- October 20, 2023
Some 29% of employees quit within a month of their first promotion. Victoria Grady, associate professor of management, talks to HR Brew about what HR can do to retain these employees.
- October 16, 2023
Associate Professor of Management Heather Vough appeared on the Academic Minute podcast to discuss the growing field of entrepreneurship education and how it could play a critical role in helping entrepreneurs correctly identify themselves.
- October 4, 2023
"If an academic spends years preparing a paper and nobody reads it, does it make a difference in the world? No. That’s why we must change how we write," says Management Professor Kevin Rockmann in an article for AACSB Insights.
- October 2, 2023
Passion is a state of mind that can’t be objectively measured, yet many bosses believe they can spot a passionate employee, writes Associate Professor of Management Heather Vough in an article for Fast Company.
- September 18, 2023
Associate Professor of Management Heather Vough's research into how a focus on passion in creative professions poses risks for employees was covered in Great Place to Work.
- August 18, 2023
When confronted with sexist humor at work, women are often left with no good option, explains Mandy O'Neill in an op-ed for Smartbrief.
- July 31, 2023
Einav Hart, assistant professor of organizational behavior in the management department, explains why you should ask sensitive questions in the workplace in The Academic Minute.
- July 10, 2023
Heather Vough, associate professor of management, and Benjamin Kessler write about how to keep social tension from tearing your team apart in the July 2023 issue of HR Future magazine.
- July 5, 2023
Einav Hart, assistant professor of management, appeared on Inside Higher Ed's Academic Minute podcast to discuss her research on negotiation styles.
- June 20, 2023
Sarah Wittman, assistant professor of management, was interviewed by The Business Journals in an article about workers who are biding their time for better offers instead of resigning - a phenomenon they call the "Big Stay."