More Information

  • Professor Iansiti releases One Strategy which analyzes how a management team tweaked and optimized the fine line between strategy and execution

    One Strategy Book
  • Professor Pisano wins the 2010 McKinsey Award for "Restoring American Competitiveness"
Publications

Keystone experts are thought leaders in their fields and are prolific writers on their findings. The experts create leading analytical frameworks for evaluating ecosystem strategy, innovation processes, IP evaluation, antitrust analysis and more. The research of our experts provides Keystone with unique access to large, cross-sectional studies of industry players. Please contact us to learn more about our experts' research.

 

Dynamics of Open Source Movements

by Susan Athey and Glenn Ellison September 2010

Set-Asides and Subsidies in Auctions

by Susan Athey, Dominic Coey and Jonathan Levin October 2010

The Impact of Targeting Technology on Advertising Markets and Media Competition

by Susan Athey and Joshua Gens American Economic Review, May 2010; and January 11, 2009 version

A Structural Model of Sponsored Search Advertising Auctions

by Susan Athey and Denis Nekipelov September 2009

Skewed Bidding in Pay Per Action Auctions for Online Advertising

by Nikhil Agarwal, Susan Athey and David Yang American Economic Review, May 2009

Position Auctions with Consumer Search

by Susan Athey and Glenn Ellison May 2008

Market Definition and Concentration: One Size Doesn't Fit All

by Mark Glick Antitrust Bulletin, Summer 2007

Intellectual Property Damages: Guidelines and Analysis

by Mark Glick, Lara Reymann, and Richard Hoffman 2002
Intellectual Property Damages presents the basics of intellectual property, the litigation process, the essential "rules" in postulating damages theories, the economic principles that are the foundation for much of IP damages, and the skills necessary to correctly calculate damages in IP cases. Intellectual Property Damages contains case summaries, useful forms for discovery, examples of effective expert opinions and testimony, and detailed calculations under various theories of damages. It also incorporates graphs illustrating economic principles, equations that might be used to support (or detract from) a damages theory, and examples of legal documents that commonly appear in IP litigation. Glick's knowledge is built upon experience with law, economics, accounting, and (to a more limited extent) finance in the context of IP damages theories.