• Business Essentials
  • Leadership & Management
  • Credential of Leadership, Impact, and Management in Business (CLIMB)
  • Entrepreneurship & Innovation
  • Digital Transformation
  • Finance & Accounting
  • Business in Society
  • For Organizations
  • Support Portal
  • Media Coverage
  • Founding Donors
  • Leadership Team

harvard case study

  • Harvard Business School →
  • HBS Online →
  • Business Insights →

Business Insights

Harvard Business School Online's Business Insights Blog provides the career insights you need to achieve your goals and gain confidence in your business skills.

  • Career Development
  • Communication
  • Decision-Making
  • Earning Your MBA
  • Negotiation
  • News & Events
  • Productivity
  • Staff Spotlight
  • Student Profiles
  • Work-Life Balance
  • AI Essentials for Business
  • Alternative Investments
  • Business Analytics
  • Business Strategy
  • Business and Climate Change
  • Design Thinking and Innovation
  • Digital Marketing Strategy
  • Disruptive Strategy
  • Economics for Managers
  • Entrepreneurship Essentials
  • Financial Accounting
  • Global Business
  • Launching Tech Ventures
  • Leadership Principles
  • Leadership, Ethics, and Corporate Accountability
  • Leading with Finance
  • Management Essentials
  • Negotiation Mastery
  • Organizational Leadership
  • Power and Influence for Positive Impact
  • Strategy Execution
  • Sustainable Business Strategy
  • Sustainable Investing
  • Winning with Digital Platforms

5 Benefits of Learning Through the Case Study Method

Harvard Business School MBA students learning through the case study method

  • 28 Nov 2023

While several factors make HBS Online unique —including a global Community and real-world outcomes —active learning through the case study method rises to the top.

In a 2023 City Square Associates survey, 74 percent of HBS Online learners who also took a course from another provider said HBS Online’s case method and real-world examples were better by comparison.

Here’s a primer on the case method, five benefits you could gain, and how to experience it for yourself.

Access your free e-book today.

What Is the Harvard Business School Case Study Method?

The case study method , or case method , is a learning technique in which you’re presented with a real-world business challenge and asked how you’d solve it. After working through it yourself and with peers, you’re told how the scenario played out.

HBS pioneered the case method in 1922. Shortly before, in 1921, the first case was written.

“How do you go into an ambiguous situation and get to the bottom of it?” says HBS Professor Jan Rivkin, former senior associate dean and chair of HBS's master of business administration (MBA) program, in a video about the case method . “That skill—the skill of figuring out a course of inquiry to choose a course of action—that skill is as relevant today as it was in 1921.”

Originally developed for the in-person MBA classroom, HBS Online adapted the case method into an engaging, interactive online learning experience in 2014.

In HBS Online courses , you learn about each case from the business professional who experienced it. After reviewing their videos, you’re prompted to take their perspective and explain how you’d handle their situation.

You then get to read peers’ responses, “star” them, and comment to further the discussion. Afterward, you learn how the professional handled it and their key takeaways.

HBS Online’s adaptation of the case method incorporates the famed HBS “cold call,” in which you’re called on at random to make a decision without time to prepare.

“Learning came to life!” said Sheneka Balogun , chief administration officer and chief of staff at LeMoyne-Owen College, of her experience taking the Credential of Readiness (CORe) program . “The videos from the professors, the interactive cold calls where you were randomly selected to participate, and the case studies that enhanced and often captured the essence of objectives and learning goals were all embedded in each module. This made learning fun, engaging, and student-friendly.”

If you’re considering taking a course that leverages the case study method, here are five benefits you could experience.

5 Benefits of Learning Through Case Studies

1. take new perspectives.

The case method prompts you to consider a scenario from another person’s perspective. To work through the situation and come up with a solution, you must consider their circumstances, limitations, risk tolerance, stakeholders, resources, and potential consequences to assess how to respond.

Taking on new perspectives not only can help you navigate your own challenges but also others’. Putting yourself in someone else’s situation to understand their motivations and needs can go a long way when collaborating with stakeholders.

2. Hone Your Decision-Making Skills

Another skill you can build is the ability to make decisions effectively . The case study method forces you to use limited information to decide how to handle a problem—just like in the real world.

Throughout your career, you’ll need to make difficult decisions with incomplete or imperfect information—and sometimes, you won’t feel qualified to do so. Learning through the case method allows you to practice this skill in a low-stakes environment. When facing a real challenge, you’ll be better prepared to think quickly, collaborate with others, and present and defend your solution.

3. Become More Open-Minded

As you collaborate with peers on responses, it becomes clear that not everyone solves problems the same way. Exposing yourself to various approaches and perspectives can help you become a more open-minded professional.

When you’re part of a diverse group of learners from around the world, your experiences, cultures, and backgrounds contribute to a range of opinions on each case.

On the HBS Online course platform, you’re prompted to view and comment on others’ responses, and discussion is encouraged. This practice of considering others’ perspectives can make you more receptive in your career.

“You’d be surprised at how much you can learn from your peers,” said Ratnaditya Jonnalagadda , a software engineer who took CORe.

In addition to interacting with peers in the course platform, Jonnalagadda was part of the HBS Online Community , where he networked with other professionals and continued discussions sparked by course content.

“You get to understand your peers better, and students share examples of businesses implementing a concept from a module you just learned,” Jonnalagadda said. “It’s a very good way to cement the concepts in one's mind.”

4. Enhance Your Curiosity

One byproduct of taking on different perspectives is that it enables you to picture yourself in various roles, industries, and business functions.

“Each case offers an opportunity for students to see what resonates with them, what excites them, what bores them, which role they could imagine inhabiting in their careers,” says former HBS Dean Nitin Nohria in the Harvard Business Review . “Cases stimulate curiosity about the range of opportunities in the world and the many ways that students can make a difference as leaders.”

Through the case method, you can “try on” roles you may not have considered and feel more prepared to change or advance your career .

5. Build Your Self-Confidence

Finally, learning through the case study method can build your confidence. Each time you assume a business leader’s perspective, aim to solve a new challenge, and express and defend your opinions and decisions to peers, you prepare to do the same in your career.

According to a 2022 City Square Associates survey , 84 percent of HBS Online learners report feeling more confident making business decisions after taking a course.

“Self-confidence is difficult to teach or coach, but the case study method seems to instill it in people,” Nohria says in the Harvard Business Review . “There may well be other ways of learning these meta-skills, such as the repeated experience gained through practice or guidance from a gifted coach. However, under the direction of a masterful teacher, the case method can engage students and help them develop powerful meta-skills like no other form of teaching.”

Your Guide to Online Learning Success | Download Your Free E-Book

How to Experience the Case Study Method

If the case method seems like a good fit for your learning style, experience it for yourself by taking an HBS Online course. Offerings span seven subject areas, including:

  • Business essentials
  • Leadership and management
  • Entrepreneurship and innovation
  • Finance and accounting
  • Business in society

No matter which course or credential program you choose, you’ll examine case studies from real business professionals, work through their challenges alongside peers, and gain valuable insights to apply to your career.

Are you interested in discovering how HBS Online can help advance your career? Explore our course catalog and download our free guide —complete with interactive workbook sections—to determine if online learning is right for you and which course to take.

harvard case study

About the Author

  • Browse All Articles
  • Newsletter Sign-Up

No results found in Working Knowledge

  • Were any results found in one of the other content buckets on the left?
  • Try removing some search filters.
  • Use different search filters.

What is the Case Study Method?

Baker library peak and cupola

Overview Dropdown up

Overview dropdown down, celebrating 100 years of the case method at hbs.

The 2021-2022 academic year marks the 100-year anniversary of the introduction of the case method at Harvard Business School. Today, the HBS case method is employed in the HBS MBA program, in Executive Education programs, and in dozens of other business schools around the world. As Dean Srikant Datar's says, the case method has withstood the test of time.

Case Discussion Preparation Details Expand All Collapse All

In self-reflection in self-reflection dropdown down, in a small group setting in a small group setting dropdown down, in the classroom in the classroom dropdown down, beyond the classroom beyond the classroom dropdown down, how the case method creates value dropdown up, how the case method creates value dropdown down, in self-reflection, in a small group setting, in the classroom, beyond the classroom.

harvard case study

How Cases Unfold In the Classroom

How cases unfold in the classroom dropdown up, how cases unfold in the classroom dropdown down, preparation guidelines expand all collapse all, read the professor's assignment or discussion questions read the professor's assignment or discussion questions dropdown down, read the first few paragraphs and then skim the case read the first few paragraphs and then skim the case dropdown down, reread the case, underline text, and make margin notes reread the case, underline text, and make margin notes dropdown down, note the key problems on a pad of paper and go through the case again note the key problems on a pad of paper and go through the case again dropdown down, how to prepare for case discussions dropdown up, how to prepare for case discussions dropdown down, read the professor's assignment or discussion questions, read the first few paragraphs and then skim the case, reread the case, underline text, and make margin notes, note the key problems on a pad of paper and go through the case again, case study best practices expand all collapse all, prepare prepare dropdown down, discuss discuss dropdown down, participate participate dropdown down, relate relate dropdown down, apply apply dropdown down, note note dropdown down, understand understand dropdown down, case study best practices dropdown up, case study best practices dropdown down, participate, what can i expect on the first day dropdown down.

Most programs begin with registration, followed by an opening session and a dinner. If your travel plans necessitate late arrival, please be sure to notify us so that alternate registration arrangements can be made for you. Please note the following about registration:

HBS campus programs – Registration takes place in the Chao Center.

India programs – Registration takes place outside the classroom.

Other off-campus programs – Registration takes place in the designated facility.

What happens in class if nobody talks? Dropdown down

Professors are here to push everyone to learn, but not to embarrass anyone. If the class is quiet, they'll often ask a participant with experience in the industry in which the case is set to speak first. This is done well in advance so that person can come to class prepared to share. Trust the process. The more open you are, the more willing you’ll be to engage, and the more alive the classroom will become.

Does everyone take part in "role-playing"? Dropdown down

Professors often encourage participants to take opposing sides and then debate the issues, often taking the perspective of the case protagonists or key decision makers in the case.

View Frequently Asked Questions

Subscribe to Our Emails

HBR.ORG - Prod

Business Case Studies

Case studies are written by professors at HBS and at renowned business programs worldwide and offer slices of business life, focusing on actual problems and decisions companies face.

Business Case Studies

Google's Project Oxygen: Do Managers Matter?

Google's Project Oxygen: Do Managers Matter? ^ 313110

Google's Project Oxygen started with a fundamental question raised by executives in the early 2000s: do managers matter? The topic generated a multi-year research project that ultimately led to a comprehensive program, built around eight key management...

Big Hit Entertainment and Blockbuster Band BTS: K-Pop Goes Global ^ 520125

Big Hit Entertainment and Blockbuster Band BTS: K-Pop Goes Global

Bang Si-Hyuk ('Hitman Bang') is the founder and co-chief executive officer of Big Hit Entertainment, the company behind BTS, a 'K-pop' band that has found unparalleled success around the globe-a remarkable feat given that most of their songs are in...

Cirque du Soleil ^ 403006

Cirque du Soleil

Retaining talent is an issue for any company whose success relies on the creativity and excellence of its employees. This is especially true for Cirque du Soleil, the spectacularly successful "circus without animals," whose 2,100 employees include 500...

GE's Two-Decade Transformation: Jack Welch's Leadership ^ 399150

GE's Two-Decade Transformation: Jack Welch's Leadership

GE is faced with Jack Welch's impending retirement and whether anyone can sustain the blistering pace of change and growth characteristic of the Welch era. After briefly describing GE's heritage and Welch's transformation of the company's business...

Pinckney Street ^ 813182

Pinckney Street

Although inexperienced in real estate, Edward Alexander hopes in June 2013 that youthful enthusiasm and an $240,000 in savings and inheritance will help him enter the real estate business. His experience chronicles the process of finding, evaluating, and...

Army Crew Team ^ 403131

Army Crew Team

The coach of the varsity Army crew team at West Point assembled his top eight rowers into the first crew team and the second tier of rowers into the second team using objective data on individual performance. As the second boat continually beat the first...

Chase Sapphire: Creating a Millennial Cult Brand ^ 518024

Chase Sapphire: Creating a Millennial Cult Brand

The Inside the Case video that accompanies this case includes teaching tips and insight from the author (available to registered educators only). The launch of the Chase Sapphire Reserve credit card was enthusiastically received by Millennial consumers,...

Trader Joe's ^ 714419

Trader Joe's

The Inside the Case video that accompanies this case includes teaching tips and insight from the author (available to registered educators only). Based on a variety of metrics, Trader Joe's ranked as one of the most successful grocers in the United...

Amazon.com, 2021 ^ 716402

Amazon.com, 2021

In February 2021, Amazon announced 2020 operating profits of $22,899 million, up from $2,233 million in 2015, on sales of $386 billion, up from $107 billion five years earlier (see Exhibit 1). The shareholders expressed their satisfaction (see Exhibit...

Leadership in Crisis: Ernest Shackleton and the Epic Voyage of the Endurance ^ 803127

Leadership in Crisis: Ernest Shackleton and the Epic Voyage of the Endurance

Provides an opportunity to examine leadership and entrepreneurship in the context of Ernest Shackleton's 1914 Antarctic expedition, a compelling story of crisis, survival, and triumph. Summarizes Shackleton's career as an officer in the British Merchant...

The Tulsa Massacre and the Call for Reparations ^ 221039

The Tulsa Massacre and the Call for Reparations

The Inside the Case video that accompanies this case includes teaching tips and insight from the author (available to registered educators only). How should historic social injustices be addressed? Survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Massacre and their...

Popeyes in China: Making Fried Chicken Fly in a Foreign Market ^ W34828

Popeyes in China: Making Fried Chicken Fly in a Foreign Market

As one of the world's largest fried chicken chains, Popeyes had failed twice to enter the Chinese market over a twenty-year span. In March 2023, Restaurant Brands International (RBI), the owner of Popeyes, attempted a third strike by bringing the fried...

BeM: A Start-Up's Journey through Online Product Reviews ^ UV8945

BeM: A Start-Up's Journey through Online Product Reviews

The product recommendation website BeM was launched in 2020 in Brazil to explore the significant and untapped potential of the country's online reviews market. Inspired by US models, BeM's webpages featured expert-generated reviews of products in four...

Mexico, Trade, and Development ^ 722062

Mexico, Trade, and Development

Coursera's Foray into GenAI ^ 124089

Coursera's Foray into GenAI

In early 2023, Maggioncalda, CEO of US EdTech firm Coursera, launched Project Genesis to develop a strategy for incorporating GenAI capabilities into the firm's offerings, asking his teams to focus on value to the firm and cost of implementation. The...

The Lithium Ion Battery: From Industry to Diverse Ecosystems ^ 031SMU

The Lithium Ion Battery: From Industry to Diverse Ecosystems

Raymond Green, Chief Researcher at Amber Global, a global energy think tank, believes that climate change could be slowed by consumers switching to electric vehicles (EVs). He analyses the lithium-ion (li-ion) battery industry's origins and its...

Malaysia Airlines: Culture Transformation While Flying Through Turbulence ^ 035SMU

Malaysia Airlines: Culture Transformation While Flying Through Turbulence

This case study follows Malaysia Airlines Berhad (MAB) through its Culture Journey (2018-2021), an initiative to rebuild the corporate culture as part of a broader turnaround strategy. The airline was stricken by twin tragedies in 2014 - the...

First to Fight? Culture, Tradition and the United States Marine Corps (USMC) ^ 423051

First to Fight? Culture, Tradition and the United States Marine Corps (USMC)

Over a history of more than 240 years, the United States Marine Corps has forged a distinct culture and institutional identity centered on its "warrior ethos." In the wars of American history, Marines fought with uncommon valor, rising to international...

ECOALF: Fashion for the Future ^ 524057

ECOALF: Fashion for the Future

ECOALF, a Spanish fashion brand and sustainability pioneer, aimed to tackle the industry's challenges of excessive consumption and production. The brand's mission was to create timeless apparel exclusively from recycled and eco-responsible materials,...

ExxonMobil: Is Chasing Net Zero Futile? ^ 090SMU

ExxonMobil: Is Chasing Net Zero Futile?

The case is set in September 2023, and talks about the energy transition of the oil and gas industry in context to ExxonMobil (Exxon), which has seen continued backlash from media and climate activists on its stance on climate change, strategies towards...

Cyrus: Turning a Traditional Business Model On Its Head (A) ^ 924303

Cyrus: Turning a Traditional Business Model On Its Head (A)

The loss of the lease at their Michelin-starred Cyrus 1.0 in Sonoma County, California gives the partners an opportunity to shut down and rework a "broken" business model, one with labor intensive experiences six or seven nights a week, high burnout,...

More than Optics: Olympus's Vision to Become a Leading Global MedTech Company ^ 724426

More than Optics: Olympus's Vision to Become a Leading Global MedTech Company

In August 2022, CEO Yasuo Takeuchi reflected on Olympus Corporation's recent transformation from being known as a Japanese consumer camera company to becoming a leading global medical technology (MedTech) company. Over the past dozen years, Takeuchi and...

Monetary Policy and Inflation Targeting in India ^ W34489

Monetary Policy and Inflation Targeting in India

In May 2022, India's retail inflation rate rose above the upper limit of the target range set by the Reserve Bank of India in 2015, to reach 7.79 per cent. In recent years, India's retail inflation rate had been successfully kept within the target range...

Doing Business in Sao Paulo, Brazil ^ 324079

Doing Business in Sao Paulo, Brazil

The case gives readers an overview of key factors of doing business in Brazil, including Brazil's economic transformation since its colonial years until 2023, when leftist President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva was sworn in for his third term, after the...

Monsters in the Machine? Tackling the Challenge of Responsible AI ^ 324062

Monsters in the Machine? Tackling the Challenge of Responsible AI

In November of 2022, the small tech company OpenAI released ChatGPT, an artificial intelligence chatbot which quickly captured the public's imagination-becoming the world's fastest-growing consumer application within months of its release. Though...

KOKO Networks: Bridging Energy Transition and Affordability with Carbon Financing ^ 124022

KOKO Networks: Bridging Energy Transition and Affordability with Carbon Financing

The problem was massive: two million hectares of African forests were lost annually to charcoal production for cooking, an area equivalent to 13 times Greater London, resulting in one billion tons of carbon emissions yearly. At the same time, an...

Khanmigo: Revolutionizing Learning with GenAI ^ 824059

Khanmigo: Revolutionizing Learning with GenAI

Already a leader in the edtech space since its 2008 launch, Khan Academy was now one of the first edtech organizations to embrace generative artificial intelligence ("genAI"). In March 2023, Khan Academy began beta testing Khanmigo, a genAI "guide" and...

East Rock Capital: "Talent is the Best Asset Class" ^ 424017

East Rock Capital: "Talent is the Best Asset Class"

Adam Shapiro and Graham Duncan launched East Rock Capital, LLC in 2006 with a seed investment from Stuart Miller, executive chairman of Lennar Corporation. East Rock managed long-term assets for high-net-worth families, primarily working with external...

NBIM and the Norwegian Sovereign Wealth Fund ^ 224038

NBIM and the Norwegian Sovereign Wealth Fund

Netflix's Culture: Binge or Cringe? ^ 522096

Netflix's Culture: Binge or Cringe?

In May 2022, streaming entertainment company Netflix lost customers for the first time in more than 10 years. Once a first mover in the streaming landscape, Netflix was facing competition from Amazon Prime Video, Disney+, HBO Max, and others. A key...

Paytm: A Payments Journey in India ^ 824039

Paytm: A Payments Journey in India

Paytm was an Indian financial technology company. Since its launch in 2010, it had built a dominant payments system in India, comprising mobile wallets, offline payments via QR codes, and a payments bank that offered no-frills banking. However, in 2016,...

Yellow Corporation: On the Verge of Bankruptcy ^ 224028

Yellow Corporation: On the Verge of Bankruptcy

Yellow Corporation, one of the country's oldest and largest less-than-truckload (LTL) carriers, was nearing its 100th anniversary in 2024. Whether it would reach that milestone, however, was uncertain as the company was attempting to restructure its...

Flourish Fi: Empowering Positive Money Habits ^ B6056

Flourish Fi: Empowering Positive Money Habits

Flourish's co-founders met in a UC Berkeley Haas MBA course and - motivated by financial adversity in their own families - aimed to make saving money attainable and rewarding for people lacking a financial safety net. The company's first product was a...

Jason Kelce - Perfectly Unplanned: A Dive into the Personal Branding of an NFL Athlete ^ W36177

Jason Kelce - Perfectly Unplanned: A Dive into the Personal Branding of an NFL Athlete

Jason Kelce, an NFL player and athlete recognized around the world, had built a strong personal brand over the course of his career. He had reinvented himself and worked hard at honing his own personal branding, successively building a successful...

Hitachi Limited: Construction Machinery ^ W35323

Hitachi Limited: Construction Machinery

In 2021, Hitachi Limited was reconsidering its ownership of Hitachi Construction Machinery (HCM). The decision about HCM's future was one of the last steps in a more than decade-long effort to reorient Hitachi from a manufacturing conglomerate to a...

The Pandemic's Impact on YLED: Navigating Uncertainty and Sustainability ^ W35252

The Pandemic's Impact on YLED: Navigating Uncertainty and Sustainability

In June 2020, Steven Zwane, founder and chairperson of the Youth Leadership and Entrepreneurship Development (YLED) program, based in Johannesberg, South Africa, faced managing the uncertainty of COVID-19's impact on the program's long-term...

Slane Irish Whiskey: Strategic Marketing for a New Brand ^ W35244

Slane Irish Whiskey: Strategic Marketing for a New Brand

In 2021, the Irish whiskey segment was the fastest growing whiskey segment in the United States. US-based Brown-Forman Corporation had acquired the Slane brand in 2015 after purchasing all shares in the Slane Castle Irish Whiskey company and agreeing to...

Zentein Nutrition Inc: Raising the Bar ^ W35174

Zentein Nutrition Inc: Raising the Bar

The founder of Zentein Nutrition Inc. needed a short-term plan for 2023 to maximize his goals for business growth and customer reach. The company was based in London, Ontario and provided natural, simple, healthy, and nutritious food alternatives to an...

Care for Wild: Social, Ecological, and Government Interdependence within Rhino Conservation ^ W35167

Care for Wild: Social, Ecological, and Government Interdependence within Rhino Conservation

In February 2023, the Care for Wild founder and her team were planning for the future of their organization. Care for Wild had recently received a request from a potential international donor to outline the interdependencies for the social, ecological,...

SAP in India's Flexible Working: Are They Flexing Enough? ^ W34921

SAP in India's Flexible Working: Are They Flexing Enough?

SAP's global approach of Pledge to Flex was the foundation for hybrid working for its employees. The approach empowers employees to balance when, how, and where they work best, considering business requirements and local legislation. The organization's...

Time is of the Essence: JP Landgoed Overcoming Challenges in the Citrus Industry ^ W34907

Time is of the Essence: JP Landgoed Overcoming Challenges in the Citrus Industry

J P Landgoed (PTY) LTD (J P Landgoed), a mandarin fruit farm in Limpopo, South Africa, was founded by Cobus Beetge in 2014. The firm grew from a few mandarin trees to a well-established export-oriented company. In July 2021, at the peak of the harvest...

Chick-Fil-A: Fighting Chicken Sandwich and Culture Wars ^ W34882

Chick-Fil-A: Fighting Chicken Sandwich and Culture Wars

Following its disastrous market entry into the United Kingdom in 2019, due to immediate backlash from the LGBTQ+ community, Chick-fil-A, the US$16 billion conservative Christian fast-food company, named a new chief executive officer in 2021, Andrew...

EduSports: Extending the Value Proposition ^ W34880

EduSports: Extending the Value Proposition

In mid-September 2022, Saumil Majmudar, the co-founder, chief executive officer, and managing director of Sportz Village faced a problem. The company, based in Bengaluru, India, was India's leading sports education organization, which provided a...

Bay Towel: How to Maintain Service Levels without Increasing Cost ^ W34878

Bay Towel: How to Maintain Service Levels without Increasing Cost

Bay Towel Linen and Uniform Rental Inc. (Bay Towel) was a family-owned business based in Green Bay, Wisconsin, that had been serving the state and growing organically for about 100 years. The company provided uniform and linen rental and laundry services...

Building Inclusive Leadership at TBK Beverages: Developing a New Mentorship Program ^ W34876

Building Inclusive Leadership at TBK Beverages: Developing a New Mentorship Program

In September 2022, the vice president of talent engagement at TBK Beverages met with the executive sponsor of a proposed mentoring program to discuss plans. A year earlier, employees had shared their dissatisfaction with the lack of access for...

Amul: Engaging Chefs as Influencers ^ W34861

Amul: Engaging Chefs as Influencers

In early 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent lockdown periods, the marketing director of Anand Milk Union Limited (Amul) was in a virtual meeting with his marketing manager. The two men were discussing plans for a marketing campaign for the...

Covered Call ETFs at Mackenzie Investments ^ W34859

Covered Call ETFs at Mackenzie Investments

In June 2023, Prerna Mathews, vice president of Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) Product Strategy at Mackenzie Investments (Mackenzie), was considering what ETFs to launch for the remainder of the year. As Mathews deliberated over the potential launch of a...

Lutheran Services - The Aged Care Food and Dining Experience ^ W34855

Lutheran Services - The Aged Care Food and Dining Experience

Innovation in aged care offers opportunities to create positive and inclusive change. Globally, healthcare systems are realizing the importance of customer-focused care, especially, when funding is limited. Residential aged care providers have...

Lansdale Warehouse: Defending Business Viability by Sustaining Its Rail Service Privileges ^ W34720

Lansdale Warehouse: Defending Business Viability by Sustaining Its Rail Service Privileges

For over two decades, Paul Delp, the President of Lansdale Warehouse, had faced a daunting challenge; the Stony Creek rail line, which provided rail service to his warehousing business in Lansdale, Pennsylvania (PA), USA, had suffered from deteriorating...

Bored Ape Yacht Club: No More Monkey Business ^ W34711

Bored Ape Yacht Club: No More Monkey Business

In late 2022, a difficult period for the cryptocurrency industry persisted, marking the middle of what many considered a "crypto winter." Popular tokens and currencies like Bitcoin and Solana lost over 50 per cent of their value, with other Web 3.0...

Jijihong Catering Management Co. Ltd.: Brand Repositioning for Growth ^ W34707

Jijihong Catering Management Co. Ltd.: Brand Repositioning for Growth

Between 2016 and 2019, Jijihong Catering Management Co. Ltd. (Jijihong)-a well-established company in Jiangxi Province, China-encountered a plateau in its development as the number of its chain stores consistently stagnated at around 80 and never...

Copyright Permissions

If you'd like to share this PDF, you can purchase copyright permissions by increasing the quantity.

Order for your team and save!

The Case Centre logo

Case collection: Harvard Business Publishing

harvard case study

About Harvard Business Publishing

Headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts, Harvard Business Publishing (HBP) is the leading provider of teaching materials for management education.

HBP was founded in 1994 as a not-for-profit, wholly-owned subsidiary of Harvard University, reporting into Harvard Business School. HBP's mission is to improve the practice of management in a changing world. This mission influences how they approach what they do and what they believe is important.

With approximately 450 employees, primarily based in Boston, with offices in New York City, India, Singapore, Qatar and the United Kingdom, HBP serves as a bridge between academia and enterprises around the globe through its publications and multiple platforms for content delivery, and its reach into three markets: academic, corporate, and individual managers. HBP has a conventional governance structure comprising a  Board of Directors , an internal  Executive Committee , and Business Unit Directors.

About the collection

The Case Centre distributes a comprehensive range of materials including the complete collection of more than 7,500 Harvard Business School case studies, teaching notes, background notes, case videos, and a selection of software ancillaries.

Also included are:

  • Brief Cases that are rigorous and compact with five-eight pages and three-four exhibits
  • case studies that are popular for undergraduate-level courses
  • executive education cases that provide rich yet efficient learning for managers at every level.

Additional top quality HBP teaching materials available from The Case Centre include:

  • articles from the  Harvard Business Review  and other top management journals
  • case method books from the Harvard Business School Press
  • over 2,000  individual chapters  from popular Harvard Business School Press books
  • newsletter articles  from Harvard Management Update, Strategy & Innovation, Negotiation, and Balanced Scorecard Report
  • Core Curriculum Readings  that cover the foundational concepts, theories, and frameworks that business students must learn. Authored by faculty at Harvard Business School, each Reading includes a teaching note, related course materials, and exhibit slides. Many include test banks, practice questions, video clips, and Interactive Illustrations to enhance student comprehension of specific topics.

HBP also offer a number of free cases.  Browse here

Collection contact

For any queries related to the Harvard Business Publishing collection, please visit:

Travis Stewart e [email protected]

Browse the full collection Browse prize-winning cases

Available from the case centre.

The HBP collection of over 16,000 cases, and their accompanying instructor materials, software and videos, 7,000 management articles and 2,000 individual book chapters are available from The Case Centre.

See what's available

There are restrictions on the distribution of some items. To see any restrictions login to our site (or register if you've not already done so) and use our online search to find the item you're interested in. Any restrictions will be shown alongside the product.

Materials from Harvard Business Publishing are not available to customers at corporate organisations or at organisations in China.

Harvard Business Publishing Education logo

www.hbsp.harvard.edu/educators

Top ten bestselling cases

Browse the top ten bestselling cases from Harvard Business Publishing in 2023.

Browse the full collection

View all case collections

Learning with cases can be a challenging experience.

Our interactive study guide takes students through the process, providing practical tips, tricks and tools.

Picture representing 'Learning with Cases: An Interactive Study Guide'

Discover more

harvard case study

  • Harvard Business School →
  • Academic Experience
  • Faculty & Research
  • The Field Method
  • A Global Experience

The HBS Case Method

  • Joint Degree Programs
  • The Section Experience
  • The HBS Case Method →

Take a Seat in the MBA Classroom

  • Harvard Business School

How the HBS Case Method Works

harvard case study

How the Case Method Works

harvard case study

  • Read and analyze the case. Each case is a 10-20 page document written from the viewpoint of a real person leading a real organization. In addition to background information on the situation, each case ends in a key decision to be made. Your job is to sift through the information, incomplete by design, and decide what you would do.
  • Discuss the case. Each morning, you’ll bring your ideas to a small team of classmates from diverse professional backgrounds, your discussion group, to share your findings and listen to theirs. Together, you begin to see the case from different perspectives, better preparing you for class.
  • Engage in class. Be prepared to change the way you think as you debate with classmates the best path forward for this organization. The highly engaged conversation is facilitated by the faculty member, but it’s driven by your classmates’ comments and experiences. HBS brings together amazingly talented people from diverse backgrounds and puts that experience front and center. Students do the majority of the talking (and lots of active listening), and your job is to better understand the decision at hand, what you would do in the case protagonist’s shoes, and why. You will not leave a class thinking about the case the same way you thought about it coming in! In addition to learning more about many businesses, in the case method you will develop communication, listening, analysis, and leadership skills. It is a truly dynamic and immersive learning environment.
  • Reflect. The case method prepares you to be in leadership positions where you will face time-sensitive decisions with limited information. Reflecting on each class discussion will prepare you to face these situations in your future roles.

Student Perspectives

harvard case study

“I’ve been so touched by how dedicated other people have been to my learning and my success.”

Faculty Perspectives

harvard case study

“The world desperately needs better leadership. It’s actually one of the great gifts of teaching here, you can do something about it.”

Alumni Perspectives

harvard case study

“You walk into work every morning and it's like a fire hose of decisions that need to be made, often without enough information. Just like an HBS case.”

Celebrating the Inaugural HBS Case

harvard case study

“How do you go into an ambiguous situation and get to the bottom of it? That skill – the skill of figuring out a course of inquiry, to choose a course of action – that skill is as relevant today as it was in 1921.”
  • --> Login or Sign Up

Shop by Author

  • Harvard Law Case Studies A-Z
  • Free Materials
  • Workshop-Based Case Study
  • Discussion-Based Case Study
  • Sabrineh Ardalan
  • Sharon Block
  • Robert Bordone
  • Emily M. Broad Leib
  • Robert Clark
  • John Coates
  • Susan Crawford
  • Alonzo Emery
  • Philip B. Heymann
  • Howell E. Jackson
  • Wendy Jacobs
  • Adriaan Lanni
  • Jeremy McClane
  • Naz Modirzadeh
  • Catherine Mondell
  • Ashish Nanda
  • Charles R. Nesson
  • John Palfrey
  • Bruce Patton
  • Todd D. Rakoff
  • Lisa Rohrer
  • Jeswald W. Salacuse
  • James Sebenius
  • Joseph William Singer
  • Holger Spamann
  • Carol Steiker
  • Guhan Subramanian
  • Lawrence Susskind
  • David B. Wilkins
  • Heidi Gardner
  • Jonathan Zittrain

Shop by Brand

Howell Jackson

  • Ashish Nanda and Nicholas Semi Haas
  • Chad M. Carr
  • John Coates, Clayton Rose, and David Lane

Ashish Nanda and Lauren Prusiner

  • Ashish Nanda and Lisa Rohrer
  • Ashish Nanda and Monet Brewerton
  • View all Brands

Professor Naz Modirzadeh lecturing her class

Harvard Law School

The Case Studies

Professor Sharon Block listening to a student at her desk

The Case Study

a valuable tool for experiential, participant-centered learning

Professor John Coates lecturing to his class at the blackboard

Public Company Analysis

Understand the control structures within US public companies

Langdell Hall at Harvard Law School

Financial Regulation

Explore emerging challenges in regulating financial institutions

Students discussing during class at the Harvard Law School

Mediation & Negotiation

Develop the theory and practice of negotiation and dispute resolution

Shop by Category

Featured items.

empty conference room

A Difficult Discussion with the Board (A)

John Coates, Karina Shaw, Nathan Cisneros

Man intently works on repairing airplane engine, industrial setting

GE Capital after the Crisis

John Coates, John Dionne, David Scharfstein

null

Noorain Khan and Disability Inclusion at the Ford Foundation

Laura Winig and Susan Crawford

glass of white wine among a blurred backdrop

BYOB in Boston

Susan Crawford and Brittany Deitch

Current Top Sellers

Brazil flag

Diego Primadonna

Robert Ricigliano

large boat on water with construction cranes

Lawrence Susskind and Eileen Babbitt

Mushing dogs look on to shipwreck in the snow, black and white

Ernest Shackleton's Journey to the Endurance

Ashish Nanda and Nicholas Tabor

cloudy view of city sandwiched between body of water and mountains

Linklaters (A): Seeking Clear Blue Water

New products.

 Alpha Stock Images - http://alphastockimages.com/

Hogan Lovells’ Sector-Focused Client Service Approach: Put to the Test During Covid

Heidi K. Gardner

First National Bank of Ames Corporation (Teaching Note)

First National Bank of Ames Corporation (Teaching Note)

Investor Access to Private Investment (Teaching Note)

Investor Access to Private Investment (Teaching Note)

Investor Access to Private Investment

Investor Access to Private Investment

Hannah Valentine under the supervision of Howell Jackson

Please note that each purchase of a product entitles the purchaser to one download and use.  If you need multiple copies, please purchase the number of copies you need.  For more information, see  Copying Your Case Study .

7 Favorite Business Case Studies to Teach—and Why

Explore more.

  • Case Teaching
  • Course Materials

FEATURED CASE STUDIES

The Army Crew Team . Emily Michelle David of CEIBS

ATH Technologies . Devin Shanthikumar of Paul Merage School of Business

Fabritek 1992 . Rob Austin of Ivey Business School

Lincoln Electric Co . Karin Schnarr of Wilfrid Laurier University

Pal’s Sudden Service—Scaling an Organizational Model to Drive Growth . Gary Pisano of Harvard Business School

The United States Air Force: ‘Chaos’ in the 99th Reconnaissance Squadron . Francesca Gino of Harvard Business School

Warren E. Buffett, 2015 . Robert F. Bruner of Darden School of Business

To dig into what makes a compelling case study, we asked seven experienced educators who teach with—and many who write—business case studies: “What is your favorite case to teach and why?”

The resulting list of case study favorites ranges in topics from operations management and organizational structure to rebel leaders and whodunnit dramas.

1. The Army Crew Team

Emily Michelle David, Assistant Professor of Management, China Europe International Business School (CEIBS)

harvard case study

“I love teaching  The Army Crew Team  case because it beautifully demonstrates how a team can be so much less than the sum of its parts.

I deliver the case to executives in a nearby state-of-the-art rowing facility that features rowing machines, professional coaches, and shiny red eight-person shells.

After going through the case, they hear testimonies from former members of Chinese national crew teams before carrying their own boat to the river for a test race.

The rich learning environment helps to vividly underscore one of the case’s core messages: competition can be a double-edged sword if not properly managed.

harvard case study

Executives in Emily Michelle David’s organizational behavior class participate in rowing activities at a nearby facility as part of her case delivery.

Despite working for an elite headhunting firm, the executives in my most recent class were surprised to realize how much they’ve allowed their own team-building responsibilities to lapse. In the MBA pre-course, this case often leads to a rich discussion about common traps that newcomers fall into (for example, trying to do too much, too soon), which helps to poise them to both stand out in the MBA as well as prepare them for the lateral team building they will soon engage in.

Finally, I love that the post-script always gets a good laugh and serves as an early lesson that organizational behavior courses will seldom give you foolproof solutions for specific problems but will, instead, arm you with the ability to think through issues more critically.”

2. ATH Technologies

Devin Shanthikumar, Associate Professor of Accounting, Paul Merage School of Business

harvard case study

“As a professor at UC Irvine’s Paul Merage School of Business, and before that at Harvard Business School, I have probably taught over 100 cases. I would like to say that my favorite case is my own,   Compass Box Whisky Company . But as fun as that case is, one case beats it:  ATH Technologies  by Robert Simons and Jennifer Packard.

ATH presents a young entrepreneurial company that is bought by a much larger company. As part of the merger, ATH gets an ‘earn-out’ deal—common among high-tech industries. The company, and the class, must decide what to do to achieve the stretch earn-out goals.

ATH captures a scenario we all want to be in at some point in our careers—being part of a young, exciting, growing organization. And a scenario we all will likely face—having stretch goals that seem almost unreachable.

It forces us, as a class, to really struggle with what to do at each stage.

After we read and discuss the A case, we find out what happens next, and discuss the B case, then the C, then D, and even E. At every stage, we can:

see how our decisions play out,

figure out how to build on our successes, and

address our failures.

The case is exciting, the class discussion is dynamic and energetic, and in the end, we all go home with a memorable ‘ah-ha!’ moment.

I have taught many great cases over my career, but none are quite as fun, memorable, and effective as ATH .”

3. Fabritek 1992

Rob Austin, Professor of Information Systems, Ivey Business School

harvard case study

“This might seem like an odd choice, but my favorite case to teach is an old operations case called  Fabritek 1992 .

The latest version of Fabritek 1992 is dated 2009, but it is my understanding that this is a rewrite of a case that is older (probably much older). There is a Fabritek 1969 in the HBP catalog—same basic case, older dates, and numbers. That 1969 version lists no authors, so I suspect the case goes even further back; the 1969 version is, I’m guessing, a rewrite of an even older version.

There are many things I appreciate about the case. Here are a few:

It operates as a learning opportunity at many levels. At first it looks like a not-very-glamorous production job scheduling case. By the end of the case discussion, though, we’re into (operations) strategy and more. It starts out technical, then explodes into much broader relevance. As I tell participants when I’m teaching HBP's Teaching with Cases seminars —where I often use Fabritek as an example—when people first encounter this case, they almost always underestimate it.

It has great characters—especially Arthur Moreno, who looks like a troublemaker, but who, discussion reveals, might just be the smartest guy in the factory. Alums of the Harvard MBA program have told me that they remember Arthur Moreno many years later.

Almost every word in the case is important. It’s only four and a half pages of text and three pages of exhibits. This economy of words and sparsity of style have always seemed like poetry to me. I should note that this super concise, every-word-matters approach is not the ideal we usually aspire to when we write cases. Often, we include extra or superfluous information because part of our teaching objective is to provide practice in separating what matters from what doesn’t in a case. Fabritek takes a different approach, though, which fits it well.

It has a dramatic structure. It unfolds like a detective story, a sort of whodunnit. Something is wrong. There is a quality problem, and we’re not sure who or what is responsible. One person, Arthur Moreno, looks very guilty (probably too obviously guilty), but as we dig into the situation, there are many more possibilities. We spend in-class time analyzing the data (there’s a bit of math, so it covers that base, too) to determine which hypotheses are best supported by the data. And, realistically, the data doesn’t support any of the hypotheses perfectly, just some of them more than others. Also, there’s a plot twist at the end (I won’t reveal it, but here’s a hint: Arthur Moreno isn’t nearly the biggest problem in the final analysis). I have had students tell me the surprising realization at the end of the discussion gives them ‘goosebumps.’

Finally, through the unexpected plot twist, it imparts what I call a ‘wisdom lesson’ to young managers: not to be too sure of themselves and to regard the experiences of others, especially experts out on the factory floor, with great seriousness.”

4. Lincoln Electric Co.

Karin Schnarr, Assistant Professor of Policy, Wilfrid Laurier University

harvard case study

“As a strategy professor, my favorite case to teach is the classic 1975 Harvard case  Lincoln Electric Co.  by Norman Berg.

I use it to demonstrate to students the theory linkage between strategy and organizational structure, management processes, and leadership behavior.

This case may be an odd choice for a favorite. It occurs decades before my students were born. It is pages longer than we are told students are now willing to read. It is about manufacturing arc welding equipment in Cleveland, Ohio—a hard sell for a Canadian business classroom.

Yet, I have never come across a case that so perfectly illustrates what I want students to learn about how a company can be designed from an organizational perspective to successfully implement its strategy.

And in a time where so much focus continues to be on how to maximize shareholder value, it is refreshing to be able to discuss a publicly-traded company that is successfully pursuing a strategy that provides a fair value to shareholders while distributing value to employees through a large bonus pool, as well as value to customers by continually lowering prices.

However, to make the case resonate with today’s students, I work to make it relevant to the contemporary business environment. I link the case to multimedia clips about Lincoln Electric’s current manufacturing practices, processes, and leadership practices. My students can then see that a model that has been in place for generations is still viable and highly successful, even in our very different competitive situation.”

5. Pal’s Sudden Service—Scaling an Organizational Model to Drive Growth

Gary Pisano, Professor of Business Administration, Harvard Business School

harvard case study

“My favorite case to teach these days is  Pal’s Sudden Service—Scaling an Organizational Model to Drive Growth .

I love teaching this case for three reasons:

1. It demonstrates how a company in a super-tough, highly competitive business can do very well by focusing on creating unique operating capabilities. In theory, Pal’s should have no chance against behemoths like McDonalds or Wendy’s—but it thrives because it has built a unique operating system. It’s a great example of a strategic approach to operations in action.

2. The case shows how a strategic approach to human resource and talent development at all levels really matters. This company competes in an industry not known for engaging its front-line workers. The case shows how engaging these workers can really pay off.

3. Finally, Pal’s is really unusual in its approach to growth. Most companies set growth goals (usually arbitrary ones) and then try to figure out how to ‘backfill’ the human resource and talent management gaps. They trust you can always find someone to do the job. Pal’s tackles the growth problem completely the other way around. They rigorously select and train their future managers. Only when they have a manager ready to take on their own store do they open a new one. They pace their growth off their capacity to develop talent. I find this really fascinating and so do the students I teach this case to.”

6. The United States Air Force: ‘Chaos’ in the 99th Reconnaissance Squadron

Francesca Gino, Professor of Business Administration, Harvard Business School

harvard case study

“My favorite case to teach is  The United States Air Force: ‘Chaos’ in the 99th Reconnaissance Squadron .

The case surprises students because it is about a leader, known in the unit by the nickname Chaos , who inspired his squadron to be innovative and to change in a culture that is all about not rocking the boat, and where there is a deep sense that rules should simply be followed.

For years, I studied ‘rebels,’ people who do not accept the status quo; rather, they approach work with curiosity and produce positive change in their organizations. Chaos is a rebel leader who got the level of cultural change right. Many of the leaders I’ve met over the years complain about the ‘corporate culture,’ or at least point to clear weaknesses of it; but then they throw their hands up in the air and forget about changing what they can.

Chaos is different—he didn’t go after the ‘Air Force’ culture. That would be like boiling the ocean.

Instead, he focused on his unit of control and command: The 99th squadron. He focused on enabling that group to do what it needed to do within the confines of the bigger Air Force culture. In the process, he inspired everyone on his team to be the best they can be at work.

The case leaves the classroom buzzing and inspired to take action.”

7. Warren E. Buffett, 2015

Robert F. Bruner, Professor of Business Administration, Darden School of Business

harvard case study

“I love teaching   Warren E. Buffett, 2015  because it energizes, exercises, and surprises students.

Buffett looms large in the business firmament and therefore attracts anyone who is eager to learn his secrets for successful investing. This generates the kind of energy that helps to break the ice among students and instructors early in a course and to lay the groundwork for good case discussion practices.

Studying Buffett’s approach to investing helps to introduce and exercise important themes that will resonate throughout a course. The case challenges students to define for themselves what it means to create value. The case discussion can easily be tailored for novices or for more advanced students.

Either way, this is not hero worship: The case affords a critical examination of the financial performance of Buffett’s firm, Berkshire Hathaway, and reveals both triumphs and stumbles. Most importantly, students can critique the purported benefits of Buffett’s conglomeration strategy and the sustainability of his investment record as the size of the firm grows very large.

By the end of the class session, students seem surprised with what they have discovered. They buzz over the paradoxes in Buffett’s philosophy and performance record. And they come away with sober respect for Buffett’s acumen and for the challenges of creating value for investors.

Surely, such sobriety is a meta-message for any mastery of finance.”

More Educator Favorites

harvard case study

Emily Michelle David is an assistant professor of management at China Europe International Business School (CEIBS). Her current research focuses on discovering how to make workplaces more welcoming for people of all backgrounds and personality profiles to maximize performance and avoid employee burnout. David’s work has been published in a number of scholarly journals, and she has worked as an in-house researcher at both NASA and the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center.

harvard case study

Devin Shanthikumar  is an associate professor and the accounting area coordinator at UCI Paul Merage School of Business. She teaches undergraduate, MBA, and executive-level courses in managerial accounting. Shanthikumar previously served on the faculty at Harvard Business School, where she taught both financial accounting and managerial accounting for MBAs, and wrote cases that are used in accounting courses across the country.

harvard case study

Robert D. Austin is a professor of information systems at Ivey Business School and an affiliated faculty member at Harvard Medical School. He has published widely, authoring nine books, more than 50 cases and notes, three Harvard online products, and two popular massive open online courses (MOOCs) running on the Coursera platform.

harvard case study

Karin Schnarr is an assistant professor of policy and the director of the Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA) program at the Lazaridis School of Business & Economics at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada where she teaches strategic management at the undergraduate, graduate, and executive levels. Schnarr has published several award-winning and best-selling cases and regularly presents at international conferences on case writing and scholarship.

harvard case study

Gary P. Pisano is the Harry E. Figgie, Jr. Professor of Business Administration and senior associate dean of faculty development at Harvard Business School, where he has been on the faculty since 1988. Pisano is an expert in the fields of technology and operations strategy, the management of innovation, and competitive strategy. His research and consulting experience span a range of industries including aerospace, biotechnology, pharmaceuticals, specialty chemicals, health care, nutrition, computers, software, telecommunications, and semiconductors.

harvard case study

Francesca Gino studies how people can have more productive, creative, and fulfilling lives. She is a professor at Harvard Business School and the author, most recently, of  Rebel Talent: Why It Pays to Break the Rules at Work and in Life . Gino regularly gives keynote speeches, delivers corporate training programs, and serves in advisory roles for firms and not-for-profit organizations across the globe.

harvard case study

Robert F. Bruner is a university professor at the University of Virginia, distinguished professor of business administration, and dean emeritus of the Darden School of Business. He has also held visiting appointments at Harvard and Columbia universities in the United States, at INSEAD in France, and at IESE in Spain. He is the author, co-author, or editor of more than 20 books on finance, management, and teaching. Currently, he teaches and writes in finance and management.

Related Articles

harvard case study

We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience, including personalizing content. Learn More . By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies and revised Privacy Policy .

harvard case study

Crafting Climate Policy That Sticks: An Arctic Case Study

Date and location.

Add this event to calendar

​Climate change transcends terms of office and demands steadfast policy responses. The Arctic, which is warming three to four times faster than the rest of the world, is at the forefront of the climate crisis. Communities in the region are witnessing profound disruptions to their daily lives and livelihoods as their environment rapidly transforms.

Join us for a deep dive into how durable policies are critical for building the resilience communities impacted by climate change. The discussion will draw out lessons from the implementation of the U.S. Arctic Strategy, featuring insights from officials from the White House and the Department of Interior, climate scientists, and local leaders who are directly engaged in translating policy commitments into action. Learn how the strides made through this strategy are not just responding to current challenges but are setting the groundwork for a resilient future for the Arctic and all communities facing the impacts of climate change.

RSVP required. A Harvard University ID is required for in-person attendance; all are welcome to attend on Zoom . For questions or to request accessibility accommodations, contact Elizabeth Hanlon ( [email protected] ).

Speakers and Presenters

​​David Balton, White House Arctic Executive Steering Committee; Raina Thiele, Department of Interior; John Holdren, HKS Arctic Initiative; Jackie Qataliña Schaeffer, Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium; Fran Ulmer, HKS Arctic Initiative

Harvard’s encampment is the last one standing in Greater Boston

Harvard University Police walked past a pro-Palestinian tent encampment in Harvard Yard Friday morning.

The pro-Palestinian encampment in Harvard Yard is now the last one standing among campuses in Greater Boston. Despite a last-minute attempt by interim president Alan Garber to talk with student protesters, and a final warning they would be suspended indefinitely from school, most have not left.

The Harvard protesters will be banned from campus as of midday Saturday, the administration said, which means they will lose campus housing and cannot participate in commencement. Harvard Out of Occupied Palestine, the student group, said “over a dozen students” received suspension notices.

Neither the students nor administrators would say what their next steps are. But on other campuses, exasperated college leaders have called law enforcement to forcibly remove encampments including at MIT, where police early Friday morning cleared an encampment and arrested 10.

Advertisement

Similar scenes played out at campuses across the country over the last week; police also dismantled encampments early Friday at the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Arizona.

University presidents are facing immense pressure from donors and conservative politicians to discipline students participating in pro-Palestinian advocacy, which critics say have contributed to a hostile environment on campus for Jewish students, and from faculty and staff, many of whom want college leaders to negotiate with students and find peaceful solutions.

College leaders are also concerned the encampments will disrupt commencement activities, since in many cases the demonstrations tend to be centrally located on campuses. In April, police arrested about 200 protesters from encampments at Northeastern University and Emerson College, and some 130 protesters were arrested at the University of Massachusetts Amherst this week.

A spokesperson for Garber said he “regrets that the protesters have declined this opportunity by deciding to continue the encampment.”

Garber met with leaders of Harvard Out of Occupied Palestine on Wednesday evening after more than 350 faculty members signed an open letter calling on top administrators to meet with students. Since the protest began on April 24, the encampment has expanded into sections of Harvard Yard where graduation ceremonies are held. Harvard commencement activities begin on May 21.

Spokesperson Jonathan Swain said Garber “listened to the students’ perspectives on their concerns and goals.” He added the “conversation was not a negotiation of protesters’ demands.”

About 150 Harvard faculty members, alumni, students, and staffers signed a separate letter sent to Garber Thursday afternoon that said they “agree entirely with your statement that [the encampment] must end.”

Shortly after 1 a.m. Friday, Harvard Out of Occupied Palestine posted on Instagram that Garber said there would be mass suspensions if the encampment was not dismantled that night. If the tents came down immediately, Garber said, there would be opportunities for “more conversations,” the post said.

The protesters, however, did not acquiesce.

Elizabeth Ross, a Harvard graduate student who was suspended Friday morning, said at a press conference that student protesters presented Garber with four demands: Offer more transparency into university investments, phase out direct investments in weapons manufacturers, establish a center for Palestine studies, and reject donations from weapons manufacturers and those who have “harassed student protesters.”

“We told them we were willing to mutually work together on a reasonable timeline,” Ross said.

Lara Jirmanus, a physician, clinical instructor at Harvard Medical School, and member of the group Faculty and Staff for Justice in Palestine, told reporters Friday that one faculty and one staff member have also received disciplinary notices. Jirmanus, wearing her scrubs in solidarity with Gazan health workers, declined to provide further details.

”We have to be seriously thinking about how dangerous [a] precedent we are setting,” Jirmanus said of the suspensions, which she fears could “silence and threaten the future and the careers of these brave students that are really just trying to make sure we’re holding our democracy accountable.”

In his meeting with the protesters, which was also attended by Harvard College Dean Rakesh Khurana, and two faculty observers, Garber said Harvard “will not use the endowment as a political tool,” according to a spokesperson. He added the encampment “must end so that thousands of students can be recognized for their academic achievement at Harvard’s Commencement.”

“President Garber has made clear the University’s commitment to reasoned discussion of complex issues, including the ongoing Israel-Hamas conflict,” Swain said. “However, as he said, ‘initiating these difficult and crucial conversations does not require, or justify, interfering with the educational environment and Harvard’s academic mission.’”

Garber on Friday also met in person on campus with Jonathan Greenblatt, president of the Anti-Defamation League, which has for months expressed concern about rising reports of antisemitism on college campuses. Greenblatt said they had a “very productive” discussion.

“We support the stance he has taken in indicating he will not negotiate with people in the encampment who are violating university code of conduct,” he said in a statement to the Globe. “We continue to look forward to working with Harvard as they will make sure that all students including Jewish and Israeli students feel valued and welcomed on campus.”

Shabbos Kestenbaum, a Harvard graduate student and one of six students suing the university for allegedly allowing a hostile environment for Jewish students to fester, said his experience as a Jewish student on campus since Oct. 7 has been “horrible.”

The suspension letters “are a natural outcome of their misbehavior,” he said. “Hopefully there will be an effort to combat antisemitism in a meaningful way.”

The protests here and around the country began in April, after more than 100 demonstrators were arrested at Columbia University. More than 2,800 protesters have been arrested across the country since April 18, according to The New York Times .

The encampments represent an escalation of protests that began in the fall, after Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack on Israel that killed more than 1,200 people, most of them civilians, and claimed about 250 as hostages. Israel has conducted a retaliatory campaign in Gaza in which more than 34,000 people have died, according to Palestinian authorities, and has leveled broad swaths of the territory and pushed the territory to the brink of famine.

As an academic year dominated by conflict and controversy over the war and its fallout draws to a close, many students and faculty remain deeply troubled by their campus experiences. And at Harvard, it isn’t over yet.

”I think people are getting more and more anxious,” said Alison Frank Johnson, a history professor. “We all are 100 percent on board with [the idea that] universities don’t arrest their own students.”

Students rallying in Harvard Yard Friday afternoon unfurled banners from the windows of dormitories, and said they renamed the buildings in honor of deceased Palestinians. A poster hanging from a tree read “Alan Garbage funds genocide,” with a drawing of Garber as a devil, with horns and a tail, sitting on a toilet. Portraying Jews as demons is widely understood to be an antisemitic trope.

Kojo Acheampong, a sophomore studying computer science, was among those who were banned by Harvard Friday for refusing to leave the encampment. He said some of his family members are upset about the suspension, but he was prepared as a student activist to face such consequences.

When asked if he is worried about being arrested — given what happened down the road at MIT overnight — Acheampong paused.

“I’m genuinely not worried,” he said, “because I know that we’re on the right side of history.”

View this post on Instagram A post shared by HOOP Coalition (@harvardoop)

Material from the Associated Press was used in this report. Globe correspondent Jade Lozada contributed.

Hilary Burns can be reached at [email protected] . Follow her @Hilarysburns . Madeline Khaw can be reached at [email protected] . Follow her @maddiekhaw . Talia Lissauer can be reached at [email protected] . Follow her on Instgram @_ttphotos .

IMAGES

  1. How To Cite A Case Study From Harvard Business School

    harvard case study

  2. Harvard Case Study Analysis PDF

    harvard case study

  3. The Case Study Handbook: How to Read, Discuss, and Write Persuasively

    harvard case study

  4. Harvard Business Review Case Study

    harvard case study

  5. The Harvard Case Method

    harvard case study

  6. Case Studies for Harvard Business School_Brochure

    harvard case study

VIDEO

  1. Blanchard Importing and Distribution Co., Inc. Case Solution & Analysis- TheCaseSolutions.com

  2. WORLDWIDE PAPER COMPANY Case Solution & Analysis- TheCaseSolutions.com

  3. Parkin Laboratories Case Solution & Analysis- TheCaseSolutions.com

  4. Believe in yourself| Harvard Case study on Belief System !!!

  5. Castrol

  6. Urban Company's COVID Comeback

COMMENTS

  1. Cases

    Browse over 50,000+ cases from HBS and other leading business schools to teach and learn with real-world scenarios. Find cases by discipline, topic, or type, and access resources and training for case teaching.

  2. HBS Case Selections

    Explore real-world scenarios from Harvard Business School on various topics, such as managing your organization, managing your team, managing yourself, and managing in a crisis. Learn from the insights and experiences of experts and leaders in different industries and contexts.

  3. Harvard Business Publishing Education

    HEC Montreal Centre for Case Studies (201) Harvard Advanced Leadership Initiative (43) Harvard Business Press Books (571) Harvard Business Press Chapters (2,435) Harvard Business Publishing (366) ... HBR Case. Bestseller. When Your Colleague Is a Saboteur (HBR Case Study) By: Bronwyn Fryer.

  4. What the Case Study Method Really Teaches

    Learn how the case study method, used by Harvard Business School for 100 years, teaches students not only specific subject matter but also seven meta-skills: preparation, discernment, bias recognition, judgement, collaboration, curiosity, and self-confidence.

  5. Browse All Articles, Research, & Case Studies

    by Dina Gerdeman. Corporate misconduct has grown in the past 30 years, with losses often totaling billions of dollars. What businesses may not realize is that misconduct often results from managers who set unrealistic expectations, leading decent people to take unethical shortcuts, says Lynn S. Paine. 26 Apr 2024.

  6. 5 Benefits of the Case Study Method

    What Is the Harvard Business School Case Study Method? The case study method, or case method, is a learning technique in which you're presented with a real-world business challenge and asked how you'd solve it. After working through it yourself and with peers, you're told how the scenario played out. HBS pioneered the case method in 1922 ...

  7. HBS Case

    A case study by Francesca Gino, Hise Gibson, and Frances Frei shows the barriers that formerly incarcerated Black men are up against and the potential talent they could bring to business. ... Inspired by a Harvard Business School case study. 1; 2 … 5; 6; →; ǁ. Harvard Business School Working Knowledge Baker Library | Bloomberg Center ...

  8. What is the Case Study Method?

    Celebrating 100 Years of the Case Method at HBS . The 2021-2022 academic year marks the 100-year anniversary of the introduction of the case method at Harvard Business School. Today, the HBS case method is employed in the HBS MBA program, in Executive Education programs, and in dozens of other business schools around the world.

  9. HBR Store

    Case studies written by professors at HBS and other leading business programs worldwide, focusing on real-world problems and decisions companies face. Use promo code HBRORGREG4 for 20% off* your first order. ... Harvard Business Publishing is an affiliate of Harvard Business School.

  10. Case Development

    The Case Studies for Harvard Business School brochure is a helpful resource to organizations interested in working with the School on a case. Case leads are identified based on a faculty's teaching purpose and may arise as the result of a past relationship with an executive, a former student, or from a professor's interest in exploring with ...

  11. Teaching by the Case Method

    Case Method in Practice. Chris Christensen described case method teaching as "the art of managing uncertainty"—a process in which the instructor serves as "planner, host, moderator, devil's advocate, fellow-student, and judge," all in search of solutions to real-world problems and challenges. Unlike lectures, case method classes unfold ...

  12. Publications

    HarvEast. By: Jeremy Friedman and Natalie Kindred. In late 2023, Dmitry Skornyakov, CEO of Ukrainian agribusiness HarvEast, was navigating the turmoil caused by Russia's invasion of Ukraine that began in 2014 and escalated into full-scale war in February 2022. Before the full-scale invasion, HarvEast managed 127,000... View Details.

  13. Case Study: Should We Embrace Crypto?

    Case Study: Should We Embrace Crypto? by. Charles C.Y. Wang. From the Magazine (November-December 2021) Anuj Shrestha. Share. Save. The phone buzzed on the nightstand—once, twice, three times ...

  14. Case collection: Harvard Business Publishing

    The Case Centre distributes a comprehensive range of materials including the complete collection of more than 7,500 Harvard Business School case studies, teaching notes, background notes, case videos, and a selection of software ancillaries. Also included are: Brief Cases that are rigorous and compact with five-eight pages and three-four exhibits.

  15. The HBS Case Method

    Discuss the case. Each morning, you'll bring your ideas to a small team of classmates from diverse professional backgrounds, your discussion group, to share your findings and listen to theirs. ... Harvard Business School Spangler Welcome Center (Spangler 107) Boston, MA 02163 Phone: 1.617.495.6128

  16. The Case Study Teaching Method

    The Harvard Business School case study approach grew out of the Langdellian method. But instead of using established case law, business professors chose real-life examples from the business world to highlight and analyze business principles. HBS-style case studies typically consist of a short narrative (less than 25 pages), told from the point ...

  17. Harvard Law School

    The Case Study Teaching Method; Harvard Law Case Studies A-Z; Free Materials; Blog; Shop By Category; Harvard Law Case Studies A-Z; Free Materials; Program; Role Play; Workshop-Based Case Study; Discussion-Based Case Study; DVD; Subject; Sabrineh Ardalan; Sharon Block; Robert Bordone; Emily M. Broad Leib; Chad Carr; Robert Clark; John Coates ...

  18. Shop HBR Case Studies

    Buy real-world case studies, written by professors at HBS and other renowned business programs. ... Harvard Business Publishing is an affiliate of Harvard Business School. ...

  19. 7 Favorite Business Case Studies to Teach—and Why

    Learn how seasoned educators use case studies to teach various topics in business and management. Discover their top case picks and the reasons behind their choices.

  20. Crafting Climate Policy That Sticks: An Arctic Case Study

    Events. Crafting Climate Policy That Sticks: An Arctic Case Study. May 14, 2024. 4:00 PM - 5:15 PM ET. ADD TO CALENDAR. 617-495-5964. RSVP To This Event. Climate change transcends terms of office and demands steadfast policy responses. The Arctic, which is warming three to four times faster than the rest of the world, is at the forefront of the ...

  21. Harvard's encampment is the last one standing in Greater Boston

    Shabbos Kestenbaum, a Harvard graduate student and one of six students suing the university for allegedly allowing a hostile environment for Jewish students to fester, said his experience as a ...

  22. Research: Negotiating Is Unlikely to Jeopardize Your Job Offer

    Summary. Job seekers worry about negotiating an offer for many reasons, including the worst-case scenario that the offer will be rescinded. Across a series of seven studies, researchers found that ...