12 results on '"S. Sinan Erzurumlu"'
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2. Development and deployment dynamics of sustainability-driven innovations in the electric and energy utility industry
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S. Sinan Erzurumlu and Wendy Yu
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Marketing ,Information Systems and Management ,020209 energy ,Strategy and Management ,Energy (esotericism) ,05 social sciences ,02 engineering and technology ,Competitor analysis ,Commercialization ,Competitive advantage ,Computer Science Applications ,Software deployment ,Dynamics (music) ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,0502 economics and business ,Sustainability ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Portfolio ,Business ,050203 business & management ,Industrial organization - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to examine sustainability-oriented innovations within the electric and energy utility industry in US through the lens of innovation theory and obtain insights on the development and commercialization of sustainability-oriented utility innovations. This research focuses on the top MSCI ESG-rated U.S. utility companies and explores a mix of innovations and strategies that differentiate these top companies. The three emerging propositions from this study are the importance for companies to diversify their innovation portfolio, engage their customers, and establish an intrapreneurial culture. The conjoining of these three propositions offers an evaluation and decision making framework for the companies to maximize the efficacy of profitable and sustainable innovations at all levels and gain a competitive edge against their competitors.
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- 2018
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3. Signing to living PRME: Learning from a journey towards responsible management education
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Stephen Deets, Vikki L. Rodgers, S. Sinan Erzurumlu, Danna Greenberg, Melissa Manwaring, James Hunt, and Elizabeth Swanson
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Academic culture ,Process (engineering) ,Strategy and Management ,05 social sciences ,Perspective (graphical) ,050301 education ,Commit ,Education ,Academic institution ,Transformative learning ,0502 economics and business ,Pedagogy ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Sociology ,Student learning ,Study analysis ,0503 education ,050203 business & management - Abstract
When colleges commit to responsible management education (RME), they begin a journey of integrating a potentially transformative pedagogy into an established academic culture. This process can be challenging as academic institutions are notoriously difficult to change, particularly when it comes to faculty-led processes such as pedagogy. In this paper, we explore an eight-year period in which one academic institution, Babson College, transitions from signing the PRME to integrating RME into the college's operations and pedagogy. This case study analysis shows that the same factors that facilitated widespread, early adoption of RME have also hindered the college from fully achieving its desired impact on student learning and the broader community. This case contributes to the growing body of research on RME by providing a longitudinal perspective that highlights the complexity of aligning an academic institution with this transformative pedagogy.
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- 2017
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4. Online Appendix for Managing Capital Market Frictions via Cost-Reduction Investments
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S. Sinan Erzurumlu, Fehmi Tanrisever, Moren Lévesque, and Nitin Joglekar
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Cost reduction ,Finance ,business.industry ,Business ,Capital market - Published
- 2019
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5. Topic modeling and technology forecasting for assessing the commercial viability of healthcare innovations
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S. Sinan Erzurumlu and Dessislava A. Pachamanova
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Topic model ,Knowledge management ,Scope (project management) ,business.industry ,020209 energy ,05 social sciences ,Innovation management ,02 engineering and technology ,Data resources ,Subject-matter expert ,Work (electrical) ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,0502 economics and business ,Health care ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Business and International Management ,business ,050203 business & management ,Applied Psychology ,Technology forecasting - Abstract
Developing technologies for a transfer from science to market is a key element of research-intensive organizations such as innovation management centers that work closely with inventors to commercialize their technological innovations. To advance the commercial viability of technological innovations, this paper proposes a framework that integrates topic modeling, survival analysis, and judgment of subject matter experts to forecast promising technologies using patents as data resources. Regarding the commercial viability of identified technologies, our empirical analysis focuses on patents and licensing data from a prominent innovation management center over a 20-year period. We are able to identify technologies that are statistically significant for predicting the likelihood and the time until a patent is commercialized, and suggest a way to assess their scope of technological impact. Our results contribute to the understanding of promising healthcare technologies and help R&D managers to develop the knowledge they need to advocate technologies in support of commercial returns.
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- 2020
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6. Managing Capital Market Frictions via Cost-Reduction Investments
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Nitin Joglekar, Fehmi Tanrisever, Moren Lévesque, S. Sinan Erzurumlu, and Tanrısever, Fehmi
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050208 finance ,Strategy and Management ,Production cost ,05 social sciences ,Monetary economics ,Management Science and Operations Research ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,OM-finance interface ,Unit (housing) ,Reduction (complexity) ,Microeconomics ,Cost reduction ,Capital (economics) ,Cost-reduction investment ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Production (economics) ,050207 economics ,Operational hedging ,Frictionless market ,Unit cost ,Capital market ,Capital market frictions - Abstract
Problem definition: We examine how the presence of capital market frictions influences the decision to invest in production cost reduction and the resultant production volume. This investment can increase the firm’s cash flow by increasing the profit margin, but it can also decrease the firm’s risk-free cash reserves and thus affect its exposure to capital market frictions. Academic/practical relevance: Process improvement aimed at production cost reduction has generated myriad of theoretical questions about efficient investment options and capacity choices. From a managerial perspective, process improvement is a fundamental concern in operations strategy. Nevertheless, its analysis typically excludes financial constraints by assuming a perfect capital market. Methodology: We formulate a two-stage profit maximization model in which a capital-constrained firm commits to a cost-reduction investment in the first stage in anticipation of its production decision in the second stage of this two-stage decision process. The firm considers capital market frictions when making decisions at each stage, while considering uncertainty in demand for its offering and in reducing its unit production cost. Results: When a firm faces small initial capital and low preinvestment unit production costs, it can benefit from investing in production cost reduction in the presence of capital market frictions more so than in their absence. Moreover, uncertainty in the production cost reduction mitigates the impact of market frictions on the net benefit (i.e., additional profit), whereas demand uncertainty decreases the feasible parameter space, where investing in production cost reduction is optimal. Managerial implications: A firm’s decision to invest in production cost reduction affects its operational and financial capabilities. Managers should thus consider this investment as an operational hedge not only against the uncertainty of matching supply and demand but also against exposure to capital market frictions and the resultant financial risk.
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- 2018
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7. Sustainable mining development with community using design thinking and multi-criteria decision analysis
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S. Sinan Erzurumlu and Yaman O. Erzurumlu
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Sustainable development ,Economics and Econometrics ,Process management ,Sociology and Political Science ,Computer science ,Impact assessment ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,Design thinking ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Multiple-criteria decision analysis ,Social system ,Scale (social sciences) ,Sustainability ,business ,Law ,Decision analysis - Abstract
The economic and social outcomes of mining development can be enhanced by positioning local communities central to development activities. Conventional approaches have failed to respond to the needs of the community without this involvement in decision making. Accordingly, novel development approaches for community involvement and sustainability have to recognize the complex nature of social systems in which mining sector exists. The objective of this paper is to develop a community-centered approach by integrating rapid and participatory nature of design thinking with multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA) in order to support sustainable development. While design thinking engages multiple stakeholders for generating alternatives, MCDA provides metrics for assessing these alternatives. Drawing on an example from a small scale mining development in Central America, this paper shows that early community involvement and rigorous impact assessment on a regular basis motivate community involvement and give value to the social outcome of mining development.
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- 2015
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8. The compatibility of durable goods with contingent generic consumables
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S. Sinan Erzurumlu
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Competition (economics) ,Service (business) ,Product (business) ,Information Systems and Management ,Consumables ,Commerce ,Strategy and Management ,Production (economics) ,Profitability index ,Business ,Durable good ,Management Science and Operations Research ,Remanufacturing - Abstract
Many durable products provide value only when used together with contingent services or consumable components, e.g. light fixtures (bulbs), printers (ink), electronics (batteries). Consumers need only have access to the contingent consumable components to continue to derive service from a durable. In fact, many firms rely primarily upon the revenues generated from the contingent services or consumables as the primary source of profitability, e.g. giving away the razors to make money on the blades. Such firms often invest considerable effort into making sure that consumers of their durables are held captive to their own branded consumables by impeding their access to generically available consumables. They do so by designing their products in such a way that they are not readily compatible with the generic consumables. We consider the implications of competition from third-party manufacturers that can provide generic consumables and the manufacturer’s production decisions of a durable good under such contingencies. This allows us to draw managerial insights about how a firm should decide on his product compatibility and production quantity when the generic contingent consumables enter the market.
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- 2013
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9. Sequential Innovation by Start-Ups: Balancing Survival and Profitability
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Karthik Ramachandran, S. Sinan Erzurumlu, and Sreekumar R. Bhaskaran
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Entrepreneurship ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Commercialization ,Bankruptcy ,Cash ,New product development ,Revenue ,Profitability index ,Product (category theory) ,Marketing ,business ,Industrial organization ,media_common - Abstract
Start-up firms, which are by nature cash-constrained, often consider launching an immediately available product to generate funds for developing more advanced products. However, this release could have an adverse effect on the perception of the firm’s future products. A key decision for the start-up firm in such an environment is: when should the first product be released? In this paper we consider the product development and introduction decisions for a start-up which has a product that is ready to launch and is also developing a more advanced product, whose launch readiness is uncertain. We model the tradeoff between the adverse effect of a first version on overall profitability and the valuable stream of revenue it generates for R&D funding. We characterize an optimal policy with cash thresholds to determine when the firm should launch the first version and whether it should continue development. We derive managerial insights by studying these cash thresholds under various technological and market scenarios. Our analysis underscores a fundamental difference between how a start-up and an established firm view commercialization: a start-up would delay the launch of a good first version longer while an established firm (without bankruptcy considerations) would accelerate its launch.
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- 2013
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10. Managing Transformational Start-Up Risks: Evidence from ARPA-E Program
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S. Sinan Erzurumlu, Jane Davies, and Nitin Joglekar
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Finance ,Actuarial science ,Market segmentation ,business.industry ,Economic recovery ,Financial risk management ,Business ,Venture capital ,Clean technology ,Business risks ,Risk management ,Valuation (finance) - Abstract
The climate change debate and economic recovery strategies in various industries demand transformational projects in clean technology. Transformation in this context refers to a nearly tenfold improvement in a key technical performance indicator that is typically conditioned upon making high risk scientific breakthroughs. These projects face multiple sources of uncertainty in high risk situations, and require specialized knowhow and longer periods for revenue growth than their counterparts in other industries. The risk profile of such projects makes them unattractive investments to conventional financiers like banks and venture capital funds. We use data from 36 clean technology projects funded by the U.S. Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy, to examine how operations design can hedge risk and enhance project valuation during early start-up stages. For start-up managers who are attempting to develop transformational technologies, our findings clarify the valuation criteria in high risk, high reward circumstances and offer strategies for securing and assigning resources. We find that firms with an operations design to reduce business risk receive more project funding. On the other hand, the choice of market segments for deployment remains uncertain for such start-ups, and design choices related to market competitiveness show a negative correlation to the level of funding.
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- 2012
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11. Production, Process Investment and the Survival of Debt Financed Startup Firms
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S. Sinan Erzurumlu, Fehmi Tanrisever, Nitin Joglekar, and Operations Planning Acc. & Control
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Monetary economics ,SDG 9 – Industrie ,Management Science and Operations Research ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Profit (economics) ,Microeconomics ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Return on investment ,Debt ,Economics ,Production (economics) ,Innovation ,Unit cost ,media_common ,innovatie en infrastructuur ,Investment policy ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,Investment decisions ,Bankruptcy ,Cash ,and Infrastructure ,SDG 9 - Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure ,Business ,Monopoly ,SDG 9 - Industry - Abstract
Whether to invest in process development that can reduce the unit cost and thereby raise future profits or to conserve cash and reduce the likelihood of bankruptcy is a key trade-off faced by many startup firms that have taken on debt. We explore this trade-off by examining the production quantity and cost reducing R&D investment decisions in a two period model wherein a startup firm must make a minimum level of profit at the end of the first period to survive and operate in the second period. We specify a probabilistic survival measure as a function of production and investment decisions to track and manage the risk exposure of the startup depending on three key market factors: technology, demand, and competitor's cost. We develop managerial insights by characterizing how to create operational hedges against the bankruptcy risk: if a startup makes a "conservative" investment decision, then it also selects an optimal quantity that is less than the monopoly level and hence sacrifices some of first period expected profits to increase its survival chances. If it decides to invest "aggressively," then it produces more than the monopoly level to cover the higher bankruptcy risk. We also illustrate that debt constraint shrinks the decision space, wherein such process investments are viable.
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- 2009
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12. Dynamic Management of Mutual Fund Advisory Contracts
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S. Sinan Erzurumlu and Yaman O. Erzurumlu
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Finance ,Management fee ,Actuarial science ,business.industry ,education ,Equity (finance) ,Survivorship bias ,Portfolio ,Performance fee ,Project portfolio management ,business ,health care economics and organizations ,Risk management ,Mutual fund - Abstract
The price of professional portfolio management provided by the mutual fund adviser depends not only on the fund characteristics but also on the fund objective, the adviser's portfolio related and management based decisions, and the portfolio performance. We analyze the advisory fee, using a survivorship bias free data set of 176 equity funds managed by 125 different advisers. Advisers benchmark the objective average but this benefit the shareholders only when the objective trend is descending. Advisers tend to reduce the cost of their marginal product through the use of derivatives or manipulate by engaging in soft dollar agreements. We find that the advisers actively manage the advisory fee contracts responding to the outcome of their management decisions. The advisory fee increases after voluntary fee reimbursement or if the adviser is not fully reimbursed for the compensation of independent directors and officers. Risk taking behavior is the main motivation behind the structure of the advisory contracts. Advisers who adopt more linear contracts that would motivate them to take on more risk tend to use derivatives arguably for better risk management and are less likely to engage in research agreements that would require a reduction in the advisory fee.
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- 2006
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