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Eric Abrahamson

Photo of Eric  Abrahamson
Office: 709 Uris
Phone: 212-854-4432
Fax: 212-316-9355
E-mail:
Office Hours: Tuesday/Thursday 10-12pm


Web site

Professor
Management

Bernstein Faculty Leader
Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. Center for Leadership and Ethics


BA, Haverford, 1982; MPhil, New York University, 1987; PhD, 1990
Year joined: 1989

Teaching and research interests

Professor Abrahamson studies the creation, spread, use and rejection of innovative techniques for managing organizations and their employees. He is best known for his work on fads and fashions in management techniques. He is also an expert on the management of organizational change. He has explored the topic of change management in Change Without Pain: How Managers Can Overcome Initiative Overload, Organizational Chaos, and Employee Burnout (Harvard Business School Press, 2005), which won a Best Book of the Year award from Strategy and Business.

More recently, Abrahamson has been studying the dynamics of moderately messy system - offices, organizations and even industrial districts - that would function less well were they any less messy or any more orderly. A summary of his scholarly work was published in Research in Organizational Behavior under the title "Disorganizational Theory and Disorganizational Behavior: Towards and Etiology of Messes" (2002). Most recently, Abrahamson has coauthored, with David Freedman, a book that popularizes these ideas about the benefits of moderately messy system: A Perfect Mess: The Hidden Benefits of Disorder, How cluttered closets, jumbled offices, and on-the-fly planning make the world a better place (Little, Brown and Company, 2007).

He lectures and consults on these topics for companies around the world.

Selected Research, Papers and Publications

More Download Management Fashion: Life Cycle, Triggers, and Collective Learning Processes. Administrative Science Quarterly; 44 1999, 708–40. Coauthor(s): Gregory Fairchild.
More Management Fashion. Academy of Management Review; 21 (1), 1996, 254–85.
More Institutional and Competitive Bandwagons: Using Mathematical Modeling as a Tool to Explore Innovation Diffusion. Academy of Management Review; 18 (3), 1993, 487–517. Coauthor(s): Lori Rosenkopf.

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