Value-creating contracts
About the course
Course content
Contracts establish the framework for value-creating and innovative business cooperation. They establish incentives, allocate risk, and create processes for re-negotiation and information exchange. To design optimal contracts, and to carry them out productively through modern contract management techniques, requires an understanding of both classical and behavioral contract theory where the latter includes psychological factors such as reciprocity, trust, and identity. The course includes both theories and illustrates their usefulness through real-world cases in which the students are asked to choose a contracting strategy or to design or negotiate a contract.
Professor Lisa Bernstein, who is world renown expert on how contracts are applied in reality, will co-teach theories and cases, drawing in part on her recent work on managerial outsourcing contracts.
Also, some learning objectives are inspired by the work of the World Commerce and Contracting organization (worldcc.com), enabling students to apply for its apprenticeship program in large international companies.
See course description in course catalogueWhat you will learn
The aim is to enable the student to:
- Design contracts that create optimal incentives and risk allocations
- Design a strategy for close contractual cooperation with certain customers or suppliers
- Use the flow of information generated digitally through contracts to manage contracts both relationally and formally
Course prerequisites
The course requires a basic understanding of economics as acquired through bachelor programs at CBS (or similar programs).Facts
- Oral exam on campus
Individual exam, winter
- 7 point grading scale