Daniel H. Simon is an assistant professor of strategy in the Department of Applied Economics and Management at Cornell University. He conducts research which focuses primarily on the internal and external drivers of firm behavior and performance. His research has appeared (or is forthcoming) in leading management and economics journals including the Academy of Management Journal, Journal of International Business Studies, Strategic Management Journal, and the Journal of Law and Economics. TeachingAEM 3300: Managerial Economics and Decision Making Selected PublicationsBlalock, G., V. Kadiyali, and D. Simon. Forthcoming. The Impact of 9/11 on Road Fatalities: A Hidden Cost of Terrorism. Applied Economics. Blalock, G., and D. Simon. Forthcoming. Do All Firms Benefit Equally from Downstream FDI? The Moderating Effect of Local Suppliers’ Capabilities on Productivity Gains. Journal of International Business Studies. Prince, J., and D. Simon. Forthcoming. Multimarket Contact and On-Time Performance in the US Airline Industry. Academy of Management Journal. Simon, D., M. Gomez, E. McLaughlin, and D.Wittink. Forthcoming. Employee Attitudes, Customer Satisfaction, and Sales Performance: Assessing the Linkages in U.S. Grocery Stores. Managerial and Decision Economics. Blalock, G., V. Kadiyali, and D. Simon. 2007. The Impact of Post 9/11 Airport Security Measures on the Demand for Air Travel. Journal of Law and Economics. 50 (November): 731-55. Simon, D., and V. Kadiyali. 2007. The Effect of a Magazine’s Digital Content: Cannibalization or Complementarity?Information Economics and Policy. 19 (October): 344-61. Simon, D., and J. DeVaro. 2006. Do the Best Companies to Work for Provide Better Customer Satisfaction?Managerial and Decision Economics. 27 (December): 667-83. Simon, D. 2005. Incumbent Pricing Responses to Entry.Strategic Management Journal. 26 (December): 1229-48. Simon, D. 2005. Competitive Threat, Learning, or Mimetic Isomorphism: Understanding the Adoption and Diffusion of Websites by Consumer Magazines. Best Paper Proceedings of the Annual Meetings of the Academy of Management. © 2007 Cornell
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