Kimon Drakopoulos
Assistant Professor, Marshall School of Business
Kimon Drakopoulos is an Assistant Professor in the Data Sciences and Operations department at USC Marshall School of Business. His research focuses on the operations of complex networked systems, social networks, stochastic modeling, game theory and information economics. Kimon completed his Ph.D. at the Laboratory for Information and Decision systems at MIT, focusing on the analysis and control of contagion processes on networks.
Susan Duffy
Executive Director, Center for Women’s Entrepreneurial Leadership (CWEL)
Dr. Susan Duffy is the Executive Director of the Babson College Center for Women’s Entrepreneurial Leadership (CWEL), where she educates, inspires and empowers women to transform their entrepreneurial potential into social and economic impact. She earned a Ph.D. in Management and Organization from The George Washington University, and is an advisor to a number of early stage companies, an angel investor, and a member of several boards and advisory councils.
Nel Dutt
Assistant Professor, Department of Management and Technology
Nilanjana (Nel) Dutt is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Management and Technology at Bocconi University in Milan. She has a Ph.D. in Strategy from Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business. She is generally interested in understanding how firms discover new investment opportunities and evolve their innovation efforts over time. Her dissertation research examined how U.S. Electric Utilities identify new Renewable Electricity projects.
Nathanael Fast
Jorge Paulo and Susanna Lemann Chair in Entrepreneurship, Associate Professor of Management and Organization, USC School of Business
Co-Director of the Psychology of Technology Institute, Director of the Neely Center for Ethical Leadership and Decision Making
Dr. Nathanael Fast is the Jorge Paulo and Susanna Lemann Chair in Entrepreneurship and Associate Professor of Management at USC Marshall School of Business, where he studies technology adoption and the future of work. He is the director of USC’s Neely Center for Ethical Leadership and Decision Making and cofounder and codirector of the Psychology of Technology Institute.
Marco Giacoletti
Assistant Professor of Finance and Business Economics, Marshall School of Business
Marco Giacoletti is an Assistant Professor of Finance and Business Economics at the University of Southern California Marshall School of Business. His research focuses on economic trends and the factors affecting U.S. home and rental prices.
Francesca Gino
Associate Professor, Negotiation, Organizations & Markets Unit, Harvard Business School
Francesca Gino is an associate professor of business administration in the Negotiation, Organizations & Markets Unit at Harvard Business School. She is also formally affiliated with the Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School and with the Mind, Brain, Behavior Initiative at Harvard. She has earned research awards from the National Science Foundation and the Academy of Management, including the 2013 Cummings Scholarly Achievement Award from the Academy of Management Organizational Behavior Division. In addition to teaching, she advises firms and not-for-profit organizations in the areas of negotiation, decision-making, and organizational behavior.
Danna Greenberg
Walter H. Carpenter Professor of Organizational Behavior
Management Division Co-Chair
Danna Greenberg is the Walter H. Carpenter Professor of Organizational Behavior at Babson College. Danna teaches organizational behavior at the undergraduate, graduate, and executive level, often in association with entrepreneurship and design thinking. She holds a B.A. in Psychology from Wellesley College and a Ph.D. in Organizational Studies from Boston College. Her main area of research focuses on understanding the intersection between individuals’ work and non-work lives as they move through their careers.
Vishal Gupta
Associate Professor of Data Science & Operations, Marshall School of Business
Vishals research interests focus on developing novel techniques for representing uncertainty and behavior in optimization problems.
Andrea Hill
Doctoral Candidate in Strategy, Harvard Business School
Andrea Hill is a Doctor of Business Administration (DBA) candidate in Strategy at Harvard Business School. Before studying at Harvard, Andrea earned a B.A. with Honors from Brown University in Philosophy and Mathematics and an M.A. in International Relations from Johns Hopkins’ School for Advanced International Studies.
Andrew Hoffman
Holcim (US) Professor of Sustainable Enterprise, Stephen M. Ross School of Business and School of Natural Resources & Environment
Andrew (Andy) Hoffman is the Holcim (US) Professor of Sustainable Enterprise at the University of Michigan, a position that holds joint appointments at the Stephen M. Ross School of Business and the School of Natural Resources & Environment. He also serves as Director of the Frederick A. and Barbara M. Erb Institute for Global Sustainable Enterprise. In his research, Andy uses organizational, network, and strategic analyses to assess the implications of environmental issues for business, and has published over a dozen books and over ninety articles and book chapters on the topic. His career has spanned academia, government, and the private sector.
John Hollenbeck
Professor of Management, Eli Broad College of Business
John R. Hollenbeck is the Eli Broad Professor of Management at Michigan State Universitys Eli Broad College of Business. His research focuses on team decision-making, employee motivation and self-regulation, and employee separation and acquisition processes. He received his Ph.D. in management from New York University in 1984.
Nan Jia
Dean's Associate Professor in Business Administration, Marshall School of Business
Nan Jia is Deans Associate Professor in Business Administration. She holds a PhD in Strategic Management from the Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto (Canada). Her research interests include corporate political strategy, business-governance relationships, emerging technology in management, and corporate governance in international business. Nan’s research has been published in multiple top journals in strategic management. She currently serves as an associate editor for the Strategic Management Journal and on the editorial boards of multiple leading academic journals.
Alisa Jno-Charles
Ph.D. Candidate, Kelley School of Business
Alisa Jno-Charles is a Ph.D. Student at Indiana University’s Kelley School of Business. Her research focuses on the relationship between startups, media, image and identity. Jno-Charles also has over a decade of private equity, public markets, and real estate industry experience. She co-founded the startups Oz and Papertrailer. Jno-Charles holds a Bachelor’s in Finance and an M.B.A. from Babson College.
Priyanka Joshi
Assistant Professor, Lam Family College of Business
Professor Joshi’s research interests include leadership, business ethics, and entrepreneurship. In one line of research, she examines the role of cultural interdependence on tolerance of corruption in organizations.
Anat Keinan
Associate Professor of Marketing, Questrom School of Business
Anat Keinan is an Associate Professor of Marketing at Boston University’s Questrom School of Business. She received her Ph.D. in Marketing from Columbia Business School. Her research interests include branding, symbolic consumption, consumer wellness and well-being, luxury marketing, consumer self-control, authenticity, and the consumption of experiences.
Michael Ketzenberg
Professor of Information and Operations Management, Mays Business School
Dr. Michael Ketzenberg is a Professor of Information and Operations Management at the Mays Business School at Texas A&M University, where he uses data analytics to investigate retail and supply chain management practices.
Debi Kleiman
Executive Director, Arthur M. Blank Center for Entrepreneurship
Debi Kleiman is the Executive Director of the Arthur M. Blank Center for Entrepreneurship, the hub for entrepreneurial activity and programs at Babson College. Babson’s undergraduate and graduate business programs have been ranked first in entrepreneurship by U.S. News & World Report for over 20 years. Kleiman has been mentoring Boston-area entrepreneurs for more than a decade and is on the advisory board for several local startups. She has a B.S. from Cornell University and an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School.
Arthur Korteweg
Jorge Paulo and Susanna Lemann Chair in Entrepreneurship, School of Business
Associate Professor of Finance and Business Economics
Arthur Korteweg is a financial economist whose research interests include corporate finance, private equity, and alternative assets more generally. His corporate finance work aims to quantify the costs and benefits of leverage and the determinants of corporate capital structures.
Camelia Kuhnen
Professor of Finance and Sarah Graham Kenan Distinguished Scholar, University of North Carolina Kenan-Flagler Business School
Camelia Kuhnen is a professor of finance at the University of North Carolina Kenan-Flagler Business School who specializes in neuroeconomics, behavioral finance, and corporate finance.
Jamie J. Ladge
Patrick F. & Helen C. Walsh Research Professor, Management and Organizational Development, D'Amore-McKim School of Business
Jamie Ladge is the Patrick F. & Helen C. Walsh Research Professor of Management and Organizational Development at Northeastern University. Her research interests are the intersection of identity, careers, and work-life integration in organizations, as well as stigmatized social identities and gender and diversity issues. Jamie is the Program Chair of the Careers Division of the Academy of Management and a founding member of the Work-Family Researchers Network. She has a Ph.D. and M.S. in Organizational Studies and an M.S. from the Carroll School of Management at Boston College, and a B.S. from Babson College.