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Strategy

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Strategy Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Latest on Strategy

Distinguished Speaker Series
Date
April 11, 2025
McKinsey’s Eric Kutcher
Distinguished Speaker Series

McKinsey’s Eric Kutcher on AI, Management Strategy, and Climate Innovation

During a recent Distinguished Speakers Series event, the Senior Partner and Chair of North America at McKinsey shared leadership insights on AI business strategy, climate innovation, and the future of work.
  • Read more about McKinsey’s Eric Kutcher on AI, Management Strategy, and Climate Innovation about McKinsey’s Eric Kutcher on AI, Management Strategy, and Climate Innovation
Business and Society, Leadership and Strategy, Management
Date
March 04, 2025
CBS Illustration Photo Image
Business and Society, Leadership and Strategy, Management
Press Release

There’s No “You” in Team: How a Word Swap Defuses Workplace Conflict

New Columbia Business School Study Shows Pronoun Use Influences Receptiveness In Conflict-Laden Interactions
  • Read more about There’s No “You” in Team: How a Word Swap Defuses Workplace Conflict about There’s No “You” in Team: How a Word Swap Defuses Workplace Conflict
Business and Society, Ethics and Leadership, The Workplace
Type
Columbia Business
Date
February 07, 2025
Business and Society, Ethics and Leadership, The Workplace

How ‘Masculine Energy’ Can Hinder Your Negotiation Success

Research from Professor Rebecca Ponce de Leon shows why women may be outperforming men in certain negotiation situations.
  • Read more about How ‘Masculine Energy’ Can Hinder Your Negotiation Success about How ‘Masculine Energy’ Can Hinder Your Negotiation Success
Labor, Leadership, Leadership and Strategy, Management, Organizations, Social Impact, Strategy
Date
January 21, 2025
Illustration of status
Labor, Leadership, Leadership and Strategy, Management, Organizations, Social Impact, Strategy

Insecure About Your Status? Try Boosting Someone Else’s

Insecurity is rampant in modern life, from the boardroom to the classroom. But if we give in to status insecurity and withhold recognition from others, we may be self-sabotaging.
  • Read more about Insecure About Your Status? Try Boosting Someone Else’s about Insecure About Your Status? Try Boosting Someone Else’s
Decisions, Marketing
Date
January 21, 2025
A cell phone sitting on top of a wooden table photo. Photo by Marques Thomas on Unsplash
Decisions, Marketing
Press Release

Online Shopping Insights: “Sponsored” Product Listings Actually Improve Buying Experience

Columbia Business School research finds both shoppers and retailers benefit from “retail media”, where retailers use sponsored listings as part of product searches
  • Read more about Online Shopping Insights: “Sponsored” Product Listings Actually Improve Buying Experience about Online Shopping Insights: “Sponsored” Product Listings Actually Improve Buying Experience
Marketing
Date
December 17, 2024
Booking travel online, woman using laptop for flights, hotels, and cruises. online booking, vacation, tourism, internet, leisure, holiday
Marketing
Press Release

You Had Me at Hello: Making Travel Search Easier

Columbia Business School study’s new approach to understanding customers’ needs and their journey to purchase is ten times more accurate than previous models
  • Read more about You Had Me at Hello: Making Travel Search Easier about You Had Me at Hello: Making Travel Search Easier
Business and Society, Climate and Sustainability, Future of Work, Leadership, Strategy
Date
December 11, 2024
Magazine Photo Image
Business and Society, Climate and Sustainability, Future of Work, Leadership, Strategy

@CBS

A collection of images from significant Columbia Business School conferences and events for the Winter/Spring 2025 Columbia Business Magazine.
  • Read more about @CBS about @CBS
Business and Society, Organizations, Strategy
Date
December 11, 2024
Magazine Photo Image
Business and Society, Organizations, Strategy

On Our Shelves

New and forthcoming books from Columbia Business School faculty feature their latest research intertwined with actionable strategies and innovative perspectives.
  • Read more about On Our Shelves about On Our Shelves

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Strategy Faculty

Laura Doval

Laura Doval

Chong Khoon Lin Professor of Business
Economics Division
Noel Capon

Noel Capon

R.C. Kopf Professor of International Marketing
Marketing Division
Christopher LaSala

Chris LaSala

Senior Lecturer in the Discipline of Marketing in the Faculty of Business
Marketing Division
Nataliya Wright

Nataliya L. Wright

Assistant Professor of Business
Management Division
Gernot Wagner

Gernot Wagner

Senior Lecturer in Discipline of Economics in the Faculty of Business
Economics Division
Faculty Director, Climate Knowledge Initiative
Tamer Institute for Social Enterprise and Climate Change
Faculty Fellow
CESifo
Board Member
CarbonPlan
Columnist
Project Syndicate
Senior Fellow
Jain Family Institute
Vanessa Burbano

Vanessa Burbano

Donald C. Waite III Associate Professor of Social Enterprise
Management Division
Columbia Business School

James Hulbert

R. C. Kopf Professor Emeritus of International Marketing
Marketing Division
Cliff Cramer, Adjunct Professor

Cliff Cramer

Adjunct Professor
Management Division
Paolo Siconolfi

Paolo Siconolfi

Franklin Pitcher Johnson Jr. Professor of Finance and Economics
Economics Division
Don Sexton

Don Sexton

Professor Emeritus of Business
Marketing Division
Professor Emeritus of Business
Decision, Risk, and Operations Division
Columbia Business School

Nicole DeHoratius

Professor of Professional Practice in the Faculty of Business
Decision, Risk, and Operations Division
Dan Wang

Dan Wang

Lambert Family Professor of Social Enterprise in the Faculty of Business
Management Division
Co-Director of the Tamer Institute for Social Enterprise and Climate Change
Tamer Institute for Social Enterprise and Climate Change

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CBS Faculty Research on Strategy

Strategic Targeting and Unequal Global Adoption of Artificial Intelligence

Authors
Dafna Bearson and Nataliya Wright
Date
April 11, 2025
Format
Working Paper

The rise of low-cost artificial intelligence (AI) technologies offers significant potential for businesses globally, yet AI adoption remains uneven. What shapes this unequal adoption? While prior work attributes adoption patterns to demand-side factors including physical costs and complementary assets, we theorize that AI entrepreneurs' strategic choice to target specific markets creates both search and perceived-fit frictions for firms outside of those markets.

Read More about Strategic Targeting and Unequal Global Adoption of Artificial Intelligence

Has Government Counterparty Risk Become The Biggest Risk Today?

Authors
Shivaram Rajgopal
Date
April 8, 2025
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Forbes.com

The US government has a massive footprint on any US company that goes way beyond just the impact of tariffs. How the government chooses to use that influence can make or break the company. Read the full article on Forbes.com

Read More about Has Government Counterparty Risk Become The Biggest Risk Today?

Taxing Universities

Authors
Shivaram Rajgopal
Date
March 14, 2025
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Forbes
Columbia professor warns that taxing university endowments and cutting research funding will cripple basic research, erode US competitive advantage against China, and ultimately harm innovation that drives private sector growth.
Read More about Taxing Universities

The folly of America’s R&D cuts

Authors
R. Glenn Hubbard
Date
March 10, 2025
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Financial Times
Trump administration cuts to federal R&D funding contradict growth objectives; research shows every $1 in public R&D generates $2 in economic output, making these cuts counterproductive to innovation and productivity.
Read More about The folly of America’s R&D cuts

The welfare impact of recommendation algorithms

Authors
Laura Doval and Alex Smolin
Date
March 1, 2025
Format
Journal Article
Journal
ACM SIGecom Exchanges

In this letter, we summarize our recent work on the welfare impact of recommendation algorithms and propose questions for further study. We model recommendation algorithms as an information structure, which shapes how a third party takes actions that affect the welfare of different individuals in a population. Each recommendation algorithm thus induces a welfare profile, describing the expected payoffs of different individuals when the third party takes actions following the algorithm.

Read More about The welfare impact of recommendation algorithms

Better Innovation for a Better World

Authors
Olivier Toubia
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Marketing

We aim to stimulate discussion on how innovation research within marketing can use a better world (BW) perspective to help innovation become a driver of positive change in the world. In this "Challenging the Boundaries" series paper, we hope to provide purposeful research opportunities for scholars seeking to bridge innovation research with the BW movement. We frame our discussion with four areas of innovation research in marketing that are particularly relevant to BW objectives.

Read More about Better Innovation for a Better World

Budget-Management Strategies in Repeated Auctions

Authors
Santiago R. Balseiro, Mohammad Mahdian, and Vahab Mirrokni
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
Operations Research

In online advertising, advertisers purchase ad placements by participating in a long sequence of repeated auctions. One of the most important features that advertising platforms often provide and advertisers often use is budget management, which allows advertisers to control their cumulative expenditures. Advertisers typically declare the maximum daily amount they are willing to pay, and the platform adjusts allocations and payments to guarantee that cumulative expenditures do not exceed budgets.

Read More about Budget-Management Strategies in Repeated Auctions

The mid-sized market trap in entrepreneurial scaling

Authors
Nataliya Wright and Ed Saiedi
Date
December 31, 2024
Format
Working Paper

Why do startups from mid-sized markets struggle to scale? We theorize that their home market is big enough to gain early traction, which incentivizes them to delay targeting new markets necessary for growth. This delay, however, allows adaptation costs to grow too large. We test this by exploring international expansions using interview and large-scale website language data of up to 20,000 software startups from around the world.

Read More about The mid-sized market trap in entrepreneurial scaling

Global Hegemony and Exorbitant Privilege

Authors
Carolin Pflueger and Pierre Yared
Date
December 15, 2024
Format
Working Paper

We present a dynamic two-country model in which military spending, geopolitical risk, and government bond prices are jointly determined. The model is consistent with three empirical facts: hegemons have a funding advantage, this advantage rises with geopolitical tensions, and war losers suffer from higher debt devaluation than victors.

Read More about Global Hegemony and Exorbitant Privilege

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