In The Headlines Newsroom
March 14, 2018
The New York Times
The New York Times
Walmart expands online grocery delivery to 100 cities
“There is a lot of experimenting going on as everyone tries to figure out that last-mile delivery — it’s a tough economic equation to make work,” said Mike Knemeyer, a professor of logistics at Fisher. “But if you can, you’ll have a big head start on the others, and you’ll end up making money not just in groceries but on all of the things that you sell.”
March 12, 2018
NBC4
NBC4
Third party shopping causes confusion for customers
A number of merchants use third-party vendors. It’s just another way to sell products online. Fisher's Deborah Mitchell said it’s part of the changing shopper landscape.
March 12, 2018
ABC 7
ABC 7
Students spend Spring Break giving back
While some college students have hit the Suncoast with the beach in mind, a group of students from Fisher College of Business are giving up their beach time — to give back instead.
February 27, 2018
WBNS-10TV
WBNS-10TV
Jeni's Splendid Ice Creams owner threatens to cut ties with FedEx over NRA partnership
Fisher's Deborah Mitchell shares insights into branding considerations companies face when they take political stances.
February 27, 2018
Houston Chronicle
Houston Chronicle
We've heard a lot of bad apologies lately. What makes a good one?
Roy Lewicki, professor emeritus of management and human resources at Fisher College of Business, started focusing on apologies in the wake of JetBlue's detailed explanation of a major equipment shutdown in New York, Tiger Woods's mea culpa for extramarital affairs, and British Petroleum's attempt to atone after the deadly Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
February 26, 2018
Smart Business
Smart Business
Navigating a tighter labor market
Every quarter, the National Center for the Middle Market surveys 1,000 executives. One thing we ask is whether their company’s overall performance has improved, deteriorated or stayed the same in the past year.
February 23, 2018
San Francisco Chronicle
San Francisco Chronicle
Silicon Valley Community Foundation’s assets surged in 2017. It won’t say why
Unlike private foundations, which generally must distribute at least 5 percent of their investments each year to operating charities, there is no grant-making requirement for donor-advised funds. Critics call them rest stops for charity dollars. Brian Mittendorf, an accounting professor at Ohio State University, said it’s “crazy” that large sponsors of donor-advised funds “are not subject to the same disclosure requirements that private foundations are.”
February 23, 2018
Chief Executive
Chief Executive
R&D is fueling innovation culture
An outsized commitment to investing in innovation is a major distinguishing characteristic of “growth champions” of the mid-market—those 10 percent of companies identified by the National Center for the Middle Market (NCMM) as the biggest gainers over time.
February 22, 2018
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
Big companies are getting a chokehold on the economy
In a recent paper, economists Söhnke Bartram, Gregory Brown and Fisher's René M. Stulz show that the increasing domination of public markets by large old companies — the superstars that economists are warning about — is responsible for the increasing correlations between stocks.
February 21, 2018
WBNS-10TV
WBNS-10TV
What researchers are doing to tackle distracted driving
A group called the Risk Institute at Ohio State University is looking at what can be done to change habits and behaviors about cellphones and driving.
February 19, 2018
Columbus CEO
Columbus CEO
Is a humble boss a better boss?
No one likes an egomaniac, but sometimes a little arrogance may be just what the C-suite needs. “To team members who expect leaders ... to take charge and give orders, humble leaders may be met with doubt,” says Fisher's Jasmine Hu.
February 14, 2018
The Columbus Dispatch
The Columbus Dispatch
Matters of Taste: False truths can mislead consumers at grocery
The belief in the health power of expensive foods — or that healthy foods need to cost more — is misguided, according to Rebecca Reczek, a food psychologist and marketing researcher at Ohio State University.
February 9, 2018
NBC News
NBC News
Will a falling stock market take the jobs market down with it?
“The stock market is what economists call a leading indicator of the business cycle, the real economy, while the labor market is a lagging indicator,” said Fisher's Lu Zhang, who has studied correlations between stock prices and the labor market.
February 5, 2018
Reward Expert
Reward Expert
Researchers find adults with ADHD may struggle financially
According to Ohio State researchers Itzhak (Zahi) Ben-David and Dr. Theordore P. Beauchaine, and a colleague at the University of Florida, adults with ADHD may struggle financially.
February 5, 2018
Columbus CEO
Columbus CEO
All In
After a year of doubt, sacrifice and reinvention, does CrossChx's Sean Lane finally have his billion-dollar idea in Columbus, an area that Fisher's Bill Diffenderffer says "is not the city that it was when I first got here 12 years ago."
February 4, 2018
Financial Times
Financial Times
ETF growth is ‘in danger of devouring capitalism’
Itzhak Ben-David, a finance professor at Fisher, presented a paper that showed that when a company joins a major index both its ETF ownership and volatility goes up, and when it leaves its ETF ownership and volatility goes down. “No one doubts this [the ETF] is a great innovation, but at the same time it could have some unintended consequences,” Prof Ben-David said at the conference.
January 26, 2018
The Columbus Dispatch
The Columbus Dispatch
U.S. Olympic curling team to wear apparel from Columbus retailer
Pursuit is providing suits, dress shirts and accessories for the Team Shuster curling team that will represent the U.S. at the Winter Olympic Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Pursuit, founded by a Fisher alumnus, is doing “the opposite of Super Bowl advertising,” said Deborah Mitchell, a professor of marketing at Ohio State’s Fisher College of Business.
January 23, 2018
Max M. Fisher College of Business
Max M. Fisher College of Business
Poets&Quants: 10 business schools to watch in 2018
Fisher College of Business was among the schools highlighted by Poets&Quants as one that is ready to climb in the rankings and generate greater student interest in the coming year.
December 20, 2017
The Chronicle of Philanthropy
The Chronicle of Philanthropy
How fundraisers should talk to donors about the tax overhaul
Republicans’ tax overhaul could have long-lasting effects on how charities will raise money — and from whom they will raise money. Now, as the overhaul is headed to President Trump’s desk, many fundraisers are wondering what steps to take next in reaching out to donors. Here’s what the experts such as Fisher's Brian Mittendorf suggest.
December 17, 2017
Sandusky Register
Sandusky Register
Experts: Sandusky Mall hanging in there
“The department store is having a very hard time,” said Deborah Mitchell, clinical associate professor of marketing at Ohio State University. Before, the department store was where you had to go if you wanted to look at a lot of different things. Internet sites now handle much of that, she said.
December 15, 2017
CNN
CNN
Want to fix sexual harassment? Don't hire jerks
As the reckoning continues, people want to know: What can we do about sexual harassment? Based on research by Fisher's Bennett Tepper, Robert Sutton's answer is: Just avoid hiring potential troublemakers in the first place.
December 13, 2017
Poets&Quants
Poets&Quants
Meet Fisher's MBA Class of 2019
“Fisher is family.” You’ll hear that a lot around Ohio State University’s Fisher College of Business. On a campus with nearly 60,000 students, Fisher is an MBA peanut with just 91 full-time students in the Class of 2019. That’s exactly how these first-years want it.
November 17, 2017
The Columbus Dispatch
The Columbus Dispatch
Hard-working Billy Price earns business degree while never missing a game
“The biggest thing once I made my decision to come to Ohio State was to make sure I got my degree because it’s a highly touted, highly respected business school here, Fisher,” senior Billy Price said. “I wanted to enjoy the process.”
November 10, 2017
Springfield News-Sun
Springfield News-Sun
Could driverless tech mean thousands of Ohio trucking jobs lost?
The technology that’s making autonomous vehicles possible isn’t new, said Tom Goldsby, chair of the Department of Marketing and Logistics at Fisher. Instead, it’s been a process of steady technological improvements over a span of decades.
November 5, 2017
The Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Journal
A reality check on stock-market ‘anomalies’
Lu Zhang and his colleagues, Kewei Hou and Chen Xue have been making waves in the investing community with a paper published earlier this year that challenges much of the research out there about market “anomalies.” They spent nearly three years compiling and replicating 447 market anomalies identified in academic literature.