Faculty News

Professor Melissa Schilling's new book, "Quirky," is highlighted

Excerpt from Inc. -- "The approach Schilling takes with Quirky is a variant of the case study method — instead of companies, the cases here are the lives of great inventors. She examines their lives to uncover the common personality traits and 'foibles' that helped them see what others did not. Schilling argues that serial breakthrough innovators are different from the rest of us because they’re able to come up with groundbreaking innovations over and over again, rather than just once. And their innovations represent dramatic leaps, rather than incremental improvements."
Faculty News

Professor Pankaj Ghemawat's book, "The New Global Road Map," is reviewed

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Excerpt from BizEd Magazine -- "Is turbulence in the world market a sign that companies should abandon their globalization strategies in favor of more localized agendas? No, says Pankaj Ghemawat of New York University and IESE. In fact, companies and countries suffer from 'the yo-yo effect' when they switch too radically from global to local business approaches, as Coca-Cola disastrously demonstrated over a period of 30 or so years."
Faculty News

Professor Adam Alter shares insights on the impact of email usage on work productivity

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "On average, it takes six seconds to check a typical email after it arrives in an inbox, Adam Alter, a New York University professor, previously told Business Insider. But, he continued: 'If you check an email, it's going to take you 25 minutes to get back into that state of productivity you were in before you checked your email.'"
Faculty News

Professor Pankaj Ghemawat and Senior Research Scholar Steven Altman's joint work on the DHL Global Connectedness Index is cited

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Excerpt from South China Morning Post -- "On the other hand, the government has displayed a proposal for foreign workers to be proficient in the Bahasa Indonesia language, while tightening visa restrictions and price controls. Indonesia ranks 108 out of 140 countries measured on the DHL Global Connectedness Index, scoring low on human connectedness in particular: its rate of migrants, tourists and international students flowing both inwards and outwards is relatively low."
Faculty News

Professor Joseph Foudy offers thoughts on uncertainty in the current global trade environment

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Excerpt from Business News Daily -- "'The toughest thing to price in is just the market uncertainty and those effects,' Foudy said. 'The stock market is jittery, but there's so much uncertainty about what [the] U.S. and others will impose. We see them move nervously but toward no particular outcome. It is slowing down business investment; uncertainty does that ... businesses need to know what's happening or they just put things on hold.'
Faculty News

Professor Dolly Chugh is interviewed for a feature story on corporate diversity and inclusion goals

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'There are strong social norms right now around committing to these kinds of goals,' said Dolly Chugh, an associate professor of management and organization at the NYU Stern School of Business. She has studied how public pressure changes diversity behavior. 'If you’re among the minority of CEOs who isn’t signing the pledge or promise, you’re violating a norm and norm violations make people very uncomfortable.'"
School News

Stern's Creative Destruction Lab-NYC, which is seeking applications from early-stage science and tech startups until August 12, is featured

Excerpt from American Entrepreneurship Today -- "The CDL program that began in 2012 at the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto has now expanded to six universities, with NYU as the sole one based in the U.S."
Faculty News

Professor Gavin Kilduff's joint research on the impact of rivalry on performance is featured

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "The authors, Brian Pike and Adam Galinsky of Columbia University and Gavin Kilduff of New York University, studied 34 seasons of NCAA men’s basketball tournaments, as well as postseasons in the NBA, NFL, NHL and Major League Baseball to analyze how success of a team’s rival impacted the team’s future performance. Their findings showed that a strong performance by a team’s rival was positively associated with an uptick in the team’s performance in the following postseason."
Faculty News

Professor Robert Seamans' joint research on AI's impact on the labor market is referenced

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- ""According to a paper by Jason Furman, former chairman of the US Council of Economic Advisers, and Professor Robert Seamans of the Stern School of Business, those who earn less and those with less education are more vulnerable."
Faculty News

Professor Thomaï Serdari shares insights on Chanel's Inside Chanel series and couture store in Biarritz

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Excerpt from Luxury Daily -- "'It is always a good idea for heritage brands to take a fresh look at their own archives and find new ways to tell and re-tell their story,' said Thomai Serdari, a professor of luxury business marketing at New York University, New York. 'Far from showcasing vanity, brands approach their younger followers, who perhaps have not been initiated into the brand story yet neither fully nor completely, with sensitivity and a genuine interest in forming a bond.'"
Faculty News

In an in-depth interview, Professor Jeffrey Hollender explains how sustainability practices benefit businesses

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "People think it's a trade-off: am I gonna be a nice, good citizen and treat the environment well or am I gonna maximize profits? And the truth is you will perform better financially by doing things like having a great sustainability program, by having women on your board and in your senior management and by treating your employees well and ensuring that they're owners of the company. Those things translate into better financial performance."
Research Center Events

Executive Education Short Course: Leading Global Organizations: Managing the Complex Challenges of Globalization

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Combining lecture, discussion, case analyses and group exercises, this short course develops participants' ability to strategically navigate a rapidly changing global business climate.
Faculty News

Professor Robert Seamans is interviewed about Purdue Pharma's shift away from OxyContin

Stamford Advocate 192 x 144
Excerpt from the Stamford Advocate -- "Moving away from opioids is 'definitely a risk, but it seems like a risk worth taking,' said Robert Seamans, an associate professor of management and organizations at New York University. 'To a certain extent, it seems like these types of sharp turns in strategy work better when private companies are making them. And since the CEO comes from the R&D side of the business, it sounds like they have the right person in place, now they have decided to pursue R&D instead of sales.'"
Faculty News

Professor Constantine Yannelis is quoted in a story on the tax bills associated with income-driven student debt repayment

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Excerpt from The Wall Street Journal -- "'I’m very doubtful that everybody is going to be able to make these tax payments,' said Constantine Yannelis, an assistant professor of finance at New York University who worked in the Obama Treasury Department. 'And I’m also doubtful that policy makers and society as a whole are going to be OK with jailing people for tax evasion because their student-loan balances are being forgiven.'"
School News

NYU Shanghai and NYU Stern's One-Year Master of Science Programs for College Graduates in Data Analytics & Business Computing and Quantitative Finance are featured

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Excerpt from BizEd Magazine - "Two new one-year master of science programs will be jointly delivered by the School of Business at New York University (NYU) and NYU Shanghai, a degree-granting campus of NYU. Both the MS in quantitative finance and the MS in data analytics and business computing will entail 12 months of full-time study over three semesters in two global hubs; students will start with a summer semester at NYU Stern in New York City and follow that with fall and spring semesters in China."
School News

Senior Research Scholar Alain Bertaud shares how city clusters in China could foster its productivity

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Excerpt from The Economist -- "Alain Bertaud of New York University says that, if integrated well, China’s city clusters could, thanks to their size, achieve levels of productivity never seen in other countries. He says it would be comparable to the differences between England and the rest of the world during the Industrial Revolution."
Faculty News

Professor Nicholas Economides is interviewed about Greece's debt-relief agreement

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Excerpt from Knowledge@Wharton -- "...It signifies that the European Union has abandoned the goal of Greece returning to the global financial markets which was supposed to be the goal of the programs, instead it's giving cash to Greece to avoid going into the financial markets..."
Faculty News

Professor Roy Smith is interviewed about the Big Bang deregulation of the London financial markets in 1986

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'In one morning, we traded more British stocks than any other British brokerage firm had done in two weeks,' says Smith, 80, who’s now emeritus professor of management practice at New York University’s Leonard N. Stern School of Business. 'Big Bang essentially blew away all the British rules.'"
Research Center Events

TRIUM Global Executive MBA Program Celebrates 1,000 Alumni Milestone

A group of TRIUM alumni
The TRIUM Global Executive MBA program, an alliance among NYU Stern, the London School of Economics and Political Science, and HEC Paris, celebrated an important milestone this year -- 1,000 alumni. To mark the moment, students and alumni from 16 class years representing 47 nationalities convened in New York City for a three-day community event, “Module 7: Celebrating TRIUM’s Global Alumni Community.”
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway shares his predictions for Amazon's growth

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Excerpt from Barron's -- "There's talk of them acquiring some TV networks and to get scale in content really quickly and fill in some niches because those assets have been beaten down from a valuation standpoint and Amazon has the ability to monetize them, not with just advertising, but because if they create more intensity across their Prime relationships, which are now 60% of US households, then they can sell more paper towels and more stuff to them."
Faculty News

Professor Aswath Damodaran discusses GE's decline and removal from the Dow Jones Industrial Average

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Excerpt from NPR -- "I mean, watching GE is like watching the Bataan Death March, right? I mean, every company has a story. And at this point, GE's story is that of, you know, decline. And the end is coming. You can see it."
Faculty News

Professor Nicholas Economides argues for why he believes Greece will be unable to repay its debts under its new debt-relief plan

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "'Under these conditions, Greece is unlikely to achieve fast growth, and therefore will be unable to pay back its debt in full despite a 10-year postponement of maturities granted by the EU,' said Nicholas Economides, professor of Economics at the Stern School of Business at New York University."
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt's remarks at Heterodox Academy's Open Mind Conference are highlighted

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Excerpt from The Chronicle of Higher Education -- "'We’re on a ship, the ship is kind of going down, and rather than fighting with each other, we actually can work together and patch it up,' Haidt said. 'It’s a pretty good ship, other than it’s sinking.'"
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan discusses the economic implications of the Supreme Court’s recent online sales tax ruling

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Excerpt from Nightly Business Report -- "I think they are going to start seeing it very soon especially if you shop through retailers like Etsy or Wayfair. I think Wayfair is probably one of the biggest losers here. They are a site that advertises themselves as a place where you don't have to pay sales tax. Amazon is probably going to see some impact but they are big enough to be able to absorb any loses that come from their sellers having to charge sales taxes. This certainly shifts the power in the online retail space away from the smaller players and toward the bigger players."
Faculty News

Professor Kim Schoenholtz shares how banks have grown since the financial crisis

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "'The banking system usually looks at its greatest health at the top of an expansion,' said Kim Schoenholtz, a professor of the history of financial institutions and markets at New York University’s Stern School of Business."