Faculty News

Professor Anindya Ghose is interviewed about his research on mobile advertising, from his book, “Tap”

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Excerpt from MarketWatch -- "For instance, Ghose’s research has found that shoppers are more susceptible to pitches from retailers during their commutes, that groups of three people are easier to target than twos or fours, that good and bad weather can be powerful motivators, and that the key to understanding customers is tracking their habits. 'We think we are all very spontaneous, when in fact we are very predictable,' Ghose said."
Faculty News

Professor Christina Fang's joint research on strategic decision-making is referenced

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Excerpt from Psychology Today -- "No, research has found that firing a CEO is the last thing a board should do. Instead, they should hit them where it hurts, in the pocket. Instead, the board of British Airways should draw on insights from our recent study from behavioral science by keeping the executives but asking them to deposit part of their salary and bonus for paying for the losses—that is, BA’s estimated £150 million compensation bill. (Study authors include Chengwei Liu, Ivo Vlaev, Christina Fang, Jerker Denrell and Nick Chater.)"
Faculty News

Professor Tensie Whelan discusses the Paris Agreement and the implications for MBA students

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "Whelan says where climate work is concerned, MBAs today face an unprecedented landscape in which the corporate sector is married with the work of state-level and municipal government. 'For MBAs, it’s about understanding what this means and understanding where the rest of the governments are going and then figuring out how, as a corporate sector with states and municipalities, we can try to claw back some of our reputation so that we can have better relationships with companies and governments overseas,' she says."
Faculty News

Professor Adam Alter shares tips for breaking a social media habit, from his book, "Irresistible"

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Excerpt from Thrive Global -- "You can’t just delete a habit; you have to replace it with something. 'It needs to be different enough that it doesn’t fit the same habit loop,' Alter says, 'but fulfills the same psychological need.'"
Faculty News

Professor Vasant Dhar discusses the role of biases when analyzing big data

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Excerpt from Forbes -- "For important business decisions, 'Ask yourself, "Can I trust my data, or might it have sources of bias?"' said Vasant Dhar, a data scientist and professor of information systems at New York University."
Faculty News

"Economics and Policy in the Age of Trump," a new book with a chapters co-authored by Stern faculty, is reviewed

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Excerpt from the Financial Times -- "...a stellar set of economists has written an anthology of highly useful analytical briefs on virtually all aspects of US economic policy in the age of Donald Trump. Chad Bown of the Peterson Institute has summarised the research effort in a column for VoxEU and the Centre for Economic Policy Research, who publish the book today."
School News

Recent Executive MBA graduates Ryan Sparks and Renee Vieira are named to the Poets & Quants 2017 "50 Best & Brightest EMBAs" list

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Excerpt from Poets & Quants -- "In Afghanistan, New York University’s Ryan Sparks, a Marine Infantry Officer who now works for JP Morgan Chase, trained and led a joint U.S-Afghan unit that defeated the local Taliban, helped with community reconstruction, and reduced opium trafficking. ... If you want to learn how to make an impact in a Fortune 500 firm, take some notes from New York University’s Renee Vieira. She serves as the Executive Director of Global Organization and Leadership Development at Time Warner."
Research Center Events

Executive Education Short Course: Strategy for Executives: Creating and Capturing Value in a Competitive Environment

his program provides the foundation for managers to think strategically about creating and capturing value within their organization. Through a series of discussions and exercises, participants will understand what value capture and creation means. They will also critically examine their current company strategies to identify where value is already being created, captured and lost. Participants will then use this knowledge to analyze their organization’s potential and begin building successful strategies.
Faculty News

Professor Petra Moser is interviewed about immigrants' contributions to entrepreneurship in the United States

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Excerpt from CBS News -- "New York University economist Petra Moser says immigrant entrepreneurs have a long history in the United States. 'Go back as far as Andrew Carnegie, who came from Scotland and then built a very, very large industrial, you might even call it an industrial empire and created many, many jobs,' Moser said."
School News

In an op-ed, MBA student Nicholas Ryan discusses the growing popularity if gig employment among young people

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Excerpt from Business Insider -- "Over the past 20 years, freelancing is up 27 percent compared to payroll employment (think more 1099s and fewer W-2s). By 2020, it’s expected that over 40 percent of the workforce will be freelancers. The shift is due in large part to the rise of digital platforms like Etsy, TaskRabbit, and Upwork."
Faculty News

Professor Baruch Lev's research on the accruals anomaly is featured

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Excerpt from Investors Chronicle -- "They found that US institutional investors did not trade on the anomaly often enough to arbitrage it away (i.e., drive prices up or down so much that prospective risk-free gains vanished). Two connected reasons lay behind this. First, the anomaly tended to dwell in illiquid stocks that were too small for institutions to bother with. Second, such stocks were clearly risky so investing in them might fall foul of so-called ‘prudent-man rules’, which required intermediaries to invest other people’s money as if it were their own."
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Haidt's work on morality is referenced

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Excerpt from The New York Times -- "People are attracted by goodness and repelled by selfishness. N.Y.U. social psychologist Jonathan Haidt has studied the surges of elevation we feel when we see somebody performing a selfless action. Haidt describes the time a guy spontaneously leapt out of a car to help an old lady shovel snow from her driveway. One of his friends, who witnessed this small act, later wrote: 'I felt like jumping out of the car and hugging this guy. I felt like singing and running, or skipping and laughing. Just being active. I felt like saying nice things about people. Writing a beautiful poem or love song. Playing in the snow like a child. Telling everybody about his deed.'"
Faculty News

Professor Michael North discusses how employers can accommodate older workers

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Excerpt from Maeil Business Newspaper -- "You should always be aware of each employee's capabilities and deficiencies. You have to invest in things that can be done more easily (older workers) than on a larger computer screen or factory floor."
Faculty News

Professor Scott Galloway comments on Amazon's new Echo product

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Excerpt from Barron's -- "'Amazon has effectively conspired, with voice and technology and about a half-billion consumers, to destroy brands,' said Scott Galloway, a New York University marketing professor in an April talk that still is discussed on Wall Street. Amazon’s view, he argues, is that brands have an 'unearned' price premium that doesn’t match their benefits to consumers."
Faculty News

Dean Peter Henry shares his views on the Paris climate agreement and the future impact on economic growth

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "I think the road to prosperity in the United States has gotten a lot steeper, and the road to prosperity in developing countries also got a lot steeper. And it's not surprising. Just two days ago, the Secretary General from the UN, Antonio Guterres, came to Stern to give a speech about climate change, and I think he chose the business school at NYU for a reason. This agreement is about business, and jobs are a critical part of this."
Faculty News

Professor Robert Engle is interviewed about his research on volatility in financial markets

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Excerpt from EPFL Magazine -- "The ARCH model is sort of a fundamental tool, the most commonly used tool for short-run risk measure by financial institutions, hedge funds, pension funds, banks — all sorts of institutions use this measure and I think it helps provide some measure of security and discipline to managing risk. But more broadly, ARCH is a tool that helps finance people do better statistics."
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan discusses competition within the ridesharing market

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Excerpt from Entrepreneur -- "'Uber is good at a lot of things -- technology, global scaling -- but its weakness for years has been its relationship with its drivers,' says Arun Sundararajan, a professor at New York University and an expert on the sharing economy. 'That left open an opportunity for an entrant to differentiate themselves on that weakness.'"
Faculty News

Scholar-in-Residence Gary Friedland discusses the use of the EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program

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Excerpt from The Washington Post -- "'Many of these affluent-area projects would have been built and jobs created without the infusion of EB-5 capital,' said Gary Friedland, a scholar in residence at New York University’s Stern School of Business. 'Consequently, deserving projects can’t be built and the resulting jobs are lost because the projects are deprived of the essential capital to proceed.'"
School News

In an op-ed, Dorothée Baumann-Pauly and Auret van Heerden of Stern's Center for Business and Human Rights share recommendations for improved worker safety in Bangladesh

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Excerpt from the Thomson Reuters Foundation -- "Simply extending the mandate of the current private initiatives in Bangladesh while following the same premises will not make the RMG sector safe and sustainable. All of those working on these issues, inside Bangladesh and in the greater international community, need to go back to the drawing board, and build on the lessons from the past four years."
Business and Policy Leader Events

Regulating Wall Street: CHOICE Act vs. Dodd-Frank Book Discussion

Cover of Regulating Wall Street: CHOICE Act vs. Dodd-Frank
On June 1, the NYU Stern School of Business will present a new book, “Regulating Wall Street: CHOICE Act vs. Dodd-Frank”, authored by more than a dozen faculty members from Stern and the NYU School of Law. 
Faculty News

Professor Arun Sundararajan is interviewed about Uber's expansion and competition with Lyft

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Excerpt from BuzzFeed -- "'Each ride-sharing market is sort of independently contestable city by city,' said Arun Sundararajan, a professor at New York University and author of the book The Sharing Economy."
School News

In a joint op-ed, Research Scholar Brandon Fuller argues in favor of state-sponsored immigration visas

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Excerpt from The Federalist -- "State-sponsored visa programs would direct temporary foreign workers to the states that want them without pushing additional migrants on the states that don’t. Many states have already exhibited an interest in administering their own visa programs. The Johnson-Buck plan meets them halfway. Lawmakers across the political spectrum should welcome the opportunity to pilot state-based visa programs that can generate jobs and growth in their home states."
Faculty News

Professor Jason Greenberg's joint research on crowdfunding is highlighted

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Excerpt from Bloomberg -- "A 2016 study by Ethan Mollick of the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School and Jason Greenberg of New York University’s Stern School on crowdfunding campaigns showed that potential male funders didn’t care whether a project was created by a man or women. Two-thirds of women thought a project was better when told it was created by a man than the project created by a woman, even when it was exactly the same project."
Faculty News

Professor Lawrence White is interviewed about the Trump administration's infrastructure stimulus plan

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Excerpt from the International Business Times -- "Some, however, like Lawrence White, an economics professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, aren’t too worried about the burden of a nationwide stimulus being thrown on the shoulders of local debt issuers, as much of the funding should come from the federal government or public-private partnerships if the projects are federally-mandated. 'There will be some kind of presence there. The feds are going to be involved,' White said. Still, he added, citing the general uncertainty associated with the Trump administration, 'Who knows?'"

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