We know a job applicant’s social category affects an employer’s likelihood of hiring them, but we do not know whether, or how, employers update their beliefs regarding members of these social categories. I examine how prior negative and positive hiring experiences of employees from particular countries affects an employer’s subsequent likelihood of hiring applicants from those countries. Analyses of over 26 million applications, from freelancers worldwide, for over 2.2 million jobs on an online labor market demonstrate that employers react more strongly to negative hiring experiences than positive ones. Employers are 14% less likely (versus 8% more likely) to hire freelancers from a country following a prior negative (versus positive) exper...
This paper shows that firms' demand for high-skilled foreign workers partly results from their hirin...
How do employers use different types of signals – that is, information believed to be associated wit...
I study discrimination arising from individual experiences of employers with worker groups. I presen...
We know a job applicant’s social category affects an employer’s likelihood of hiring them, but we do...
Can employers learn to hire? This article conceptualizes hiring as a dynamic experiential learning p...
This paper uses data from freelancer.com – an online platform that allows employers and freela...
Online markets reduce certain transaction costs related to global outsourcing. We focus on the role ...
This article explores the relationship between labor market discrimination, stereotypes and employer...
This paper investigates the role of workers’ job-specific experience on employers’ hiring decisions ...
Using data from an online labour market where the country of residence is the salient group characte...
Extant hiring research has generally focused on understanding outcomes for employees and not on outc...
Extant hiring research has generally focused on understanding outcomes for employees and not on outc...
This dissertation consists of three papers on search and signaling on a large online labor market. T...
No matter whether organizations are confronted with economic up‐ or downturns, there will always be ...
Word-of-mouth (WOM) is a valued source of employment information for job seekers. Given mixed prior ...
This paper shows that firms' demand for high-skilled foreign workers partly results from their hirin...
How do employers use different types of signals – that is, information believed to be associated wit...
I study discrimination arising from individual experiences of employers with worker groups. I presen...
We know a job applicant’s social category affects an employer’s likelihood of hiring them, but we do...
Can employers learn to hire? This article conceptualizes hiring as a dynamic experiential learning p...
This paper uses data from freelancer.com – an online platform that allows employers and freela...
Online markets reduce certain transaction costs related to global outsourcing. We focus on the role ...
This article explores the relationship between labor market discrimination, stereotypes and employer...
This paper investigates the role of workers’ job-specific experience on employers’ hiring decisions ...
Using data from an online labour market where the country of residence is the salient group characte...
Extant hiring research has generally focused on understanding outcomes for employees and not on outc...
Extant hiring research has generally focused on understanding outcomes for employees and not on outc...
This dissertation consists of three papers on search and signaling on a large online labor market. T...
No matter whether organizations are confronted with economic up‐ or downturns, there will always be ...
Word-of-mouth (WOM) is a valued source of employment information for job seekers. Given mixed prior ...
This paper shows that firms' demand for high-skilled foreign workers partly results from their hirin...
How do employers use different types of signals – that is, information believed to be associated wit...
I study discrimination arising from individual experiences of employers with worker groups. I presen...