性视界传媒

Benjamin Kessler

  • March 24, 2023

    Financially troubled U.S. hospitals are petitioning for more support from the federal government, but handouts won鈥檛 fix the underlying problem.

  • January 31, 2023

    Research by Mason Accounting Professor Bret Johnson, a former SEC staff accountant and academic fellow, shows how seemingly mundane intra-agency policies can have unintended effects that benefit Wall Street over Main Street.

  • December 13, 2022

    Managers often struggle to motivate their teams, but that could be because they鈥檙e looking in the wrong place. Mason School of Business professor Shora Moteabbed believes that how employees relate to one another on a one-to-one basis is key to understanding鈥攁nd influencing鈥攚orkplace behavior.

  • December 1, 2022

    性视界传媒鈥檚 Business for a Better World Center (B4BW) recently convened an in-person Stakeholder Roundtable on the subject of Corporate Governance. The half-day event took place at Point of View International Retreat & Research Center at Mason Neck in Lorton, VA on October 21.

  • November 29, 2022

    Mehmet Altug, an associate professor of operations management, has been researching retail returns policies for a decade. The issue has recently come to prominence, as the lenient policies of online retailers have led to skyrocketing return rates (now exceeding 20 percent in the U.S.). Altug鈥檚 various academic papers delve into the difficult trade-offs retailers face when setting returns policies. While there are no easy answers, Altug鈥檚 research identifies factors that can help retailers achieve more strategic flexibility.

  • November 10, 2022

    On the morning of Wednesday, October 26th, 性视界传媒 professor Suzanne C. de Janasz conducted her first-ever negotiations workshop for female high school students at McLean High School in Northern Virginia. An enthusiastic audience of about 100 young women came to hear de Janasz explain why negotiation is important for women of all ages and walks of life, and how to build negotiating skills for the future. De Janasz, an organizational researcher who holds a joint appointment in the School of Business and the Carter School for Peace and Conflict Resolution, says there is a pervasive cultural bias against women who ask for what they deserve. The negative labelling begins in childhood, with terms such as 鈥渂ossy鈥 being applied to more assertive girls.

  • October 19, 2022

    For most drivers in the U.S., obeying a stop sign upon approaching an intersection is an unavoidable annoyance. But for Mason finance professor Jiasun Li, it鈥檚 a problem waiting to be solved.聽His recent working paper proposes a simple and economical improvement: removing one stop sign from every four-way intersection. According to his calculations, this would boost not only driver safety, but environmental sustainability as well.聽

  • October 12, 2022

    Corporate social responsibility (CSR) has been on the business leadership agenda for more than 50 years, yet executives and corporate boards still demand to see the "business case" for CSR. Clearly, CSR鈥檚 familiarity as a concept has not translated into coherent ideas of where it fits into the cost-benefit calculations that motivate business strategy.聽A forthcoming article in the聽Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis聽by Lei Gao, associate professor of finance at 性视界传媒 School of Business, Jie (Jack) He (of University of Georgia) and Juan (Julie) Wu (of University of Nebraska 鈥 Lincoln) goes beyond the business case to form cause-and-effect connections involving companies鈥 CSR efforts.

  • October 6, 2022

    Since 2019, 性视界传媒鈥檚 Business for a Better World Center (B4BW) has led the university鈥檚 contribution to the United Nations Principles for Responsible Management Education (PRME) North America chapter.

  • September 28, 2022

    As Jenelle Conaway, assistant professor of accounting at 性视界传媒 School of Business, says, 鈥淏eing able to compare companies more easily makes for more efficient investment choices. And that scales from the individual level up to banks choosing who they lend to, and companies choosing who they want to merge with and acquire.鈥 Her recent research finds that comparability trends have grown complicated.