An Empirical Analysis of Intra-Firm Product Substitutability in Fashion Retailing
Authors: E. Ergin, Mehmet Gumus, and N. Yang
Publication: Production and Operations Management, Forthcoming
Abstract:
Incentives and Emission Responsibility Allocation in Supply Chains
Authors: Sanjith Gopalakrishnan, D. Granot, F. Granot, G. Sošić, and H. Cui
Publication: Management Science, Volume 67, Issue 7, July 2021, Pages 4172-4190
Abstract:
Narrative in the Economic Sphere: The International Monetary Fund and the Scripting of a Global Economy
Author: Lindsay Holmgren
Publication: NARRATIVE, Vol. 29, No. 2 (May 2021)
Abstract:
Professors Etzion, Animesh and Luederitz awarded SSHRC Partnership Development Grant
Dror Etzion, Animesh Animesh and Christopher Luederitz awarded SSHRC Partnership Development Grant
Professor Perez-Aleman awarded 2020-2021 SSHRC Partnership Engage Grant
Paola Perez-Aleman, Associate Professor of Strategy & Organization, awarded 2020-2021 SSHRC Partnership Engage Grant
Professor Cohen awarded 2021 NSERC Discovery Grant
Maxime Cohen, Professor of Retail and Operations Management awarded 2021 NSERC Discovery Grant
Professor Khern-am-nuai awarded 2021 NSERC Discovery Grant
Warut Khern-am-nuai, Assistant Professor of Information Systems, awarded 2021 NSERC Discovery Grant
Professor Doré awarded 2021 NSERC Discovery Grant
Bruce P. Doré, Assistant Professor of Marketing awarded 2021 NSERC Discovery Grant
Professors Vaast and Pinsonneault awarded 2021 SSHRC Insight Grant
Emmanuelle Vaast, Professor of Information Systems and Alain Pinsonneault, Professor of Information Systems, awarded 2021 SSHRC Insight Grant
Professor Doré awarded 2021 SSHRC Insight Grant
Bruce P. Doré, Assistant Professor of Marketing, awarded 2021 SSHRC Insight Grant
Professor Holmgren awarded 2021 SSHRC Insight Grant
Lindsay Holmgren, Associate Professor of Strategy & Organization, awarded 2021 SSHRC Insight Grant
Charging an Electric Vehicle-Sharing Fleet
Electric vehicle (EV) sharing programs rely on publicly available charging infrastructure. Yet often there simply isn’t enough infrastructure to go around, creating a major barrier to success. In 2016, the vehicle sharing company Car2Go sold off its fleet of EVs in San Diego largely because the city’s charging infrastructure couldn’t keep pace with demand. Or so it seemed. With too many vehicles being dropped off at a few charging points in high-use areas, delays grew.
A multi-category demand model incorporating inter-product proximity
Authors: Yu Ma, P.B. Seetharaman and V. Singh
Publication: Journal of Business Research, Volume 124, January 2021, Pages 152-162
Abstract:
The Dual Impact of Product Line Length on Consumer Choice
Jalapeño cheddar or zesty lime. Crinkle cut or wavy. Potato chips are as varied as people’s appetites – and the chances are pretty good that everyone’s local corner store features dozens of choices to suit every taste. But do the countless variations of this humble snack food satisfy consumer demand for variety, or intimidate the indecisive by making it too difficult to choose?
Robert Nason, Associate Professor of Strategy & Organization, awarded William Dawson Scholar
Professor Robert Nason’s research program centers on entrepreneurship and inequality. While flashy startups dominate headlines, the reality is that most of the rich are entrepreneurs and most entrepreneurs are poor.