Employee Feedback and Turnover

Studying more than 10 years of comprehensive performance appraisal data from a large regional public accounting and consulting firm, this study identifies attributes of employees and supervisors associated with higher or lower quality feedback. This data also made it possible to measure the influence feedback may play in voluntary and involuntary turnover decisions.

Effects of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017

This study explores how firms account for the transition tax applied to accumulated foreign earnings following the enactment of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. In addition, the study examines whether and how earnings quality and the informativeness of effective tax rates are affected by this decision.

Managing Demand Shocks

Using a large firm panel from 44 countries, researchers found that firms with greater comparability provide greater insurance to employees in response to a company-level, marketplace, consumer-facing demand (corporate sales) shock. In return, comparability increases employees’ willingness to accept a higher wage discount without sacrificing productivity.

Diversity of Corporate Bonds

Diversity may reduce groupthink and enable different perspectives to inform executive decisions. This can be vital to the two key functions of boards of directors: monitoring and advising. While research shows more tenure-diverse boards are better monitors of top management, faculty at Trulaske are now examining how diverse boards handle their advising roles.

The Future of Auditing

Advances in sensors, artificial intelligence and cloud-computing have significantly changed organizations’ business processes. Increasingly, audit firms themselves must adopt similarly advanced technological tools and techniques in the audit process. These include data visualization, text mining, predictive analytics and artificial intelligence. Researchers at Trulaske are developing ideas about what new standards might look like – adopting the term Audit 4.0 – to provide a starting point for gathering qualitative field data.

Tax Effects of Managerial Indiscretions

Do or should accounting firms respond to public allegations of non-work-related indiscretions, such as marital infidelity or substance abuse, leveled against executives and directors? For years in which indiscretion allegations are first publicized, auditors charge significantly higher fees, take longer to issue the audit report and are significantly more likely to resign from the client.

 

As you will find on this website, our faculty pursue high-impact academic research in a variety of areas. Below are current research interest areas by academic department. 

  • Current issues in auditing and disclosure
  • Corporate governance
  • International accounting
  • Auditing regulation
  • Securities market transparency
  • Internal controls
  • Tax risk
  • Banking and financial intermediation
  • Asset pricing
  • Investments
  • Corporate finance
  • Household finance
  • Behavioral finance
  • Institutional investors
  • Corporate governance
  • Competitive dynamics
  • Corporate communications
  • Corporate governance
  • Crowdfunding and new venture growth
  • Emergence, development, and impact of leaders
  • Employee motivation
  • Employee well-being
  • New venture workforce and work design
  • Interorganizational networks
  • Precursors of deviant and unethical behavior at work
  • Social evaluations
  • Startup workforce and work design
  • Sustainability and ESG
  • Technology management and innovation
  • Turnover and withdrawal
  • Workforce staffing
  • B2B relationships
  • Service systems and engineering management
  • AI and machine learning
  • Sales force management
  • International marketing
  • Big data analytics
  • Innovation

Have Questions?

We're Here to Help! Please contact Associate Dean for Research Marsha Richins with any questions.