Columbia Business School Welcomes New Professors
Get to know the new faculty members joining CBS. Discover their extensive experience and expertise in fields ranging from economics to organizational behavior.
Get to know the new faculty members joining CBS. Discover their extensive experience and expertise in fields ranging from economics to organizational behavior.
Columbia Business School faculty members are world-renowned — not only for generating new thinking in their fields but also for having a genuine impact on current business practices. Our professors routinely partner with businesses in New York and across the globe to test, refine, and implement new ideas for the ever-changing business landscape. This interchange of theory and practice is part of what makes the School such a rich environment for creating research that is truly groundbreaking.
The article offers the authors' views on expatriate management programs and the benefits from executives interacting with the people and institutions of the host country. The idea that international experience or interaction between foreign managers and local people will help managers become more creative, entrepreneurial, and successful is discussed. The concept of integrative complexity in bi-cultural managers which enhances job performance is mentioned.
The Kidney Case is multi-person exercise that involves the allocation of a single kidney. Students read profiles of eight candidates for the kidney and make a first allocation decision. Each candidate was designed to be high on some allocation principles but low or unknown on others (e.g., best, match, time in cue, age, personal responsibility for disease, future benefits to society, etc.). Then, students are put into groups and assigned to advocate for one of the candidates. Each group will prepare and give a 3-minute presentation on why their candidate should receive the kidney.
Emissions abatement alone cannot address the consequences of global warming for weather disasters. We model how society adapts to manage disaster risks to capital stock. Optimal adaptation — a mix of firm-level efforts and public spending — varies as society learns about the adverse consequences of global warming for disaster arrivals. Taxes on capital are needed alongside those on carbon to achieve the first best.
What are the sources of the returns to education? We study the allocation of higher education graduates from public institutions in Ohio across firms. We present three results. First, we confirm findings in the earlier literature of large pay differences across degrees. Second, we show that up to one quarter of pay premiums for higher degrees are explained by between-firm pay differences. Third, higher education degrees are associated with greater representation at the best-paying firms.
This article focuses on the role of threats in negotiations. Broadly speaking, a threat is a proposition that issues demands and warns of the costs of noncompliance. Even if neither party resorts to them, potential threats shadow most negotiations. Researchers have found that people actually evaluate their counterparts more favorably when they combine promises with threats rather than extend promises alone. Whereas promises encourage exploitation, the threat of punishment motivates cooperation.
Tano Santos, the Robert Heilbrunn Professor of Asset Management and Finance and Director of Columbia Business School’s Heilbrunn Center for Graham and Dodd Investing, discusses the school’s approach to value investing and finance.
Columbia Business School Study Highlights Shift in Consumer Preferences from Conventional Luxury Goods
The EU's new sustainable finance taxonomy will go a long way toward strengthening Europe's market for green investment.
Columbia Business School Study Highlights Shift in Consumer Preferences from Conventional Luxury Goods
Work Breaks Don't Signal Career Brakes: Lee Georgs ’03
Brief summary that offers context and strong keywords so Google likes it
On the weekend before Thanksgiving, marketing professor Vicki Morwitz, a leading expert in behavioral pricing, embarked on what researchers call a “customer journey.”
With a TEDx event, new research, and other efforts, CBS delves into how DEI values contribute to distinction in education and business.
Startups are known for having low-paying jobs. They are also known for offering employees attractive non-monetary perks.
Our fiscal health is in shambles. Accounting can help fix it, says Chazen Senior Scholar Shivaram Rajgopal.
The Nobel Prize-winning economist visited CBS for the first installment of a new speaker series from The Hub, a new think tank, to discuss the future of capitalism with CBS Dean Emeritus Glenn Hubbard.
Tano Santos, the Robert Heilbrunn Professor of Asset Management and Finance and Director of Columbia Business School’s Heilbrunn Center for Graham and Dodd Investing, discusses the school’s approach to value investing and finance.
Professor Tano Santos, the Faculty Director of Value Investing and Advanced Value Investing programs at Columbia Business School, outlines the reasons why value investing is returning to a period of ascendancy.
In its ongoing war against Chinese technology companies, the Trump administration has now set its sights on China's leading social-media app, WeChat.
Providing Mental Wellbeing From a Distance
Startups are known for having low-paying jobs. They are also known for offering employees attractive non-monetary perks.
The paper from Columbia Business School, “Learning or Playing? The Effect of Gamified Training On Employee Performance,” explores the impact of gamified learning on business outcomes. The study was co-authored by Ryan W. Buell of Harvard Business School, Wei Cai of Columbia Business School, and Tatiana Sandino of Harvard Business School.
New research demonstrates that local government subsidies don’t play much of a role in luring discount stores to a new market.
Columbia Business School Study Reveals that Giving Products a Human Characteristic Makes Consumers More Likely to Recycle Them
For Julie DeTraglia (VP, Head of Research and Insights, Hulu; BRITE ’20 Speaker), the most competitive year yet in the streaming wars presents an opportunity.
Learn how Columbia Business School is updating its acclaimed value investing curriculum to align with a rapidly changing financial landscape.
Western consumers and governments are increasingly demanding that goods produced overseas be manufactured under safe working conditions.
In its ongoing war against Chinese technology companies, the Trump administration has now set its sights on China's leading social-media app, WeChat.
New research demonstrates that local government subsidies don’t play much of a role in luring discount stores to a new market.
Professor Shivaram Rajgopal discusses the improvements that are called for, and why he thinks ESG is more than just a passing fad.
NEW YORK, NY – It’s Women’s History Month, an important moment to focus on how far women have come, and how far our society has to go to ensure gender equality. Columbia Business School’s faculty experts are leaders on women in the workplace, with groundbreaking research that highlights gender disparities in business and solutions to close them.