Prof. Dr. Björn Michaelis is Associate Professor of Management Practice at Kühne Logistics University (KLU). Before joining KLU, he was a post-doc researcher and Habilitand at the UBS-Endowed Professorship for Strategic Management at Goethe University Frankfurt, where he received his habilitation in Business Administration. He has also held positions as Associate Professor of Organizational Behavior at Heidelberg University and Visiting Fellow at the Graduate School of Business in Fontainebleau, France.
His research interests include corporate strategy, mergers & acquisitions, joint ventures, strategic human resource management, and leadership. Prof. Michaelis has taught strategy, management, and leadership courses at various institutions, including KLU, Goethe University, Heidelberg University, and the Frankfurt School of Finance and Management.
In addition to his academic work, Prof. Michaelis advises firms on strategy, management, and leadership issues. He has gained practical experience in corporate strategy with Daimler AG, strategic human resource management with DaimlerChrysler Japan, and executive search with Kienbaum Executive Consultants.
Up Close & Personal
“For me, the entrepreneurial spirit sets KLU apart.”
– Prof. Dr. Björn Michaelis
Teaching
- Management and Strategy with a Focus on Quality Management
- Applied Research Methods and Business Problem-Solving
- Strategic Decision-Making in a World of Constraints
- Logistics Innovation and Future Trends
- Evidence-Based Logistics Strategy
Research Areas
- Digital Markets
- Digital Transformation
- Employer Branding
- Entrepreneurship & Start-Ups
- Joint Ventures & Strategic Alliances
- Leadership
- Mergers & Acquisitions
- Organizational Culture
- Strategy
Selected Publications
This study examines individual-level origins of team organizational citizenship behaviors (OCB). Building on the literature on trust and social exchange theory, we hypothesize that individual-level leader charisma is indirectly related to team OCB through individual-level trust in leader. Additionally, we propose that the positive relationship between leader charisma and trust in leader is stronger under conditions of high organizational change. Based on data from 142 team members and 33 leaders, results reveal an indirect bottom-up relationship between individual-level leader charisma and team OCB through trust in leader. High change impact at the team- but not at the individual-level facilitates the positive relationship of leader charisma with trust in leader. The findings show how individual-level phenomenon can contribute to the emergence of team-level OCB.
We extend theories on charismatic leadership by investigating the influence of prior company performance on subordinates’ attributions of chief executive officer (CEO) charisma within companies of different sizes and ownership structure. First, we use an experimental design to examine the effects of prior company performance on attributions of CEO charisma. Second, in a field study with 69 companies we replicate the experimental finding and show that this relationship is moderated by the size of the company such that the relationship between prior company performance and attributions of CEO charisma is significant only in large companies. We find no evidence, however, that the ownership structure of a company could strengthen or weaken this relationship.
Abstract Drawing on the knowledge-based view of the firm, we develop and test a theoretical model linking high-performance work systems (HPWS) and workforce productivity via employee exchange and combination of knowledge. A test of our model in a sample of junior enterprises in Germany supports the proposal that knowledge exchange and combination plays a mediating role. However, knowledge-management effectiveness interacts. That is, knowledge exchange and combination mediates the relationship between 5HPWS6 and workforce productivity only when knowledge-management is effective at medium and high levels, but not at low levels.
The present study extends knowledge of the performance consequences of workgroup diversity climate. Building upon Kopelman, Brief, and Guzzo’s () climate model of productivity, we introduce workgroup discrimination as a behavioral mediator that explains the positive effects of diversity climate on workgroup performance. In addition, we investigate group size as a moderator upon which this mediated relationship depends. We test these moderated-mediated propositions using a split-sample design and data from 248 military workgroups comprising 8,707 respondents. Findings from structural equation modeling reveal that diversity climate is consistently positively related to workgroup performance and that this relationship is mediated by discrimination. Results yield a pattern of moderated mediation, in that the indirect relationship between workgroup diversity climate (through perceptions of workgroup discrimination) and group performance was more pronounced in larger than in smaller workgroups. These results illustrate that discrimination and group size represent key factors in determining how a diversity climate is associated with group performance and, thus, have significant implications for research and practice. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Abstract What makes people perceive a leader as charismatic, and how do team leaders obtain performance outcomes from their followers? We examine leaders in times of organizational change and investigate the mechanisms through which leaders’ change-promoting behaviors are associated with team performance. In a multilevel mediation model, we propose that the indirect relationship between change-promoting behaviors and team performance is sequentially transmitted through followers’ perceptions of charisma and followers’ commitment to change. A study of 33 leaders and 142 followers provides empirical support for the model, using multilevel structural equation modeling to analyze top-down relationships between leaders and followers and bottom-up relationships between followers and team outcomes. Results suggest that team leaders are perceived as more charismatic when they engage in change-promoting behaviors. These behaviors facilitate team performance through individual followers’ perceived charisma and commitment to change.
Academic Positions
since 2015 | Adjunct Professor for Management and Organization at Kühne Logistics University, Hamburg, Germany. |
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2011 - 2015 | Post-Doc ("Habilitand"), Goethe University Frankfurt (Chair for Strategic Management), Germany |
2009 - 2011 | Associate Professor in Organizational Behavior („Vertretungsprofessur“), Ruprecht-Karls University Heidelberg, Germany |
2006 - 2009 | Research Assistant ("Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter"), Organizational Behavior, Ruprecht-Karls University Heidelberg, Germany |
Education
| 2009 - 2015 | "Habilitation" at the Faculty of Economics and Business Administration at Goethe University Frankfurt; Granting of the "venia legendi" in Business Administration; Title of Habilitation: "Essays on Management: A Dynamic Capabilities, Human Resources, and Leadership Perspective“ |
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| 2006 - 2009 | PhD, Organizational Behavior; Title of Dissertation: “Transformational and Charismatic Leadership Effects on Performance Outcomes: An Analysis of Linking Mechanisms and Boundary Conditions”; distinguished with Südwestmetall Dissertation Award 2010; Ruprecht-Karls-University Heidelberg, Germany |
| 2003 - 2004 | Academic year at the Graduate School of Business, Fontainebleau, France |
| 2000 - 2006 | M.Sc., Undergraduate and Graduate Studies in Psychology and Business Administration with Majors in Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management. Title of Master Thesis: “Leadership and Job Satisfaction in Western and Asian Cultures: A Comparison between German, Japanese, and Chinese Executives”; Georg-August-University Göttingen, Germany. |





