COMMENTS

  1. Case 19: Good News, Bad News: Part 1—The $3.75 Mistake

    95 Case 19 Good News, Bad News: Part 1—The $3.75 Mistake Background Information Ted Banacek smiled as the "I've got some good news, and I've got some bad … - Selection from 50 Case Studies for Management and Supervisory Training [Book]

  2. Good News, Bad News: An HBR Management Puzzle on Innovation Execution

    by Andrew O'Connell. October 3, 2013. It shouldn't happen, but it does: You realize much too late that your innovation project is in deep trouble. Read more on Innovation or related topic ...

  3. Case 20: Good News, Bad News: Part 2—Judy, Judy, Judy

    99 Case 20 Good News, Bad News: Part 2—Judy, Judy, Judy Background Information Four months ago, Ted Banacek completed State Bank's Management Trainee Pro- gram and was … - Selection from 50 Case Studies for Management and Supervisory Training [Book]

  4. Case Discussion: Good News, Bad News

    Case 19: Good News, Bad News: Part 1. 97 . Case 19 (continued) Case Discussion: Good News, Bad News. Summary: Part 1—The $3.75 Mi stake . As a recent graduate of State Bank's Management Trainee Program, Ted Banacek had been pro-moted to the assistant manager's job at one of the busier branch offices.

  5. Why We Seem to Prefer Bad News Over Good News

    Conversely, Legg and Sweeney found that news givers — 65 and 70 percent — chose to give the good news first, then the bad news. "When news givers go into a conversation, they are anxious. No one enjoys giving bad news. They don't understand that having to wait for bad news makes the recipient more anxious.".

  6. New Study On Women In Leadership: Good News, Bad News And The ...

    A new study of 423 companies across the US and Canada by McKinsey & Company and Leanin.org finds women are better than men at providing emotional support to employees (19% of men compared with 31% ...

  7. Good News, Bad News Case Study

    Semantic Scholar extracted view of "Good News, Bad News Case Study" by K. Leonard et al.

  8. When No News Is Good News

    When No News Is Good News. Greg James punched the button on the Lexus's stereo, scanning the stations for the morning news story he didn't want to hear. Sure enough, 101.7 was in mid-broadcast ...

  9. Good news and bad news are still news: experimental evidence on belief

    Bayesian updating remains the benchmark for dynamic modeling under uncertainty within economics. Recent theory and evidence suggest individuals may process information asymmetrically when it relates to personal characteristics or future life outcomes, with good news receiving more weight than bad news. I examine information processing across a broad set of contexts: (1) ego relevant, (2 ...

  10. Good News Vs. Bad News

    Bad News January 10, 2018 Accountability , Accuracy , Media , Minimizing Harm , Weighing Benefits and Harm bad news , Bill Gates , good news , Linkedin , Time Magazine ethicsadviceline On the whole, the world is getting better, writes Bill Gates, Time Magazine's first-ever guest editor.

  11. We Really Do Shoot the Messengers of Bad News, Research Suggests

    We dread such discussions for good reason. Recent research shows that people are prone to derogating those who tell them things they don't want to hear—we shoot the messenger. The bad news is ...

  12. When good news is bad news: the negative impact of positive customer

    Subsequently, an exploratory qualitative study consisting of seven focus groups with 45 FLEs and 22 in-depth interviews with managers working across various service industries were performed. All the transcripts were analyzed via an iterative hermeneutical process. , - A model describing ten negative impacts and six key contingencies of PCF ...

  13. Case 21: Good News, Bad News: Part 3—The Storm Breaks

    103 Case 21 Good News, Bad News: Part 3—The Storm Breaks Background Information As a recent graduate of State Bank's Management Trainee Program, Ted Banacek is now … - Selection from 50 Case Studies for Management and Supervisory Training [Book]

  14. Good news

    The good news - bad news debate is an argument over whose interpretations should prevail. Lord Reith believed that the BBC's interpretations of events should be based on the needs to inform, educate and entertain, but that was a luxury available to the BBC only when it had no competitors.

  15. Good News and Bad News: Representation Theorems and Applications

    Good news and bad news: representation theorems and applications Paul R. Milgrom* This is an article about modeling methods in information economics. A notion of "favorableness" of news is introduced, characterized, and applied to four simple models. In the equilibria of these models, (1) the arrival of good news

  16. Good news is bad news: Leverage cycles and sudden stops

    Crises in this case can be triggered by good news followed by a bad realization, and indeed even when no change in fundamental is finally observed. ... Sudden Stop Event Study- Estimated model without News.Note: Dashed lines show the model implied cross country medians of Sudden Stops, identified using the same definition of events as in ...

  17. PDF Bad News, Good News: Coverage and Response Asymmetries

    case, agents would react asymmetrically to good and bad news with clear implications for economic outcomes. We test both asymmeteries within a uni ed econometric framework. We begin by constructing two novel measures of media coverage of bad and good economic events using three major US newspapers.3 Our measures of bad and good news represent

  18. Case Discussion: Good News, Bad News

    Case 21: Good News, Bad News—Part 3 105 Case 21 (concluded) Case Discussion: Good News, Bad News Summary: Part 3—The Storm Breaks Acting on advice from a colleague, … - Selection from 50 Case Studies for Management and Supervisory Training [Book]

  19. Negativity bias: Why we can't look away from bad news ...

    Morewedge's work has found a negativity bias in "external agency": When something bad happens, people are likelier to blame another person for a bad event than give them credit for a good ...

  20. Do You Want the Good News or the Bad News First? The Nature and

    Study 1 confirmed that news-givers and news-recipients differ in their news order preferences. Study 2 tested two solutions to close the preference gap between news-givers and recipients and found that both perspective-taking and priming emotion-protection goals shift news-givers' delivery patterns to the preferred order of news-recipients.

  21. Evidence-Based Case Reviews: Communicating bad news

    Communicating bad news. MS Roberts, a 54-year-old African American woman with cirrhosis due tohepatitis B, presented with a new right upper quadrant abdominal pain. Acomputed tomographic scan showed a poorly defined mass with indistinct borderslocated near the portal vein. The likely diagnosis was hepatocellularcarcinoma, probably unresectable ...

  22. Why you should always deliver the bad news first

    Endings offer good news and bad news about our behavior and judgment. I'll give you the bad news first, of course — endings help us encode a lesson learned, but they can sometimes twist our memory and cloud our perception by overweighting final moments and neglecting the totality. But endings can also be a positive force.