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Leadership & Organizational Behavior

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Leadership & Organizational Behavior Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Latest on Leadership & Organizational Behavior

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Leadership Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Leadership & Organizational Behavior

Bad Environments, Good Environments: A Non-Gaussian Asymmetric Volatility Model

Authors
Geert Bekaert, Eric Engstrom, and Andrey Ermolova
Date
May 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Econometrics

We propose an extension of standard asymmetric volatility models in the generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (GARCH) class that admits conditional non-Gaussianities in a tractable fashion. Our "bad environment-good environment" (BEGE) model utilizes two gamma-distributed shocks and generates a conditional shock distribution with time-varying heteroskedasticity, skewness, and kurtosis. The BEGE model features nontrivial news impact curves and closed-form solutions for higher-order moments.

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The Value of Hiring Through Employee Referrals

Authors
Bo Cowgill, Stephen Burks, Mitch Hoffman, and Michael Housman
Date
May 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Quarterly Journal of Economics

Using personnel data from nine large firms in three industries (call centers, trucking, and high-tech), we empirically assess the benefit to firms of hiring through employee referrals. Compared to nonreferred applicants, referred applicants are more likely to be hired and more likely to accept offers, even though referrals and nonreferrals have similar skill characteristics. Referred workers tend to have similar productivity compared to nonreferred workers on most measures, but referred workers have lower accident rates in trucking and produce more patents in high-tech.

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Anxious and egocentric: How specific emotions influence perspective taking

Authors
A. Todd, M. Forstmann, P. Burgmer, A. Brooks, and Adam Galinsky
Date
April 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General

People frequently feel anxious. Although prior research has extensively studied how feeling anxious shapes intrapsychic aspects of cognition, much less is known about how anxiety affects interpersonal aspects of cognition. Here, we examine the influence of incidental experiences of anxiety on perceptual and conceptual forms of perspective taking.

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Social class, power, and selfishness: When and why upper and lower class individuals behave unethically

Authors
David Dubois, Derek D. Rucker, and Adam Galinsky
Date
March 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

Are the rich more unethical than the poor? To answer this question, the current research introduces a key conceptual distinction between selfish and unethical behavior. Based on this distinction, the current article offers 2 novel findings that illuminate the relationship between social class and unethical behavior. First, the effects of social class on unethical behavior are not invariant; rather, the effects of social class are moderated by whether unethical behavior benefits the self or others.

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The Long-Term Effect of Multichannel Usage on Sales

Authors
Tolga Bilgicer, Kamel Jedidi, Donald Lehmann, and Scott Neslin
Date
March 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Customer Needs and Solutions

The paper investigates the long-run consequences of multichannel shopping on customers' spending. Using data from a major US catalog company which introduced an online channel, our results validate previous findings that multichannel customers spend more than mono-channel customers in the short run. However, the difference in spending dissipates over time with multichannel customers reverting to their regular consumption pattern in 3 years.

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Macroeconomic Regimes

Authors
Lieven Baele, Geert Bekaert, Seonghoon Cho, Koen Inghelbrecht, and Antonio Moreno
Date
March 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Monetary Economics

We estimate a New-Keynesian macro model accommodating regime-switching behavior in monetary policy and in macro shocks. Key to our estimation strategy is the use of survey-based expectations for inflation and output. We identify accommodating monetary policy before 1980, with activist monetary policy prevailing most but not 100% of the time thereafter. Systematic monetary policy switched to the activist regime in the 2000-2005 period through an aggressive lowering of interest rates.

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Fashion with a foreign flair: Professional experiences abroad facilitate the creative innovations of organizations

Authors
F. Godart, W. Maddux, A. Shipilov, and Adam Galinsky
Date
February 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Academy of Management Journal

The current research explores whether the foreign professional experiences of influential executives predict firm-level creative output. We introduce a new theoretical model, the Foreign Experience Model of Creative Innovations, to explain how three dimensions of executives' foreign work experiences — breadth, depth, and cultural distance — predict an organization's creative innovations, which we define as the extent to which final, implemented products or services are novel and useful from the standpoint of external audiences.

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Anchors weigh more than power: Why absolute powerlessness liberates negotiators to achieve better outcomes

Authors
Michael Schaerer, Roderick I. Swaab, and Adam Galinsky
Date
February 1, 2015
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Psychological Science

The current research shows that having no power can be better than having a little power. Negotiators prefer having some power (weak negotiation alternatives) to having no power (no alternatives). We challenge this belief that having any alternative is beneficial by demonstrating that weak alternatives create low anchors that reduce the value of first offers. In contrast, having no alternatives is liberating because there is no anchor to weigh down first offers.

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Shortfall Aversion

Authors
Paolo Guasoni, Gur Huberman, and Dan Ren
Date
February 1, 2015
Format
Working Paper

Shortfall aversion reflects the higher utility loss of a spending cut from a reference point than the utility gain from a similar spending increase, in the spirit of Prospect Theory's loss aversion. This paper posits a model of utility of spending scaled by a function of past peak spending, called target spending. The discontinuity of the marginal utility at the target spending corresponds to shortfall aversion.

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