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Journal Article

Employer attractiveness from an employee perspective: A systematic literature review.

Frontiers in Psychology 13
Anke Dassler, Evgenia Lysova, Svetlana Khapova, Konstantin Korotov (2022)
Subject(s)
Human resources management/organizational behavior
Keyword(s)
Employer attractiveness, organizational commitment, current employees, existing employees, employer brand
JEL Code(s)
M12
With the growing interest in employer attractiveness, research is unsystematic on how this phenomenon can be conceptualized and studied. Studies tend to make little conceptual differentiation regarding for whom employers should be attractive, and therefore, address the perspectives of potential as well as current employees, who work in organizations for long periods of time. In this study our arguments relate to the phenomenon’s conceptual clarity as well as its differentiation from other related concepts. By focusing on employer attractiveness for current employees, we have systematically reviewed 48 studies published in business and management journals, and categorized findings into the Inputs-Mediators-Outputs model. This approach allowed us to depict significant limitations in the existing knowledge about employer attractiveness from the current employees’ perspective, and offer avenues for future research. Next, to delineate the future research agenda, we have concluded this study with a discussion on what our findings mean for managers and organizations.
Volume
13
Journal Article

Hedge fund flows and performance streaks: How investors weigh information

Management Science 68 (6): 4151–4172
Guillermo Baquero, Marno Verbeek (2022)
Keyword(s)
hedge funds, cash flows, hot hand fallacy, performance streaks, relative weights, smart money
Cash flows to hedge funds are highly sensitive to performance streaks, a streak being defined as subsequent quarters during which a fund performs above or below a benchmark, even after controlling for a wide range of common performance measures. At the same time, streaks have limited predictive power regarding future fund performance. This suggests investors weigh information suboptimally, and their decisions are driven too strongly by a belief in continuation of good performance, consistent with the “hot hand fallacy.” The hedge funds that investors choose to invest in do not perform significantly better than those they divest from. These findings are consistent with overreaction to certain types of information and do not support the notion that sophisticated investors have superior information or superior information processing abilities.
© 2021, INFORMS
Volume
68
Journal Pages
4151–4172
ISSN (Online)
1526-5501
ISSN (Print)
0025–1909
ESMT Case Study

Digital and agile transformation at telecom call centers

ESMT Case Study No. ESMT–322–0195–1
Subject(s)
Strategy and general management
Keyword(s)
General managers, middle management, digital strategy, call centers
The case tells the evolution of the call center transformation at Frontelco (a major telecom company in disguise). “Digital” and “agile” approaches to changing the way how call centers operate seem to produce different results. Debate between proponents of alternative approaches takes place across three levels of organizational hierarchy: the Managing Director seems to prefer “agile”, those close to operations in VP ranks seem to prefer “digital”, while three “managers in the middle” following each other in Senior Vice President rank seem to follow different strategies as to how to align the top and the bottom. To settle the debate, evidence-based clarity is being sought and the protagonist is tasked to design an appropriate performance measure to show the real impact of competing approaches.
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Journal Article

Patents, data exclusivity, and the development of new drugs

Review of Economics and Statistics 104 (3): 574–586
Fabian Gaessler, Stefan Wagner (2022)
Subject(s)
Technology, R&D management
Keyword(s)
patents, drugs, data exclusivity, clinical trials
JEL Code(s)
K41, L24, L65, O31, O32, O34
Volume
104
Journal Pages
574–586
Journal Article

Conflict strength: Measuring the tension between cooperative and competitive incentives in experimental negotiation tasks

Collabra: Psychology 8 (1)
Johann M. Majer, Martin Schweinsberg, Hong Zhang, Roman Trötschel (2022)
Subject(s)
Human resources management/organizational behavior
Keyword(s)
methods, measures, research transparency, open science,reproducibility, meta-science, negotiation,conflict, cooperation, competition
Conflict management scholars study mixed-motive negotiation situations with cooperative and competitive incentives predominantly through multi-issue negotiation tasks in experimental studies. Intriguingly, experimenters currently lack an objective, generalizable, and continuous measure that precisely quantifies the incentives underlying these negotiation tasks. We present the conflict strength coefficient, which enables scholars to systematically quantify the incentive structures in these multi-issue negotiation tasks. By making the incentive structures accessible and numerically comparable, the conflict strength coefficient provides new insights into the central element of the experimental study of negotiation and conflict management, unmasks differences across existing tasks, facilitates research transparency, knowledge sharing, and open science practices. We demonstrate the coefficient’s benefits by providing a hands-on example from past research, by reviewing and quantitatively assessing the current literature, and by mapping conflict strength coefficients for the negotiation and conflict management research landscape and its subareas. Our analysis suggests that the conflict strength coefficient can enrich the understanding of cooperative and competitive incentives in the established tasks and directly guide and support an individual scholar’s process of knowledge creation. The conflict strength coefficient provides a methodological contribution to the experimental study of conflict management and negotiation with immediate benefits for the production of scientific knowledge, the experimental study of real-world phenomena, and theory development.
Volume
8
Journal Article

Designing for impact: A results-driven perspective for executive education

The European Business Review May – June: 18–25
Edward W. Boon, Christoph Burger, Nora Grasselli (2022)
Subject(s)
Human resources management/organizational behavior
Keyword(s)
Leadership development, executive education, business impact
JEL Code(s)
M53
Executive Education must be seen as an investment. If we are serious about achieving business impact through training, the first question should be “What business outcomes would we like to see because of this intervention?” Next, we ask questions like “How, where, and when do we need our leaders to perform better to achieve those business outcomes” and “What specific knowledge and skills do we need to equip our leaders with to deliver the improved performance?”. We illustrate this approach through our work with one of the world’s largest commercial vehicle manufacturers, TRATON.
Journal Pages
18–25
Journal Article

The role of autonomy and selection at the gate in flat organizations

Journal of Organization Design 11 (1): 27–29
Subject(s)
Strategy and general management; Technology, R&D management
Keyword(s)
autonomy, remote work, flat organizations
Volume
11
Journal Pages
27–29
ISSN (Online)
2245-408X
Journal Article

Judging the legality of sexually violent tactics: a comparison between prosecuting attorneys in the United States and Colombia

Journal of Sexual Aggression 28 (2): 261–279
Zoë D. Peterson, Monica Perez Trujillo, Ana L. Jaramillo-Sierra (2022)
Subject(s)
Unspecified
Keyword(s)
attorney perceptions, sexual violence, coercive tactics, measurement, cross-cultural research
In order to study sexual violence internationally, it is helpful to understand similarities and differences in how sexual violence is conceptualised across countries. The current study examined prosecuting attorneys’ judgments about which sexual tactics legally qualify as sexual violence in two countries. Attorneys from the U.S. (n = 28) and Colombia (n = 24) evaluated whether 36 tactics would qualify as a sexual offense in their jurisdiction. Although Colombian and U.S. attorneys agreed on the legality of many tactics, Colombian attorneys judged more behaviours as criminal, on average, than U.S. attorneys. Within-country variations suggested that differences were due not only to different legal statutes, but also to different interpretations of laws. Open-ended responses illustrated sources of ambiguity, including lack of clarity about how much coercion is required and which behaviours indicate nonconsent. This suggests that vagueness within legal definitions may allow attorney judgements to be influenced by stereotypes and prejudices.

Practical Impact Statement: This study illustrates the vagueness of legal definitions of sexual violence in two countries—the United States and Colombia. This vagueness provides prosecuting attorneys with substantial power to interpret the law, and in this study, some attorney judgements of legality seemed to be influenced by stereotypes. Greater training for law students and attorneys about the realities of sexual violence may be helpful in undermining belief in rape myths that may inhibit attorneys from prosecuting certain sexual violence cases.
Volume
28
Journal Pages
261–279
ISSN (Online)
1742-6545
ISSN (Print)
1355-2600
Online Article

Four questions corporate executives must answer before deglobalization

Forbes
Olaf Plötner, Bianca Schmitz, Johannes Habel, Claire Cardy (2022)
Subject(s)
Economics, politics and business environment; Strategy and general management
Keyword(s)
corporate structures, industrial companies, globalization, supply chain, headquarters, global trade
ISSN (Print)
0015-6914
Journal Article

Crowdsourcing research questions in science

Research Policy 51 (4): 104491
Susanne Beck, Tiare-Maria Brasseur, Marion Poetz, Henry Sauermann (2022)
Subject(s)
Diversity and inclusion; Health and environment; Technology, R&D management
Keyword(s)
Crowd science, citizen science, crowdsourcing, problem solving, problem finding, agenda setting, organization of science
Scientists are increasingly crossing the boundaries of the professional system by involving the general public (the crowd) directly in their research. However, this crowd involvement tends to be confined to empirical work and it is not clear whether and how crowds can also be involved in conceptual stages such as formulating the questions that research is trying to address. Drawing on five different “paradigms” of crowdsourcing and related mechanisms, we first discuss potential merits of involving crowds in the formulation of research questions (RQs). We then analyze data from two crowdsourcing projects in the medical sciences to describe key features of RQs generated by crowd members and compare the quality of crowd contributions to that of RQs generated in the conventional scientific process. We find that the majority of crowd contributions are problem restatements that can be useful to assess problem importance but provide little guidance regarding potential causes or solutions. At the same time, crowd-generated research questions frequently cross disciplinary boundaries by combining elements from different fields within and especially outside medicine. Using evaluations by professional scientists, we find that the average crowd contribution has lower novelty and potential scientific impact than professional research questions, but comparable practical impact. Crowd contributions outperform professional RQs once we apply selection mechanisms at the level of individual contributors or across contributors. Our findings advance research on crowd and citizen science, crowdsourcing and distributed knowledge production, as well as the organization of science. We also inform ongoing policy debates around the involvement of citizens in research in general, and agenda setting in particular.
With permission of Elsevier
Volume
51
Journal Pages
104491