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Decision Making & Negotiations

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Decision Making & Negotiations Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Decision Making & Negotiations

Decision Making & Negotiations Research

Sales Through Sequential Distribution Channels: An Application to Movies and Videos

Authors
Donald Lehmann and Charles Weinberg
Date
July 1, 2000
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing

A study examines the sale of a product across channels. Using data from 35 movies, exponential sales curves are estimated for both theater attendance and video rentals. How knowledge of the sales parameters in the first channel helps predict sales in the subsequent channel is demonstrated.

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Global Diffusion of Technological Innovations: A Coupled-Hazard Approach

Authors
Marnik Dekimpe, Philip M. Parker, and Miklos Sarvary
Date
February 1, 2000
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing Research

The authors propose a new methodology called the "coupled-hazard approach" to study the global diffusion of technological innovations. Beyond its ability to describe discontinuous diffusion patterns, the method explicitly recognizes the conceptual difference between the timing of a country's introduction of the new technology (the so-called implementation stage; Rogers 1983) and the timing of the innovation's full adoption in the country (the confirmation stage).

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Debt Valuation, Renegotiation, and Optimal Dividend Policy

Authors
Hua Fan and M. Suresh Sundaresan
Date
January 1, 2000
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Financial Studies

The valuation of debt and equity, reorganization boundaries, and firm's optimal dividend policies are studied in a framework where we model strategic interactions between debt holders and equity holders in a game-theoretic setting which can accommodate varying bargaining powers to the two claimants. Two formulations of reorganization are presented: debt-equity swaps and strategic debt service resulting from negotiated debt service reductions. We study the effects of bond covenants on payout policies and distinguish liquidity-induced defaults from strategic defaults.

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A Comparative Study of Structural Models of Corporate Bond Yields: An Exploratory Investigation

Authors
Ronald Anderson and M. Suresh Sundaresan
Date
January 1, 2000
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Banking and Finance

This paper empirically compares a variety of firm-value-based models of contingent claims. We formulate a general model which nests versions of the models introduced by Merton, 1974; Leland, 1994 and Anderson and Sundaresan, 1996, and Mella-Barral and Perraudin (1997). We estimate these using aggregate time series data for the US corporate bond market, monthly, from August 1970 through December 1996. We find that models fit reasonably well, indicating that variations of leverage and asset volatility account for much of the time-series variations of observed corporate yields.

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Intrafirm Trade, Bargaining Power, and Specific Investments

Authors
Tim Baldenius
Date
January 1, 2000
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Review of Accounting Studies

This paper compares the performance of standard-cost with negotiated transfer pricing under asymmetric information. Negotiated transfer pricing generally achieves higher expected contribution margins, as this method tends to be more efficient in aggregating private information into a single transfer price. Standard-cost transfer pricing confers more bargaining power to the supplier and therefore generates better incentives for this division to undertake specific investments. The opposite holds for buyer investments.

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Whither Reform? Ten Years of Transition

Authors
Joseph Stiglitz
Date
January 1, 2000
Format
Lecture

The author argues that the Russia's transitional failures stem from a misunderstanding of the very foundations of a market economy, as well as a failure to grasp the fundamentals of reform processes.

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Times Square: A Revisionist Lesson in City Building

Authors
Lynne Sagalyn
Date
January 1, 2000
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Hermes

Rapid comprehensive change in the physical pattern of a city is a minor revolution — as is the transformation of 42nd Street and Times Square. Two decades ago the agenda for change posed two big questions: Is it possible for cities to reshape what the market is likely to deliver in an area? Is large-scale redevelopment even a plausible political objective, especially when aggressive actions such as condemnation are deemed a necessary part of the strategy?

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Quantized surface complementarity diversity (QSCD): A model based on small molecule-target complementarity

Authors
Edward Wintner and Ciamac Moallemi
Date
January 1, 2000
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry

A model of molecular diversity is presented. The model, termed "Quantized Surface Complementarity Diversity" (QSCD), defines molecular diversity by measuring molecular complementarity to a fully enumerated set of theoretical target surfaces. Molecular diversity space is defined as the molecular complement to this set of enumerated surfaces. Using a set of known test compounds, the model is shown to be biologically relevant, consistently scoring known actives as similar.

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"Globalization": Modeling Technology Adoption Timing Across Countries

Authors
Marnik Dekimpe, Philip M. Parker, and Miklos Sarvary
Date
January 1, 2000
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Technological Forecasting and Social Change

The authors study global adoption processes where the units of observation are countries, which sequentially adopt a particular technology. The authors’ goal is to provide a better understanding of how exogenous and endogenous country characteristics affect this diffusion process. They develop a general model of global adoption processes, which allows researchers to test extant theories of cross-country adoption, and illustrate the approach using data from the cellular telephone industry for 184 countries.

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