2015 SH-DH
3620 Locust Walk
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Research Interests: Entrepreneurship, Contingent Work, Global Labor Markets, Digitization, Emerging Economies
Links: CV, Personal Website
Natalie A. Carlson is an Assistant Professor of Management at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. Her research focuses on entrepreneurship and human capital, with a particular focus on emerging economies. Her work draws on a variety of methodologies, with a focus on experiments and computational methods. She has worked on field experiments in collaboration with NGOs and firms in settings such as Zimbabwe and Colombia. She studied for her Ph.D. in Management at Columbia Business School, and holds a B.A. in Economics from Yale University.
Exequiel Hernandez, Natalie Carlson, Dany Bahar, Global Palette: The Impact of Immigrant Talent on Multinational Product Strategy.
Natalie Carlson (2023), Differentiation in Microenterprises, Strategic Management Journal, 44 (5).
Abstract: Small unregistered firms contribute to a substantial proportion of global economic activity, particularly in developing regions. In explaining variation in productivity in these types of informal firms, research has focused primarily on the adoption of effective business practices and access to capital, with little focus on fundamental positioning. This article explores the nature of differentiation in microenterprises, introducing a text-based measure of differentiation using state-of-the-art sentence embeddings. Using a combined sample of nearly 10,000 microenterprises across eight developing countries, I examine whether (and which) microenterprises differentiate, whether differentiation is related to performance (and for whom), and whether any existing policy interventions affect differentiation.
Prithwiraj Choudhury, Dan Wang, Natalie Carlson, Tarun Khanna (2019), Machine Learning Approaches to Facial and Text Analysis: Discovering CEO Oral Communication Styles, Strategic Management Journal, 40 (11).
Natalie Carlson (2017), Simple Acoustic-Prosodic Models of Confidence and Likability are Associated with Long-Term Funding Outcomes for Entrepreneurs, Social Informatics.
Description: Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science.
This upcoming academic year, the Wharton School will welcome 20 new faculty members. These brilliant minds are leading experts in a wide range of fields, including business, social science, finance, economics, public policy, management, marketing, statistics, real estate, and operations. One of the most exciting additions to the Wharton community…
Wharton Stories - 08/17/2020