The management literature has highlighted the role of a manager’s gender in adopting and practicing managerial innovation. The conditions that affect female (or male) managers’ decision making on innovations, however, have been less explored. Using a national survey of top-level administrators in US nursing homes and archival nursing home quality data, this study examines how performance information shapes gender differences in managerial innovation adoption. We find that female managers are more likely to adopt innovations relative to male managers, particularly when they perform better than they have in past years. Our findings, however, do not support a gender difference in innovation adoption when a nursing home performs worse than othe...
We look at the differences in performance and characteristics of mutual funds as they relate to the ...
This paper uses firm-level survey responses across more than 100 emerging and developing countries t...
The “think manager–think male” (TMTM) association underlies many gender inequalities in the workplac...
Despite the large literature on gender differences in politics, there have been relatively few empir...
As women rise through the upper echelons of firms, research interest in the possible performance con...
The present study addresses the perceived gap in literature on contribution of managerial demographi...
The importance of innovation within organizations has been demonstrated on numerous occasions, whic...
Our understanding of the link between women managers and firm-level innovation remains incomplete. B...
Innovation represents a key predictor of firm performance, international competitiveness and overall...
The individual innovator is seldom seen in innovation research, but there is still an implicit under...
The increase in the number of women occupying managerial positions has led to a debate about whether...
Motivated by calls to explore corporate outcomes of gender diversity-related dependencies in the upp...
Do men and women manage differently? Do their efforts have different impacts on public program perfo...
We argue that female representation in top management brings informational and social diversity bene...
Several studies have shown that the traditional stereotype of a "good" manager being masculine and m...
We look at the differences in performance and characteristics of mutual funds as they relate to the ...
This paper uses firm-level survey responses across more than 100 emerging and developing countries t...
The “think manager–think male” (TMTM) association underlies many gender inequalities in the workplac...
Despite the large literature on gender differences in politics, there have been relatively few empir...
As women rise through the upper echelons of firms, research interest in the possible performance con...
The present study addresses the perceived gap in literature on contribution of managerial demographi...
The importance of innovation within organizations has been demonstrated on numerous occasions, whic...
Our understanding of the link between women managers and firm-level innovation remains incomplete. B...
Innovation represents a key predictor of firm performance, international competitiveness and overall...
The individual innovator is seldom seen in innovation research, but there is still an implicit under...
The increase in the number of women occupying managerial positions has led to a debate about whether...
Motivated by calls to explore corporate outcomes of gender diversity-related dependencies in the upp...
Do men and women manage differently? Do their efforts have different impacts on public program perfo...
We argue that female representation in top management brings informational and social diversity bene...
Several studies have shown that the traditional stereotype of a "good" manager being masculine and m...
We look at the differences in performance and characteristics of mutual funds as they relate to the ...
This paper uses firm-level survey responses across more than 100 emerging and developing countries t...
The “think manager–think male” (TMTM) association underlies many gender inequalities in the workplac...