Anand Swaminathan

Roberto C. Goizueta Chair of Organization & Management

  • Atlanta GA UNITED STATES
Anand.Swaminathan@emory.edu

Contact

Social

Biography

Anand Swaminathan joined Goizueta Business School in the fall of 2007. Prior to joining Goizueta he taught organizational theory and strategy at the University of California at Davis and before that he taught corporate strategy at the University of Michigan Business School.

His research touches a wide range of organizational issues, including industry evolution, strategies for niche/specialist firms, and applications of social network analysis. His current research examines planned obsolescence in software platforms, cross-national differences in the timing of product recalls in the automobile industry, transition to self-employment and entrepreneurship, membership retention in online communities, network effects in venture capital investment decisions, and career outcomes for coaches in the NFL and faculty in higher education institutions.

Education

University of California at Berkeley

PhD

Business Administration

1993

Indian Institute of Management , Calcutta

Master's PDGM

Marketing and Organizational Behavior

1984

National Institute of Technology , Warangal, India

Bachelor's BTech

Mechanical Engineering

1982

Areas of Expertise

Organizational theory and strategy
People Analytics
Interorganizational and social networks
Industry evolution
Small-firm strategies
Organizational change and its consequences

Publications

Racial disparity in leadership: Evidence of valuative bias in the promotions of National Football League coaches

American Journal of Sociology

Christopher I Rider, James B. Wade, Anand Swaminathan and Andreas Schwab

2023-07-01

The authors propose that racial disparity in organizational leadership representation will persist until valuative bias favoring white men ceases to influence advancement from the lower-level positions where most careers begin. They consider how racial disparity results from the organizational matching of individuals to positions with different advancement prospects (i.e., allocative bias) and by the provision of differential rewards within those positions (i.e., valuative bias). Analyzing career history data for over 1,300 National Football League coaches from 1985 to 2015, the authors find that white assistant coaches were promoted at higher rates than Black coaches—holding constant many factors including unit and individual performance—both before and after a league-wide intervention explicitly implemented to close the racial gap in leadership representation. They further demonstrate that this white promotion advantage is specific to the position typically occupied before promotion to head coach. Simulations demonstrate how racial disparity persists even absent bias in positional allocations; eliminating valuative bias at early career stages is, thus, necessary to achieve racial parity in leadership representation.

View more

Industry Clusters and Organizational Prototypes: Evidence from the Franconian Brewing Industry

Journal of Management

Nikolaus Beck, Anand Swaminathan, James B. Wade and Filippo Carlo Wezel

2019-09-01

In this article, we argue that in addition to facilitating organizational learning and specialization,
an industry cluster related to tradition or to the practice of a craft influences audience
expectations through the definition of the prototypical features that define an organizational
form. Analyzing the population of northern Bavarian (Franconian) breweries, we show that
compliance with a prototype involves multiple dimensions and depends on an organization’s
location in geographic space with reference to the center of the industry cluster. Using qualitative
interviews, archival data, and a survey of consumers, we provide evidence that as distance
from the cluster center increases, organizations are more likely to deviate from the prototype
and suffer fewer of the negative consequences that result from such deviations.

View more

Resource partitioning and the organizational dynamics of ‘fringe banking’

American Sociological Review

Giacomo Negro, Fabiana Visentin and Anand Swaminathan

2014-08-01

We examine the emergence and proliferation of payday lenders, fringe businesses that provide small short-term, but high-cost loans. We link the organizational dynamics of these businesses to two trends in consumer lending in the United States: the continuing consolidation of mainstream financial institutions; and the expansion of such institutions in the provision of financial services regarded as similar to payday loans. We explain the coexistence in mature industries of large-scale organizations in the market center and smaller specialists in the periphery by testing and extending the organizational model of resource partitioning. Our focus is on two under-examined aspects of the model: the dynamic underlying the partitioning process, and the conditions under which the market remains partitioned. The empirical analysis covers payday lenders, banks, and credit unions operating in Wisconsin between 1994 and 2008.

View more

Show All +

In the News

The Rooney Rule appears to mask a larger racial problem in coaching

CBS Sports  online

2016-01-12

The loophole in the Rooney Rule is that it doesn’t apply to coordinators or position coach jobs, which is how coaches get on head-coach interview lists to begin with.

View More

Swaminathan to Head PhD Program

emorybusiness.com  online

2011-06-20

Anand Swaminathan, Goizueta Chair and Professor of Organization & Management, has been named Director and Associate Dean of Goizueta’s PhD Program. He takes over for Professor of Accounting Grace Pownall, who served as the program head for two terms that saw increasing success in placement and student achievement.

Pownall remains on the school’s faculty while Swaminathan expands on an active role in the PhD Program. He also serves as coordinator for the Organization & Management academic area.

Swaminathan joined Goizueta in Fall 2007. He previously held potions at the University of California at Davis and the University of Michigan Ross School of Business. His research touches a wide range of organizational issues including industry evolution, strategies for niche/specialist firms and applications of social network theory.

In 2011, PhD students will join the faculty of Pittsburgh, BYU, Virginia Commonwealth, Washington University and Florida International.

View More