If you've been assigned to read an article from the Harvard Business Review, you can find it by entering the title in the Library Search box on the homepage.
Putting the title in quotation marks will help limit the results (i.e., "Leadership That Gets Results"). If the title is very general, like "Managing People," you can also add the author to the box (i.e., "managing oneself" Drucker).
1. From the results list, click on the article title you want. Very popular articles have often been reprinted, so multiple results may come up. Choose what seems appropriate. Look at the authors and dates to be sure.
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2. Follow the link on that page under the heading "Full text availability."
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From the PDF display of the article, you can read, download/save, or print the article.
Unfortunately, Harvard has restricted printing and saving their top 500 articles. If you see that the print and save icons are grayed out, the article is one of those 500. In these cases, the only options within copyright are to read it only online, photocopy the print copy in the Library, or purchase printing rights to the article from Harvard's website (usually about $7-8 per article).
Contact the Reference Desk if you need more information.
Please note: This FAQ refers only to Harvard Business Review magazine articles. "Case Studies" published individually by Harvard Business Review are a separate item with additional restrictions (see more information).
Last Updated: Jun 20, 2023 Views: 48