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Research Fellows Program
Research Fellows in a one year program offering students paid opportunities
to work with one of our outstanding Smith Faculty members on their research.
Research Fellows present their work at the annual Research Day each spring.
Fellowship Application Eligibility
- Must be Smith School student with junior or senior standing (60 credits)
- Must have completed a minimum of 12 credit hours at UMCP
- 3.2 minimum cumulative UMCP gpa is preferred, with appeals considered
for otherwise outstanding applicants with gpa below 3.2
- Superior writing and communication skills required.
- Computer proficiency with various applications and platforms is highly
desirable.
- Minimum one-year commitment, which is renewable
Fellowship Compensation & Responsibilities
- Research fellows will complete a total of 250 hours/semester, which can
be allocated as 18 hours/week for 14 weeks or some other set hours, to be
established in consultation with your faculty project supervisor.
- Compensation will be $5,000/year—or $2,500/semester. The fellowship is
an actual job; you will submit hours bi-weekly on the university’s payroll
system, with a maximum of 20 hours/week.
Fellowship Application & Selection Process
- The application for the Fall 2009 cohort will reopen in Spring 2009.
- You can work on your application in any order you choose.
- You will be submitting one application to be considered for all
available projects. While you cannot select a specific project you may
indicate your preference(s) for up to two of the academic departments.
While there is no guarantee that you will be selected for a particular
project, please specify your project preference in your cover letter if
there is a particular project of interest to you.(The academic departments
will review your application and determine which project might be most
appropriate given your credentials).
- You can save your application as a draft (before making a final
submission). Your saved application is located in your "Profile" under "My
Applications" in UNet.
Please remember not to submit your application until you have finished
entering all parts of your application . You will only be able to submit
this application once and are then unable to return to make edits.
Testimonials
Research Fellows Projects
Available research projects are listed below.
Each applicant can apply to be considered by up to two academic departments for
research projects in their specific area (listed below). The Departments
will make their selections and determine which students will be assigned the
specific projects.
Decision,
Operations and Information Technologies Projects
Ritu Agarwal - The Impacts of Electronic Prescribing on Workflow and
Outcomes in Physician Practices [
Description available in
PDF here ]
Ritu Agarwal - Online Health Communities and their Role in Healthcare
Delivery [ Description available in
PDF here ]
Ritu Agarwal - Privacy and Digital Health Information [
Description available in
PDF here ]
Sunil Mithas - IT: The Boon and Bane for Firms
This project has two related goals.
- First, we seek to understand how information technology (IT) can be both
a boon as well as a bane for firms. Much work has looked at the positive
side of IT but few studies have looked at negative consequences of IT. Our
goal will be to take a balanced view and offer suggestions for managing IT
in a way that capitalizes on strengths of using IT while minimizing the
negative consequences.
- A second goal of this study will be to find the extent to which IT
enables firms to pursue goals that at the surface might seem somewhat
inconsistent. For example, literature continues to direct attention to 2 X 2
matrices and dichotomies from which firms must choose (e.g., cost leadership
versus differentiation, centralization versus decentralization). Our
objective will be to look for cases where IT is enabling firms to pursue and
achieve somewhat opposing goals.
Students interested in this project must have basic familiarity with IT tools
and applications and who have motivation and aptitude for doing research. They
should also have excellent writing and communication skills and be willing to
learn to work with research databases. Based on similar projects that I have
supervised earlier, students benefited significantly in terms of acquiring
valuable research skills and turned out to be attractive candidates for
potential employers.
Finance Projects
Logistics, Business, and Public Policy Projects
T. Leigh Anenson - Legal Research
The student will primarily be reading cases, finding and summarizing
secondary source materials, and possibly assisting me in the formatting of
footnotes. All that is necessary is computer literacy and the ability to use a
library. I can teach the student any other skills involved, such as utilizing a
legal database.
The area of research aims at rethinking the role of ancient equitable
defenses in contemporary court practice. Scholarship in this area will be
valuable in furthering an overall theory of the role of law in business.
Equitable defenses often arise in business disputes, especially issues involving
corporate governance and technology. Examining equitable defenses also provides
the theoretical means to explore ways in which lawyers can better manage the
litigation risk of business clients.
The specific research I would like help with analyzes the equitable defense
of “unclean hands” to identify deficiencies in its development and to propose
improvements to enhance its evolution. The undergraduate fellow would assist me
with legal research to complete and finalize three working papers. The first
paper attempts to build a theoretical foundation for the adoption of the
equitable defense of unclean hands in legal cases. The second paper analyzes the
choice of law issue under the constitutionally-based Erie doctrine. The third
paper examines the incorporation of unclean hands under California law.
Rachelle Sampson - Ambiguity Aversion, Contract Structure and Firm Strategy:
An examination of contract structure in technology development alliances and
mergers
How firms organize their alliance activities has profound implications for
the ultimate performance of the collaboration. In this research project, we
examine how firms organize their collaborations with other firms for joint
technology development. Past research has shown how alliance contract structure
is linked with the extent of firm networks. However, our observation from prior
studies tends to contradict what has been suggested in past theory – we observe
that firms tend to have more detailed agreements as they develop relationships
with their partners. This suggests that contracts are more than simply legal
agreements. Further theoretical development in this area suggests that we may be
able to explain the relationship between alliance organizational form and
relationships between firms. More importantly, this new theory suggests that we
may also be able to identify when mergers or large equity exchanges are likely
to take place subsequently to alliance activity with a specific firm.
This research project surrounds the data work associated with testing this
new theoretical advancement. We have collected detailed contracts for firms
entering joint technology development arrangements in the biotechnology
industry. The research required for this project includes collecting background
information on the biotechnology alliances themselves, follow up study on merger
activity and detailed coding of the alliance contracts themselves. From this
work, we hope to gain further insights into (1) the role of organizational form
in firm strategy and (2) what precipitates merger activity.
Marketing
Projects
Rebecca Hamilton &
Rebecca Ratner - Netcentric Behavioral Lab
The Netcentric Behavioral Laboratory’s research fellow will provide expertise
and support to faculty and PhD students using the lab to conduct experimental
research.
Responsibilities include: • assisting faculty and PhD students with
conducting experimental sessions • assisting faculty and PhD students with
MediaLab software (e.g., preparing experiments using MediaLab, troubleshooting)
• working as a research assistant on one or more ongoing research projects being
conducted in the lab
Benefits include: • the opportunity to see first-hand how experimental
research is conducted • working directly with a faculty member on one or more
ongoing research projects • becoming familiar with several stages of the
experimental research process (from the submission of the IRB proposal to
experimental setup, data collection, data analysis and finally, interpretation
of the data)
Management &
Organization
Projects
Azi Gera,
Brent Goldfarb and
David Kirsch - Entrepreneurial Firms
Entrepreneurial firms have become increasingly prominent in the
commercialization of inventions. Entrepreneurial firms face many choices upon
successful innovation: do they commercialize themselves or do they license to
other firms? If they do license, how should they proceed. In this study, we
explore a set of technology licensing agreements between startup and large
firms. The Research Associate will examine these contracts, understand them, and
analyze them. This will contribute to our understanding in the markets for
technology. The Associate would also gain an understanding of the legal ins and
outs of intellectual property (patents) and the markets for technology.
Azi Gera and
Brent Goldfarb - Uncovering Competitive Actions
This research explores how startups and young firms influence their image and
reputation among external decision makers. In one venue, we study how a venture
capital firm selects startups soliciting funds for evaluation. In a second
study, we study how young firms manage their reputation as industry leaders with
investment bankers. We look at the actions taken by the young firms and the
signals these actions create for decision makers who scrutinize the arena in
which the firms act. Research findings in the field to date have shown that the
actions taken by a firm influence its success, and survival.
Our study, in two parts, explores how the firm’s choice of actions
legitimizes, differentiates, or discredits the firm. First, we examine the
existence of a relationship between the competitive actions a firm takes and the
attention it receives. What is the influence of the environment on the preferred
signals? Second, we test the longitudinal impact of earlier actions taken by a
firm in the context of ongoing activity by rivals. What is the durability of
prior competitive actions on image construction and how might the sequencing of
those actions shape the firm’s reputation? We expect that our findings may
contribute to the bodies of work on firm reputation, legitimacy and
organizational decision-making, as well as to the field of entrepreneurship in
general.
The Research Fellow would participate in the development of a rich collection
of news content from a variety of industry publications. Throughout the Fall and
Spring, he or she would be relied upon to thoroughly search through key articles
for reports of competitive actions by young companies in technological
industries, and then capture those actions according to a detailed coding plan.
The work is especially quality-sensitive, as it will be used to test a set of
hypotheses on legitimacy, reputation and rivalry. Therefore the Fellow must be
particularly concerned with accuracy.
This research project may appeal to a student who would enjoy the challenge
of uncovering competitive actions from within a cross-section of printed media.
Along the way, he or she would gain valuable exposure to the manner of research
in strategic management and entrepreneurship.
Jeff Kudisch,
Joyce Russell,
Paul Tesluk - Research on Executive Coaching and Leadership
Development
There has been a surge of interest in recent years on the topic of executive
coaching and its role in the development of managerial/executive talent. In
fact, an increasing number of our EMBA recruits have been attracted to and
ultimately joined the Smith program thanks to the success and branding efforts
associated with our Leadership Development and Executive Coaching Program."
However, the amount and quality of the research on executive coaching and the
leadership development process is highly deficient. In large part this is
because of a failure to combine executive coaching programs and initiatives with
high quality research. The objective of the proposed project is to leverage
existing coaching programs and initiatives in which the members of our coaching
team are engaged for research purposes. We should note that in addition to high
quality research, one of the important goals of this effort is to incorporate
future findings into improving the executive coaching and leadership development
programs at Smith.
Our research team consists of three faculty (listed above) as well as three
PhD students and a Associate Research Scholar in HCIT (post doc researcher).
Together, we have formed a research team called the Executive Coaching
Consortium. We are requesting three Smith Undergraduate Research Fellows to join
this research team. Undergraduate Research Fellows will work closely with the
faculty and PhD students are a variety of research related activities including:
(1) conducting literature reviews and developing bibliographies and research
summaries, (2) working with and organizing existing data collected in our
existing executive coaching programs and initiatives for data analysis, (3)
assisting in planning studies and the development of research designs, (4)
assisting with the development of surveys and other measures, (5) assisting with
data collection efforts, (6) assisting with data analyses, and (7) participating
in writing manuscripts and research reports. The Fellows will build off of the
work being done by the Smith Fellows participating in the executive coaching
research consortium this year.
David L. Major and
Ken G. Smith - Competitive Dynamics
Research Project: This research explores two sets of novel hypotheses in the
study of dynamic competition. Competitive dynamics approaches competition as
discrete moves and countermoves by firms vying for superior performance. It is
most concerned with the fine measure of rival interaction and its resulting
implications. Research findings in the field to date have shown that the host of
actions taken by a firm has distinct implications for its performance and the
performance of its rivals – leader dethronement, advantageous reaction speed,
acceleration of rivalry, and others.
Our study, in two parts, explores the role of a firm’s resources on its
choice of actions, and the lingering implications of past actions. First, we
examine the existence of a reciprocating relationship between the competitive
actions a firm takes and the bundle of resources that it controls. Over time,
how might each contribute/hinder the other? And second, we test the longitudinal
impact of earlier actions taken by a firm in the context of ongoing activity by
rivals. What is the durability of prior competitive actions and how might the
sequencing of those actions constrain/focus the firm’s search process? We expect
that our findings may contribute to the bodies of work on firm resources and
organizational learning as well as to the field of competitive dynamics.
Opportunity for an undergraduate student to actively participation in
research: The Research Fellow would participate in the development of a rich
collection of news content from a variety of industry publications. Throughout
the Fall and Spring, he or she would be relied upon to thoroughly search through
key articles for reports of competitive actions among rival companies, and then
capture those actions according to a detailed coding plan. The work is
especially quality-sensitive, as it will be used to test a set of hypotheses on
competitive rivalry. Therefore the Fellow must be particularly concerned with
accuracy.
This research project may appeal to a student who would enjoy the challenge
of uncovering competitive actions from within a cross-section of printed media.
Along the way, he or she would gain valuable exposure to the manner of research
in strategic management.
Rhonda Reger &
David Kirsch - Licensing of Intellectual Property
Entrepreneurial firms have become increasingly prominent in the
commercialization of inventions. Entrepreneurial firms face many choices upon
successful innovation: do they commercialize themselves or do they license to
other firms? If they do license, how should they proceed. In this study, we
explore a set of technology licensing agreements between startup and large
firms. The Research Associate will examine these contracts, understand them, and
analyze them. This will contribute to our understanding in the markets for
technology. The Associate would also gain an understanding of the legal ins and
outs of intellectual property (patents) and the markets for technology.
Rhonda Reger &
David Kirsch - Venture Financing and Business Planning:
Entrepreneurial firms have become increasingly prominent in the economy. Many
of the most exciting such firms are funded by high-stakes private equity. But
how do venture capitalists and startups decide how to divide up control of a
startup, when it is not even clear what the company will become? The research
associate will help understand this by exploring a set of venture financing
agreements, understand them, and then analyze them. This will contribute to our
understanding of private equity. The Associate will also gain an understanding
of the legal ins and outs of private equity financing and early stage deals.
Rhonda Reger - The Reputation Trap: Does Worrying About Looking Good Lead
Managers to Make Bad Decisions?
Most prior research focuses on the positive aspects of organizational
reputation. We are interested in studies that emphasize the dark side of
reputation, which may influence firms’ innovation strategies in negative ways.
Specifically, prior research and theory suggests that reputation may create a
reputation trap in which high reputation firms are motivated to over-exploit
their existing stock of innovations, and low-reputation firms are motivated to
over-explore in pursuit of competency destroying innovations. Managers that fall
into these traps will have lower “ambidexterity” and thus the performance of
their firms will suffer. However, top managers may mitigate the dark side effect
of reputation by altering the framing of innovation decision making and
innovation actions. We intend to conduct an online scenario-based survey to
better understand how reputation can influence managers’ decision making and
innovation resource allocation actions. Working closely as part of research team
that includes Scott Livengood, a senior strategy doctoral students, the Research
Fellow would be involved with the design and administration of the survey, data
capture and analysis of the data.
Debra Shapiro - From Guilty to Great: Are Today’s Higher-ranked Companies
those with a Guiltier Past?
The highest-ranked companies today are often presumed to have been
consistently great, an assumption guided in part by empirical analyses that are
flawed with “halo effects” (cf. Rosenzweig, 2007). But might it be that the
greatest companies today are those with guiltier pasts? We intend to conduct an
historical analysis, using archival data-sources, to examine the path associated
with the organizations’ rankings today. More specifically, our study aims to
answer two questions: (1) Which path—one of consistent goodness or one from
guilty-to-good—more commonly characterizes the companies rated as great today?;
and (2) What strategies enable organizations to ascend to top-ranked positions
following negative media exposure for bad practices? Answering these questions
will be achieved via three studies. Study 1 will focus on companies such as
Mattel, Hasbro, and RC2 Corp who are members of the toy manufacturing industry
worldwide; our choice to focus initially only on the toy manufacturing industry
is due to the fact that companies in this industry are currently facing negative
media exposure for selling toys whose safety has been below industry standards.
Study 2 will also use archival methods to answer the two questions motivating
this project, and will examine organizations in multiple industries; its design
will be guided, in part, by what we learn from the findings of Study 1. Study 3
will employ survey-based methods to assess managers’ perceptions and
explanations associated with how their organizations have ascended to the
rankings they have today; this study’s survey is meant to test inferences we
draw (but cannot directly assess) from the dynamics suggested by our two
previous studies’ archivally-based findings.
Since this project consists of three studies, and because much of Study 2’s
data collection can occur simultaneously with data collected for Study 1 (since
Study 2 will duplicate most of the archival operationalization of variables
assessed in Study 1), there is need for TWO UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH FELLOWS to
assist with our project. Working closely as part of a research team that
includes me, Professor Rhonda Reger, and a doctoral student, Anastasiya
Zavyalova, who is an integral conceptual leader on this project, the two
Undergraduate Research Fellows would be involved with reading archival
data-sources and coding them guided by detailed Coding Instructions in ways that
operationalize the variables whose interrelationships will be examined in our
studies. For example, to assess whether an organization had a “guilty” past, the
Research Fellows would code “1” (yes) versus “0” (no) if a news article they
read about the organization refers/does not refer to a charge levied against the
organization by another party. As another example, to assess whether an
organization has engaged in “good practices,” the Research Fellows would code
“1” (yes) versus “0” (no) if a news article they read about the organization
refers/does not refer to actions by the organization that relate to “corporate
social responsibility (CSR)”—defined in one of five possible ways, including the
organization’s engagement in community-oriented action, charitable activities,
environmentally-friendly (or sustainability) activities, diversity-supportive
activities, and/or employee wellbeing-related activities. The latter types of
CSR result from conversations we have had with Chief Ethics and Compliance
Officers (CECOs) at various Fortune 500 companies who describe the latter
actions as part of their own organizations’ measure of CSR.
Depending on the speed with which Study 1 and Study 2 are completed, the two
Undergraduate Research Fellows may also be involved in learning how to design
and administer a survey whose content will use quantitative (scale-based) ways
to assess the variables of interest to us in this project. Because all codes
entered by the Undergraduate Research Fellows will be in a raw SPSS data file,
the Research Fellows will also enjoy the opportunity to learn how to conduct
SPSS (statistical) analyses on the data they will have helped assemble. For this
reason, this project offers a fantastic opportunity to undergraduates interested
in learning multiple research skills. Moreover, the importance of this topic for
managers in all fields (since all managers probably wish to learn how to move
their organizations toward greatness, especially after experiencing obstacles)
promises to make this project’s insights very gratifying to all participants.
Henry P Sims, Jr. & Matthew Pearsall - The Interactive Effect of Leadership
and Virtuality on Team Performance
In today’s global world, many organizations have implemented
interdisciplinary teams to cope with the complexity of the dynamic business
environment. Moreover, while a team might have a common goal, it is not uncommon
to find teams where the members are geographically and/or organizationally
dispersed. This phenomenon is known as a “Virtual Team”.
Virtual teams pose an interesting challenge to the leaders of the teams. The
demeanor and non-verbal behavior of face to face interaction is not available to
the leader. Precisely how should a leader lead under virtual circumstances? What
will be the best leadership style to influence team members and the team as a
whole under conditions of geographical dispersion?
This research project will use laboratory experimental methodology to
investigate the interaction of various types of leadership with the virtuality
of the team. More specifically, does one type of leadership work best in a
face-to-face situation, but, is a different type of leadership more effective in
a virtual team situation?
The experimental protocol will use a previously tested military strategy
simulation game to investigate this question. A series of teams will be exposed
to different configurations of leadership type and virtuality (face-to-face vs.
virtual). The main dependent variable will be the performance of the team on the
military strategy simulation.
The military strategy simulation is similar to many contemporary popular
computer games. Our research team hopes to attract two undergraduate research
fellows who will be assigned the task of setting up the computer configuration
of the experimental protocol, and also running experimental participants through
the various simulation protocols.
Ken G. Smith &
R. Scott Livengood - Entrepreneurial Actions and the Market Process
Entrepreneurial actions, such as new product introductions, new market entry,
etc., infuse new information and drive the market process by moving the market
either toward or away from existing institutional conditions. Actions that
disrupt institutions cause socio-cognitive conflict for market participants, who
engage in discourse as expressions of opinion and sensemaking activities to
reduce this conflict and eventually either accept or reject the new action,
which is essentially the market process. However, little is known regarding the
impact of entrepreneurial actions and the process of how market discourse moves
the market.
I intend to research this market process by starting with new actions by
firms and then tracing them on Factiva or Lexis Nexis to gauge and analyze
market discourse. The Research Fellow would be instrumental in identifying
actions and compiling a database of the discourse that follows those actions. An
opportunity to create a proprietary software program to aid in the text analysis
is also available. Following the archival study, I plan on exploring this
phenomenon in a lab setting and also by means of a game simulation. The Research
Fellow would be able to assist in the design and implementation of the studies,
as well as the data collection and analysis.
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