Institute of Management and Organization

Organisational unit: Institute

Organisation profile

Organizations play a key role in our society. People create organizations to implement their plans and attain their goals. Organizations provide the structure that allows people to work towards common goals in a collaborative manner. Such collaborative efforts take place in for-profit or non-profit as well as in governmental or non-governmental organizations.

What We Do and Why

At the Institute of Management and Organization (IMO), we see it as a great responsibility to help people create, manage, and develop organizations. This includes the management and development of people working in organizations. Moreover, we believe that the management and development of organizations and people must comprehensively feature economic, ecological, social, and psychological aspects. Only such a comprehensive perspective allows to develop organizations and enrich people's lives in a meaningful manner.

Three activities are central to manage and develop organizations and the people in organizations. First, we need to understand key drivers and processes of an effective and sustainable development of people and organizations. Second, we need to incorporate this understanding of key drivers and processes in our training of future leaders and managers. Our aim is to equip students with the latest scientific know-how about managing and developing people and organizations. Third, we need to inform current practitioners about new scientific insights to continuously improve the practices implemented in organizations. Therefore, the IMO equally emphasizes the three activities: research to better understand, teaching to better train, and transfer to better inform.

The IMO combines the areas of strategy, organizational behavior, work & organizational psychology, and entrepreneurship. Furthermore, the institute integrates the fields of business administration and psychology to take an interdisciplinary perspective. Such an interdisciplinary perspective is important to fully embrace the dynamics of people and organizations. State-of-the-art approaches emphasize a close integration of both disciplines. Furthermore, the members of the institute understand themselves as an active part in the global context incorporating a strong international orientation in their research, teaching, and transfer activities.

 

Main research areas

At IMO, we want to achieve a better understanding. Specifically, we want to advance the theoretical understanding of managing and developing organizations and the people in the organizations by conducting research on strategy, management, entrepreneurship, innovation, and HR management. Furthermore, we believe that only research in line with the highest academic standards leads to scientific advancements that are meaningful for developing people and organizations.

Therefore, the institute is dedicated to research that is excellent with regard to the theoretical, conceptual, and methodological approach. We regard publishing in international top tier journals and conferences as a benchmark of excellence in research. Furthermore, we consider quantitative and qualitative research as complementary in identifying the drivers and processes of successfully managing and developing organizations and the people in organizations.

The members of the institute are widely acknowledged as internationally high profile scholars and prolific experts in the areas of strategy, entrepreneurship, innovation, organizational behavior, and (international) HR management. They combine expertise from the domains of business administration and psychology. They have published their research in international top tier entrepreneurship and management journals.

At IMO, we engage in collaborative initiatives and joint research projects. We bundle resources and foster a climate of permanent (formal and informal) exchange of ideas. The results are large research projects, for example on entrepreneurship and entrepreneurship trainings, entrepreneurial learning from failures, global mobility, and integrating refugees into the workforce.

The research projects of the institute have a strong international orientation. The research collaborations of the institute span universities from countries across the globe (e.g., USA, East and West Africa, Asia). For example, the institute conducts research projects on:

  • entrepreneurship and entrepreneurship trainings in several countries in East and West Africa, Asia, and Latin America;
  • global leadership, selection, and development in collaboration with several international universities;
  • topics of international business, in particular questions of global mobility, expatriate management, and international HR practices in countries around the globe.
  1. Accepted/In press

    Stability matters: A dynamic process view on self-efficacy in training transfer.

    Weers, J. & Gielnik, M., 2025, (Accepted/In press) In: Journal of Applied Psychology.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  2. E-pub ahead of print

    Unpacking olfactory marketing: initial evidence for the positive effects of scented parcels on post-order consumer responses in e-commerce

    Oberwegner, N., Cantner, F., Imschloss, M. & Zürn, M. K., 06.08.2025, (E-pub ahead of print) In: Marketing Letters. 14 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  3. Published

    Concession patterns in dyadic negotiations: Empirically contrasting sunk cost, loss aversion, and rationality predictions

    Escher, Y. A., Petrowsky, H. M., Boecker, L., Stöckli, P. L. & Loschelder, D. D., 22.08.2025, In: Negotiation and Conflict Management Research. 18, 3, p. 165–203 39 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  4. Published

    Round, just-below, or precise prices? Cultural differences in the prevalence of price endings in E-commerce

    Ventura, A., Troll, E. S., Soliman, M. & Loschelder, D. D., 2025, In: Frontiers in Behavioral Economics. 4, 18 p., 1296207.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  5. Accepted/In press

    A Tale of Open Science: Emergence of a New Normal

    Soliman, M., Sarstedt, M., Adler, S. J., Siegfried, D., Genschow, O. & Imschloss, M., 2025, (Accepted/In press) In: Schmalenbach Journal of Business Research. 30 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  6. Published
  7. Accepted/In press

    Victims of Conspiracies? An Examination of the Relationship Between Conspiracy Beliefs and Dispositional Individual Victimhood

    Author collaboration of "Victims of Conspiracies", Toribio-Flórez, D., Altenmüller, M. S., Douglas, K. M., Gollwitzer, M., Adinugroho, I., Genschow, O. & Westfal, M., 2025, (Accepted/In press) In: European Journal of Social Psychology. 18 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  8. Accepted/In press
  9. Accepted/In press

    Reviewing is caring! Revaluing a critical, but invisibilized, underappreciated, and exploited academic practice

    Dobusch, L., Plotnikof, M. & Wenzel, M., 2025, (Accepted/In press) In: Organization. 17 p., 13505084251343672.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  10. Published

    NAVIGATING PROFESSIONAL CAREERS AND INTERNAL ACTIVISM: A BOURDIEUSIAN LENS

    Hug, K., Chudzikowski, K. & Gustafsson, S., 2025, In: Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings. 2025, 1

    Research output: Journal contributionsConference article in journalResearchpeer-review

Recently viewed

Publications

  1. Sustainability Balanced Scorecard
  2. The struggles of Malaysian media and environmental non-governmental organisations (ENGOs) in communicating the environment within semi-democratic nation
  3. Online Channel Sales Premia in Times of COVID-19: First Evidence from Germany
  4. Bildung - Studium - Praxis
  5. The risk of male success and failure
  6. Mycorrhizas and Ecological Restoration in South America
  7. Interactive influence of livestock grazing and manipulated rainfall on soil properties in a humid tropical savanna
  8. Die Edition der Lodzer Getto-Chronik und ihre Multimedialisierung im Spiegel medialer Transformationen des Holocaust
  9. Determinanten menschlicher Fehler in Risikoindustrien
  10. Die Frage in den Geisteswissenschaften
  11. Gewalthandeln und Ehre. Versuch einer anerkennungstheoretischen Deutung
  12. Measurement of Biodiversity (MoB)
  13. Effekte testbasierter Rechenschaftslegung auf die datenbasierte Schul- und Unterrichtsentwicklung
  14. Mathematik und Sprache - Sprache und Mathematik?
  15. Hohlfelds 'Kommentar' oder Salto Mortale rückwärts
  16. Independent decisions are fictional from a psychological perspective
  17. Perspektiven für eine sichere, preiswerte und umweltverträgliche Energieversorgung in Bayern
  18. Jürgen Albrecht - Licht und Raum
  19. Safeguarding Children’s Rights in Residential Child Care
  20. Fazit und Ausblick
  21. Hydrogeochemical and isotopic characterization of groundwater salinization in the Bangkok aquifer system, Thailand
  22. Strategisches Modellieren durch heuristische Lösungsbeispiele :
  23. Probleme des Datentransfers zwischen Jugendhilfe und Schule
  24. Naturschutz in Zeiten sozial-ökologischer Transformationen
  25. EU Refugee Policies and Politics in Times of Crisis
  26. The Inverse Domino Effect
  27. Kompetenzen impliziter Nachhaltigkeitsmanager stärken
  28. Product-service systems as enabler for sustainability-oriented innovation
  29. THE SHADOW ECONOMY
  30. § 19 Wechselseitig beteiligte Unternehmen
  31. Professionelle Koordination
  32. Biophysical and sociocultural factors underlying spatial trade-offs of ecosystem services in semiarid watersheds
  33. Fachübergreifende Auseinandersetzung mit Nachhaltigkeit und Werten in der Studieneinstiegsphase – Das Beispiel des Leuphana Semesters