View Details

    • February 2020
    • Article

    Effects of a Tournament Incentive Plan Incorporating Managerial Discretion in a Geographically Dispersed Organization

    By: Carolyn Deller and Tatiana Sandino
    Using retail chain data, we study the effects of a tournament incentive plan based primarily on objective performance, but incorporating managerial discretion in the selection of winners. In principle, such plans could motivate employees to perform both at a high... View Details
    Keywords: Tournaments; Subjectivity; Motivation and Incentives; Fairness; Performance Improvement; Geographic Location
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    Deller, Carolyn, and Tatiana Sandino. "Effects of a Tournament Incentive Plan Incorporating Managerial Discretion in a Geographically Dispersed Organization." Management Science 66, no. 2 (February 2020): 911–931.
    • 26 Apr 2016
    • First Look

    April 26

    giant IBM? Purchase this case: https://cb.hbsp.harvard.edu/cbmp/product/316143-PDF-ENG Harvard Business School Case 416-019 Gap Inc.: Refashioning Performance Management In 2014, clothing retailer Gap Inc. rolled out a new View Details
    Keywords: Sean Silverthorne
    • 27 Oct 2011
    • Research & Ideas

    Horrible Boss Workarounds

    what employees can do to resist them. As she states in a recent column in Harvard Business Review, "The best cure for horrible bosses is wonderful colleagues." Bad boss behavior #1: failure to communicate. At any level of... View Details
    Keywords: by Carmen Nobel
    • June 2025
    • Article

    Riding the Passion Wave or Fighting to Stay Afloat? A Theory of Differentiated Passion Contagion

    By: Emma Frank, Kai Krautter, Wen Wu and Jon M. Jachimowicz
    Prior research suggests that employees benefit from highly passionate teammates because passion spreads easily from one employee to the next. We develop theory to propose that life in high-passion teams may not be as uniformly advantageous as previously assumed. We... View Details
    Keywords: Passion; Emotional Contagion; Emotions; Groups and Teams; Employees; Power and Influence; Performance Improvement
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    Frank, Emma, Kai Krautter, Wen Wu, and Jon M. Jachimowicz. "Riding the Passion Wave or Fighting to Stay Afloat? A Theory of Differentiated Passion Contagion." Administrative Science Quarterly 70, no. 2 (June 2025): 444–495.

      Boris Groysberg

      Boris Groysberg is a professor of business administration in the Organizational Behavior unit at the Harvard Business School. Currently, he teaches courses on talent management and leadership in the school's MBA and Executive Education programs. He has won numerous... View Details
      Keywords: asset management; banking; brokerage; information technology industry; investment banking industry; professional services
      • 11 Mar 2014
      • First Look

      First Look: March 11

      and subsequent performance within the firm. Using unique personnel data for entry level undergraduates and leveraging the fact that the assignment of an employee to one of many technology centers within the... View Details
      Keywords: Sean Silverthorne
      • October 2014 (Revised May 2015)
      • Case

      HandsOn Bay Area: Scaling Up Community Service

      By: James Heskett
      HandsOn Bay Area, an organization devoted to the performance of (and development of leaders for) community service, is undergoing a significant (and internally controversial) shift in its business model from "retail" projects involving individual volunteers to... View Details
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      Heskett, James. "HandsOn Bay Area: Scaling Up Community Service." Harvard Business School Case 915-404, October 2014. (Revised May 2015.)
      • March 2006 (Revised August 2006)
      • Case

      Putnam Investments: Rebuilding the Culture

      By: Nitin Nohria and Charles Nichols
      Charles "Ed" Haldeman Jr. is promoted CEO of Putnam Investments after the firm was badly damaged by a series of improper trading practices. He is charged with the task of managing the crisis, repairing the company culture, and putting the firm back into a pattern of... View Details
      Keywords: Crime and Corruption; Organizational Culture; Organizational Change and Adaptation; Ethics; Investment Funds; Investment; Leading Change; Decision Choices and Conditions; Financial Services Industry; United States
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      Nohria, Nitin, and Charles Nichols. "Putnam Investments: Rebuilding the Culture." Harvard Business School Case 406-009, March 2006. (Revised August 2006.)
      • Research Summary

      The Transparency of Ethical Behavior

      (with Max Bazerman, Karim Kassam, and Neeru Paharia)
      This research analyzes how unethical behavior is viewed when performed... View Details
      • 05 Jun 2014
      • Research & Ideas

      Fixing the ‘I Hate Work’ Blues

      The New York Times ran a troubling story, "Why You Hate Work," in last week's "Sunday Review." The article indicated that employees work too hard and find little meaning from their work. The anecdotes we all hear about... View Details
      Keywords: by Bill George
      • 11 Oct 2004
      • Research & Ideas

      Four Ways to Create Lasting Change

      Many managers know that even when their firm launches a change initiative with great fanfare, it is tough to make the changes last. More often than not, employees wearily dismiss the initiative as another management fad. Soon enough,... View Details
      Keywords: by Martha Lagace
      • 21 Apr 2010
      • Working Paper Summaries

      Why Do Firms Use Non-Linear Incentive Schemes? Experimental Evidence on Sorting and Overconfidence

      Keywords: by Ian Larkin & Stephen Leider
      • 20 Mar 2013
      • Research & Ideas

      How CEOs Sustain Higher-Ambition Goals

      to drink the Kool-Aid and buy into the agenda or move on." On the flip side, the executives noted that employees who embrace the mission should be rewarded in a variety of ways, whether in terms of glowing View Details
      Keywords: by Dina Gerdeman
      • 26 May 2015
      • Research & Ideas

      Corporate Field Researchers Share Tricks of the Trade

      Forming A Research Partnership Teresa Amabile discussed a comprehensive field study in which her research team collected confidential, personal work diaries from 238 white-collar employees at seven disparate companies. The key finding:... View Details
      Keywords: by Carmen Nobel
      • 04 Aug 2021
      • Research & Ideas

      Worried About the Great Resignation? Be a Good Company to Come From

      reports of their peers." Recruit’s performance appraisal system, Will-Can-Must, is designed to help employees build their future. Will asks employees what they want to do now... View Details
      Keywords: by Sandra J. Sucher and Shalene Gupta
      • November 2010 (Revised April 2011)
      • Supplement

      Aman Resorts (B)

      By: Eugene Soltes and Aldo Sesia
      The (B) case describes how employees are rewarded and compensated and is used to supplement the (A) case. View Details
      Keywords: Customer Focus and Relationships; Customer Satisfaction; Globalized Firms and Management; Compensation and Benefits; Employees; Performance Evaluation; Motivation and Incentives; Accommodations Industry
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      Soltes, Eugene, and Aldo Sesia. "Aman Resorts (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 111-015, November 2010. (Revised April 2011.)
      • January–February 2020
      • Article

      Give Your Colleague the Rating He Deserves—or the One He Wants?

      By: Anthony J. Mayo, Joshua D. Margolis and Amy Gallo
      The article presents a case study on business friendship and its possible effect on employee ratings. It mentions a hypothetical case where one member of a team didn't meet his deadlines on the development of a new product, the use of a peer-to-peer employee rating... View Details
      Keywords: Groups and Teams; Relationships; Performance Evaluation; Decision Making
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      Mayo, Anthony J., Joshua D. Margolis, and Amy Gallo. "Give Your Colleague the Rating He Deserves—or the One He Wants?" Harvard Business Review 98, no. 1 (January–February 2020): 140–144.
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