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Topics: Faculty & Research
June 17, 2019
Business Insider

Financial documents show the NRA is living 'paycheck to paycheck,' and ended 2018 $10.8 million in the red

The new details about the NRA's financial dealings come after several reports about infighting and other signs of turmoil within the organization. Brian Mittendorf, the Fisher Designated Professor in Accounting, examined the organization's 2018 financial report and told The Washington Post that the documents depicted the organization like "a person living paycheck to paycheck."
June 14, 2019
NBC4

Wrongful death lawsuits, Legionnaires’ outbreak damage Mount Carmel brand, experts say

Experts in crisis management say the damage to the Mount Carmel brand is significant but not beyond repair. Deborah Mitchell, who teaches marketing at Fisher College of Business, says there are plenty of examples of company brands surviving extraordinary damage. 
June 4, 2019
Salon

Is Apple really a privacy-first company?

Apple wants consumers to view it as the privacy-centric tech company — but some security experts aren't impressed. Dennis Hirsch, a professor of law and Director of the Program on Data and Governance at The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law and research fellow at The Risk Institute, sees parallels to when big corporations made a push to make green products, and marketed them as so to win trust from consumers.
May 29, 2019
Business Insider

Extroverts have four consistent advantages over everyone else at work

According to a forthcoming publication, extroverts tend to have consistent advantages over everyone else in the workplace, which jibes with other research on the benefits associated with extroversion. For example, extroverts are more likely to become leaders and to lead effectively, according Timothy Judge, the Joseph A. Alutto Chair in Leadership Effectiveness and executive director of the Fisher Leadership Initiative.
May 24, 2019
Harvard Business Review

Creating a culture of continuous improvement

How do organizations remain committed to continuous improvement when the leader who championed lean strategies leaves? Researching within the health care industry, Aravind Chandrasekaran and John Toussaint identify a set of practices that can stop this backsliding and sustain a culture of continuous improvement after such departures.
Group of students pose in front of University of Dodoma sign
May 22, 2019
Fisher College of Business

Collaboration connects Fisher with partners in Tanzania

Throughout the past four years, students, faculty and leaders from The Ohio State University’s Global Water Institute have partnered with the Universi
May 18, 2019
The Columbus Dispatch

Recent United Way campaign raises $22 million, with more year-round fundraising

United Ways throughout the nation have been working to gain a footing as charitable habits shift away from workplace giving. Wealthy donors have moved to donor-advised funds at financial firms, while many other donors — especially the young — increasingly give directly to nonprofit groups online or through crowdfunding events. Brian Mittendorf, the Fisher Designated Professor in Accounting, explains why.
May 15, 2019
NPR

As leaks show lavish NRA spending, former staff detail poor conditions at nonprofit

New documents leaked about National Rifle Association top executive Wayne LaPierre's lavish clothing and travel expenses contrast with the culture of fear, poor pay and an underfunded pension described by former staffers. Brian Mittendorf, the Fisher Designated Professor in Accounting, helped NPR review copies of 2019 NRA pension documents.
Terry Esper leads a TedxOhio State talk about why logistics is important to him.
May 10, 2019
Fisher College of Business

TEDx event spotlights the power of logistics

Highlighting the impact of and their passion for logistics, Fisher students, faculty and business leaders from the community united for a series of TE
May 7, 2019
Institutional Investor

The mystery of the missing Berkshire Hathaway invite

Warren Buffett has snubbed KBW’s Meyer Shields from participating in his annual conclave for years. Why? The answer may lie in a difference of investing philosophies. Lu Zhang, the John W. Galbreath Chair in Real Estate at Fisher, points out that Buffett’s stock picking is value-oriented, a countercyclical style that has been out of fashion for much of the past decade. “Ten years is just too short to suggest Buffett should change his strategy,” Zhang says. “Over the long term, Berkshire has beaten any index, any index, hands down.”
May 3, 2019
Entrepreneur

Science says healthy scheduling habits make people happier

Selin Malkoc, a professor of marketing at Fisher, and her colleague discovered that when a leisure activity is planned, it’s less enjoyable than if it had taken place spontaneously: “It becomes a part of our to-do list. As an outcome, they [the activity] becomes less enjoyable," Malkoc said.
May 2, 2019
Think Op-Ex

Simple, not easy: Talking leadership with bestselling author Sam Walker

What seemed like a clear-cut research project on the “secret sauce” behind the greatest teams in sports history has evolved into a multi-year endeavor and bestselling book for Sam Walker, a Wall Street Journal columnist and one-time editor. Walker, who served as the kickoff keynote at The Ohio State University Center for Operational Excellence’s seventh-annual Leading Through Excellence summit, talked about the biggest takeaways from his book – and where the project is taking him next. 
May 1, 2019
Think Op-Ex

COE Summit 2019: A look back, in pictures

Each year, The Ohio State University Center for Operational Excellence brings together hundreds of process improvement leaders from across the country for a deep dive into leadership and problem-solving best practices at its Leading Through Excellence summit. Check out photos from the center's seventh summit this past April.
Hundreds of Fisher grads in caps and gowns at commencement
May 1, 2019
Fisher College of Business

Fisher celebrates the Class of 2019

A number of Fisher College of Business ceremonies and festivities marked the accomplishments of the graduating Class of 2019.Undergraduate students, t
April 26, 2019
Bloomberg

Pharma-funded charity touted ‘higher profits’ for drugmakers

Brian Mittendorf, the Fisher Designated Professorship in Accounting, weighs in on a nonprofit's tax filings and the questions they raise about the organization's dealings with drugmakers.
April 17, 2019
The New Yorker

Secrecy, self-dealing, and greed at the N.R.A.

The organization’s leadership is focused on external threats, but the real crisis may be internal. Brian Mittendorf, the Fisher Designated Professorship in Accounting, has analyzed 11 years’ worth of the organization’s public financial statements, starting in 2007. In seven of those years, he found “the N.R.A. owed more money to others than it had at its discretion to spend.” A financial audit from 2017 revealed that it had nearly reached the limit of a $25 million.
April 15, 2019
The Ohio State University

Ohio State institute highlights efforts to stop distracted driving

Every day in the U.S., approximately nine people are killed and more than 1,000 injured in crashes that are reported to involve a distracted driver, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The Risk Institute at The Ohio State University Fisher College of Business is working to bring those numbers down.
April 9, 2019
The Columbus Dispatch

'New Urbanism' pioneer praises Columbus development

Andres Duany, the keynote speaker at the City of the Future conference hosted by The Ohio State University’s Center for Real Estate, said he was “stunned” to see so much development in Columbus since his last visit a decade ago. A pioneer of New Urbanist-style growth praised Columbus' development while knocking "NIMBYS" who resist change.
April 8, 2019
Columbus CEO

Introducing CaaStle: Former Gwynnie Bee pushing the retail envelope

Terry Esper, associate professor of logistics at Fisher, says Columbus becomes even more attractive for companies that use a ship-to-consumer rather than a ship-to-store model: “The location is central to where people live, not just where they shop.”
April 1, 2019
WBNS-10TV

Hilliard helping drivers navigate roundabouts through new approach

Hilliard city leaders found  many people still don’t know how to use roundabouts. The leaders referenced research by the Risk Institute at The Ohio State University Fisher College of Business, which showed that when used properly roundabouts can save lives.
April 1, 2019
WCPN ideastream

If Trump shuts down U.S.-Mexico trade, Ohio would take hit

Freezing the flow of goods between the U.S. and Mexico would have a significant impact on Ohio because of the interconnectedness of global supply chains, according to Tom Goldsby, the Harry T. Mangurian Jr. Foundation Professor in Business at Fisher. 
March 29, 2019
Forbes

New research provides insight into 'deadly epidemic' of distracted driving

In coordination with Distracted Driving Awareness Month, the Risk Institute announced several projects and research to help predict and curb the deadly behaviors, including a coordinated nationwide effort comprised of dozens of companies, government entities, and researchers seeking to combine the latest research with industry expertise.
March 28, 2019
Columbus Business First

Promoting women to leadership roles: A little less conversation, a little more action

Fisher's Tanya Menon shares insights into how companies can structure their workplaces and their hiring practices to close the gap in the number of women hired for leadership roles.
GrubHub
March 21, 2019
Fisher College of Business

What can we learn from the GrubHub driver?

Thanks to the popularity of delivery services like GrubHub, UberEats and Amazon Prime Now, consumers are influencing companies’ supply chain strategies whether they know it or not.

In his research, Vince Castillo, assistant professor of logistics at Fisher, examined how crowdsourced delivery is impacting the most important — and costly — aspect of the retail supply chain.
March 17, 2019
Forbes

Saying 'I don't have time' is a great way to lose trust with teammates

Research by Grant Donnelly, assistant professor of marketing, suggests that simply telling colleagues "I don't have time" for their requests can make them feel less valued and less likely to trust you.