New SOM "raw" cases provide real-world
situations
When business school students anywhere in the country
consider the buyout of the Texas utility TXU by a pair of private equity firms,
they don't have to use a standard business school case study. (Such studies are
traditional business school teaching tools, but they are heavily predigested
and interpreted for students.) Instead, students can use a "raw
case," a new type of multimedia online case developed by SOM to support
the school's innovative, integrated MBA curriculum by more closely replicating
real-world business situations. The SOM case-writing team, which has developed more
than 20 "raw" cases for the Yale MBA program, originally created the
TXU case for a competition sponsored by the Aspen Institute and JPMorgan Chase.
Rather than a "cooked" narrative,
summarizing the background of the issue, the case team prepared a website that linked
to a plethora of "raw" documents that would have been available to a
person deeply involved in the actual deal. Students are provided with news
accounts, analyst's reports, news releases, videos, maps, 10Ks, and stock
charts as they try to put together a strategy for how the various parties
should proceed. View the TXU case and learn more about "raw" cases at
http://mba.yale.edu/news_events/CMS/Articles/6434.shtml.
Successful faculty recruiting brings senior academics
to Yale SOM
An exceptional faculty recruiting season last year
has resulted in significant additions to the SOM senior faculty. Gary Gorton,
whose research has focused on banking, corporate finance, asset pricing, and
commodity futures, comes to Yale from the Wharton School, where he was a
professor of banking and finance and held a secondary appointment as professor
of economics in the University of Pennsylvania College of Arts and Sciences.
Stephen Redding, formerly a reader in economics at the London School of
Economics and director of the Globalization Program at the LSE Center for
Economic Performance, has focused on productivity growth at the firm and
industry level, international trade, and economic geography. Redding was a
visiting associate professor in the department of economics at Harvard
University in 2007-2008. The two are joined by Constance Bagley, newly
appointed professor in the practice of law and management, who comes to Yale
SOM from the Harvard Business School, and seven other new tenure-track hires in
marketing, economics, organizational behavior, and operations management.
Q3 asks, "Can good health be good business?"
Q3, the third issue of the SOM magazine, takes a look at the
intersection of health and business and how strong management practices can
improve healthcare around the globe. The issue addresses the problems
surrounding employer-sponsored health insurance, the best ways to fund medical
innovation, how to reduce medical errors, and how healthcare consumers make
decisions. Q3 pulls together top practitioners and faculty from SOM and around the country to
tackle some of the most important issues facing business today. The magazine
can be found online at som.yale.edu/q3, where you can also request a print
copy.