Schmalenbach Journal of Business Research - About the Editors
Matthias BREUER (AE) is an Associate Professor of Business at Columbia University's Graduate School of Business. His research interests include financial accounting, auditing, corporate governance, valuation, and sustainability. In his research, he uses varied empirical methods and data sources to describe relevant markets and phenomena, identify effects of interventions in these markets, or test theories with reduced form or structural approaches. |
Marina FIEDLER (AE) is a Professor of Management, People and Information at the University of Passau. Her research focuses on the interface of three central topics of digitization: the role of Information Systems in organizations and digital platforms; governance and management of sustainable behavior; and changes in designing work. Her work covers a methodological spectrum, including experiments, qualitative and quantitative methods. |
Miriam FLICKINGER (AE) is a Professor of Organizations at Freie Universität Berlin. Her expertise lies at the intersection of organizational theory, strategy, and corporate governance. Her research is based on behavioral theories and, therefore, deals primarily with cognitive, emotional, and social phenomena in management. |
Emilia GARCIA-APPENDINI (AE) is a Research Economist at Norges Bank and a Research Fellow in the University of Zurich. Her main research interests are in corporate finance, banking, financial intermediation, supply chain, climate finance and sustainable finance. Her research is primarily empirical. |
Karen GEDENK (AE) is a Professor of Marketing at the University of Hamburg. Her key research interests are pricing, promotions, and retailing. Her methodological expertise covers empirical marketing models and survey research. |
Thomas GEHRIG (EiC) is a Professor of Finance at the University of Vienna. His research interests cover banks, trading, financial intermediaries and information generation in (international) financial markets. His work is mainly theoretical with an eye on empirical applications and institutional design. |
Martin KLARMANN (AE) is a Professor of Marketing at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. His key research interests are marketing methods, marketing strategy, B2B marketing, and sales management. His methodological expertise covers survey research methods (especially structural equation modeling, multilevel modeling and factor analysis), text mining, and meta-analyses. |
Tobias KRETSCHMER (AE) is a Professor of Strategy, Technology and Organization at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich. He works on strategy and organization in high-technology markets, including platform markets, organization design, competitive strategy and competitive dynamics, and digitization. His work covers a wide methodological spectrum, including large-sample econometrics using primary and secondary data, formal models and simulation models. |
Jan LANDWEHR (AE) is a Professor of Marketing at the Goethe University Frankfurt. His key research interests cover consumer behavior/psychology, advertising, conscious consumption, visual product design, and empirical aesthetics. His methodological expertise covers experimental research methods including statistical mediation and moderation. |
Jan MUNTERMANN (AE) is a Professor of Financial Data Analytics at the University of Augsburg. His research interests include big data analytics to support financial decision-making and digital business strategy in the financial services sector. His work is empirical and design science-oriented with a focus on machine learning techniques. |
Rainer NIEMANN (AE) is a Professor of Accounting and Taxation at the University of Graz. His expertise includes tax effects on investment and finance, taxation under uncertainty, and international taxation. His methodological expertise is mainly economic modeling, theory, and normative. |
Jana OEHMICHEN (AE) is a Professor of Organization, Human Resources, and Management Studies at the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz. Her research covers international corporate governance, strategic leadership, incentive systems, strategic change, and digital strategy. Her work is mainly quantitative (multivariate econometrical analyses) and conceptual (agency theory, institutional and resource-based approaches). |
Georg REISCHAUER (AE) is an Assistant Professor at WU Vienna University of Economics and Business. His research interests lie at the intersection of strategic management, organization theory, and sustainability management, with an emphasis on the implications of digital technologies. Topics of interest include algorithmic management, ecosystems, institutional innovation, organization design, and platforms. He specializes in qualitative methods and qualitative research designs. |
Jörg ROCHOLL (AE) is the President of ESMT Berlin, where he is also a Professor of Finance. His research interests are in the areas of corporate finance, corporate governance, and financial intermediation. His research is primarily empirical. |
Thorsten SELLHORN (AE) is a Professor of Accounting and Auditing at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich. His expertise includes financial reporting, international accounting, and auditing. Most of his research applies empirical methods, including archival and interview studies. |
Martin SPANN (AE) is a Professor of Electronic Commerce & Digital Markets at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich. His key research interests are digital marketing and electronic commerce. His expertise covers quantitative empirical methods, particularly lab & field experiments and econometric models. |
Thomas S. SPENGLER (AE) is a Professor of Production and Logistics Management at the TU Braunschweig. His research interests cover operations management, supply chain management, sustainability management and recycling. His research mainly focuses on the development and application of operations research models and methods for decision support in industry and the mobility sector. |
Uriel STETTNER (AE) is an Associate Professor of Strategic Management at Tel Aviv University. His research focuses on exploration and exploitation/ambi-dexterity, and the performance implications of organizational learning. His work relies on quantitative data analysis, panel data, and survival/event history analysis. |
Marliese UHRIG-HOMBURG (AE) is a Professor of Finance at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. Her research focusses on asset pricing, derivatives, risk management, liquidity, energy finance, and cryptocurrencies. She covers both empirical capital market research and capital market theory as well as financial modelling. |
Kristina VAARST ANDERSEN (AE) is Associate Professor of Integrative Innovation Management at University of Southern Denmark. Her research interests include innovation strategy and business development, and has a strong focus on new technology, localized innovation, and different systems and networks of innovation. Her methodological expertise covers econometrics, network analysis, qualitative methods, and mixed method design. |
Guido VOIGT (AE) is a Professor of Logistics and Supply Chain Management at the University of Hamburg. His current research interests surround supply chain coordination, behavioral operations management, reverse logistics, carbon footprint reduction in supply chains, and choice-based optimization. |
Alfred WAGENHOFER (EiC) is a Professor of Accounting at the University of Graz. His research includes financial accounting, management accounting and control, international accounting, auditing, and corporate governance. His methodological expertise is mainly economic modeling, theory, and normative. |
Florian ZAPKAU (AE) is a Professor for International Business at the Vienna University of Economics and Business. His research is at the intersections of internationalization and entrepreneurship, focusing on SMEs and young firms. He investigates firms' strategic decisions in the internationalization process and their outcomes. He also analyzes how learning affects firms' future foreign market entries. Finally, he is interested in cognitions, heuristics, and biases in decision-making contexts in IB and entrepreneurship. Methodologically, his work is mainly quantitative-empirical. |