Professor Michael Roberto's Blog
Musings about Leadership, Decision Making, and Competitive Strategy
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
Reframing the Purpose & Value of an Education
Monday, May 11, 2026
Perseverance & Focus When Work is Hectic
Karina Mangu-Ward wrote a great column recently for Fast Company. She examined how high-performing teams remain steady and composed during crises. Specifically, I thought her point about tradeoffs bears emphasis. She writes,
Thursday, May 07, 2026
Asking AI Chatbots to Adopt an Expert Persona Doesn't Work
Conventional wisdom suggests that we should ask AI chatbots to adopt an expert persona to elicit better answers. According to this advice, prompts will yield better responses if they include statements such as "Imagine that you are a world class statistician" or "Think like an expert engineer." Some of the major models (such as Claude and ChatGPT) advise users to engage in this type of prompt engineering. Yet, new research suggests that asking the models to behave as an expert does not work.
Friday, April 24, 2026
New Case Study - Costco Wholesale Club: The Gas Station Strategy
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
How to Make Small Talk Effectively
In a recent Inc. article, Henna Pryor speaks with writer Amaya Nichole about how to engage in small talk effectively. Pryor offers three important and useful tips:
1. Focus on a specific detail. It might be the photo on their desk, the screensaver on their computer, or the recent family celebration you know they attended. Direct their attention, show them that you noticed, and inquire to learn more about that particular topic.
2. Ask specific questions, rather than general ones. Don't just ask how they are doing. Ask about a specific book, podcast, or TV show that they are enjoying. Don't just ask how the family is doing, but inquire about a particular individual and a recent important event (birthday, graduation, wedding, etc.).
3. Finally, Pryor recommends that we "learn to leave a conversational thread." Pryor offers an example of how to do this effectively: "This is less about the question asked and more about the response. Instead of answering 'how was your weekend?' with 'good,' try: 'It was good. It was really good. I finally checked out that new bookstore downtown and ended up staying for two hours. I did not need that many books.'"
Thursday, April 16, 2026
Why Movie Production Teams Do Not Learn From Failure
We love those wonderful stories about how people learn from failure. We champion the practices in certain industries (such as healthcare, the military, and commercial aviation) in which organizations improve based on systematic reflection. Yet, in a new study, Suresh Muthulingam and Kumar Rajaram find that Hollywood production teams do not seem to learn from failure effectively. Perhaps we should not be surprised, as we have all witnessed highly publicized films, with top actors, flop spectacularly at the box office.





