How often do employees return to your company after departing for a promising opportunity elsewhere? Why did they leave, and what caused them to return? Anthony C. Klotz, Andrea Derler, Carlina Kim and Manda Winlaw have conducted some useful research on the topic of boomerang employees. They found that returning to an organization where an individual once worked is quite common. Based on their analysis of extensive employee work records, "28% of “new hires” were actually boomerang hires who had resigned within the last 36 months." Clearly, employees depart and often discover that the grass indeed was not greener elsewhere.
Professor Michael Roberto's Blog
Musings about Leadership, Decision Making, and Competitive Strategy
Wednesday, February 19, 2025
Thinking Carefully about Boomerang Employees
How often do employees return to your company after departing for a promising opportunity elsewhere? Why did they leave, and what caused them to return? Anthony C. Klotz, Andrea Derler, Carlina Kim and Manda Winlaw have conducted some useful research on the topic of boomerang employees. They found that returning to an organization where an individual once worked is quite common. Based on their analysis of extensive employee work records, "28% of “new hires” were actually boomerang hires who had resigned within the last 36 months." Clearly, employees depart and often discover that the grass indeed was not greener elsewhere.
Thursday, February 13, 2025
Creative Ideas Really Do Emerge More Often from the Periphery, Not the Core
![]() |
Andy Grove, Former CEO of Intel |
Do great ideas come from incumbents or from outsiders in a particular field? Conventional wisdom says that outsiders usually introduce the boldest, most original innovations. Is that true? Lee Simmons recently wrote an article for Stanford Insights about the work of Paul Vicinanza, Amir Goldberg, and Sameer Srivastava. The three scholars developed an incredibly large and diverse dataset, and then they used a deep learning model to examine the information. They found that prescient ideas actually do come from outsiders more often than from those at the "core" of a field.
Friday, February 07, 2025
Do Those Super Bowl Commercials Increase Sales?
Companies will spend an enormous amount of money on Super Bowl commercials during Sunday's big game. Sporting News reported that companies will spend an average of $7 million for a 30-second Super Bowl commercial. Of course, you might be wondering: How much of an impact do those commercials have on subsequent purchases? I dug through some research on the topic, and I found one particularly interesting paper by Wesley R. Hartmann and Daniel Klapper. They published their research in Marketing Science several years ago.
Hartmann and Klapper examined how commercials impacted sales after the Super Bowl. They found a positive relationship between the advertising and product purchases during a subsequent sporting event. Specifically, they examined how Super Bowl ads impacted consumption of products such as beer during the March Madness college basketball tournament, which takes place about 5-6 weeks after the Super Bowl. Here is their summary of the findings from the research:
We measure the effect of ad viewership on post–Super Bowl sales. Without an obvious horizon for the effects, we measure the effect separately for each week following the game. While the first few weeks appear to follow a typical decay pattern, the advertising effects show resurgence in weeks when shoppers make purchases to consume during subsequent major sports broadcasts. This pattern suggests the hypothesis that Super Bowl advertising may build a complementarity with sports viewership more broadly. To test this, we collected market-week-level data on viewership of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) basketball tournament and interacted it with the Super Bowl ad exposures. We found that purchases for consumption during viewership of the NCAA tournament were augmented if the brand’s Super Bowl ad viewership was high.
Monday, February 03, 2025
Who Makes Those Private Label Products In Your Grocery Store and Why?
First, they confirm a well-known fact about private label production. The large brands have an inherent advantage when producing private labels. They can leverage economies of scale to produce those private label goods at low costs. Moreover, manufacturing the private label goods, and further taking advantage of scale economies, can lower their costs of producing their branded products.
Second, they find that manufacturers may be supplying private label products in hopes of strengthening their relationships with key retailers. In so doing, they hope to gain more shelf space for their branded products. The scholars confirm that retailers do carry more of a manufacturer's branded products if that company supplies private label goods to their stores. If a manufacturer exits the private label business, they tend to lose shelf space for their branded goods.
However, interestingly, they find that the national brands do not gain market share in their categories simply because they have more shelf space and more availability of their product in the stores. In the end, the consumer drives the success of the brands. More shelf space doesn't mean more sales, and ultimately, a retailer may take shelf space away if products don't sell.
One thing that they do not examine is why some branded manufacturers are more successful at private label production than others. I suspect that some branded goods companies simply do not have the efficiencies and cost structure required to offer private label goods at competitive prices. Moreover, attempts to become more efficient might harm the quality of the branded goods the firm supplies.
Wednesday, January 29, 2025
Why Some Employers are Disappointed with Gen Z Hires
![]() |
https://www.monitask.com/ |
Fortune's Orianna Rose Royle reports that, "six in 10 employers say they have already sacked some of the Gen Z workers they hired fresh out of college in recent months." She cites data from a survey of nearly 1,000 business leaders conducted by Intelligent. Royle offers some more data from the Intelligent study:
Thursday, January 23, 2025
Reducing Customer Pain Points: The Savannah Bananas
My former student, Jon Huntley, and I are working on a new case study about the Savannah Bananas, the wildly successful and highly entertaining barnstorming baseball team co-founded by Jesse and Emily Cole. The company provides a wonderful example of how to identify and alleviate pain points in the customer experience. In his book, Banana Ball (written with Don Yaeger), Jesse explains how the Bananas sought to find and eliminate all the friction in the fan experience.
“Here’s what I don’t understand about many businesses. Why do they continually do the things that their customers hate? Why are people endlessly put on hold, while a message plays that tells them how ‘important’ their call is, but they do a slow burn while waiting to talk to an actual human being… and maybe they still hang up in frustration. In the Bananas’ organization, we have a word for this – friction. We looked at all the friction points from a baseball experience – ticket fees, price gouging on parking and concessions, as well as limited access to autographs and fan photos with their favorite players – and we did the opposite.”
They use several methods to identify and eliminate pain points. First, employees pose as Undercover Fans during games. Second, senior leaders in the organization work on the front lines at times to see the processes and fan interactions up close. Third, the organization takes photos and video of the fans throughout the ballpark to see when and why they are frustrated. Finally, they constantly look for opportunities to transform pain points into moments of joyful entertainment. For instance, most people hate being put on hold. The Bananas have created such entertaining voicemail messages and hold music that fans enjoy the wait. Many people become frustrated by the wait times in the concession areas. The Bananas try to reduce those wait times, but they also have developed all sorts of entertainment on the concourse.
Sounds simple, right? Why do many organizations fail to alleviate these pain points? In my view, three main reasons exist. First, managers become too isolated from the true customer experience. When they "experience" the customer journey, it's not real. Employees know they are watching and inspecting, and they create a "false" process for managers. Second, managers do not empower front-line employees to eliminate those frictions. They constrict their freedom and autonomy such that the employees feel powerless to address problems that are clear to them on the front lines. Third, and perhaps most importantly, managers convince themselves that an amazing product should be sufficient to satisfy customers. It's like the doctor who thinks that patients should be happy if they receive the appropriate treatment to remedy their illness, even if patients had to experience long wait times, confusing insurance forms, an array of unexplained fees, and unclear instructions about medication and other treatments. A great product alone is not sufficient to satisfy customers. How you deliver that product matters. In baseball, a competitive, well-played game is far from enough to satisfy fans. That's the key insight that the Bananas have used to transform the ballpark experience into a magical one for fans.