Visiting Professors

Academic Year 2018/19

Prof. Nelson Phillips

Home Institution: Imperial College

Homepageexternal pagehttps://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/n.phillips

Bio: Professor Nelson Phillips' research interests lie in four main areas. First, he has become increasingly engaged in a program of research looking at a range of different but related issues in entrepreneurship. From a more practical perspective, he is interested in how to scale up new, high-growth ventures and in how scaling up social enterprises differs from scaling up more traditional companies. He is also interested in how new ventures “pivot” as this activity remains highly undertheorized. He is also involved in a project investigating how the idea of an incubator has been adapted to different cultural setting. When studying entrepreneurship, Professor Phillips often uses ideas from organization theory to help him theorize and he has found this approach to be particularly fruitful.

Second, Professor Phillips has been working for the last several years on various aspects of technology strategy and innovation. In particular, he is interested in the social dynamics of technology adoption and the ramifications of these dynamics for technology, strategy, and innovation. He is particularly interested in the dynamics of adoption of digital consumer devices such as the iPod and 3G mobile telephony and has carried out a large study on the introduction of texting. More recently he has become interested in platform technologies and he is currently involved in a project looking at the role of rumor in technology development.

Third, Professor Phillips has a general interest in organization theory. Much of his work in this area has focused on connecting conventional approaches to understanding institutional processes to other theoretical perspectives such as identity or to new empirical areas of study such as stigma. Much of his work currently focuses on understanding how institutions change and the implications of institutional change for organizations. He is also interested in various forms of “social symbolic work” such as identity work, institutional work, and other related research streams.

Finally, Professor Phillips has a strong interest in qualitative research methods and he has published a number of papers, books, and book chapters on various topics in this area. In particular, he is interested in the application of discourse analysis, narrative analysis and other related linguistic methods in the study of organizations.

Professor Phillips has published more than 100 academic articles and book chapters including articles in the Academy of Management Journal, Academy of Management Review, Management Science, Sloan Management Review, Organization Science, Journal of Management Studies, Strategic Organization, Organizational Research Methods and Organization Studies. He has also written four books: one with Cynthia Hardy (Melbourne) entitled Discourse Analysis published in 2002; a second, Power in Organisations, with Stewart Clegg (University of Technology Sydney) and David Courpasson (EM-Lyon) for the Sage Fundamentals of Organization Science series in 2006; a third, Technology and Organization, with Dorothy Griffiths (Imperial) and Graham Sewell (Melbourne) that was published in 2010; and the Oxford Handbook of Innovation Management co-authored with David Gann (Imperial) and Mark Dodgson (U of Queensland) published in 2014. He is currently working on a book on the use of linguistic research methods in management that will be published in 2015.

Academic Year 2017/18

Prof. Mike Wright

Home Institution: Imperial College

Homepage: external pagehttps://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/mike.wright

Bio: Professor Mike Wright joined Imperial College Business School as Professor of Entrepreneurship in September 2011. He is Director of the Centre for Management Buy-out Research, the first centre to be established devoted to the study of private equity and buyouts, which was founded in March 1986 at the Nottingham University Business School.

Previously he was Professor of Financial Studies at Nottingham University Business School since 1989. He has written over 40 books and more than 300 papers in academic and professional journals on management buy-outs, venture capital, habitual entrepreneurs, academic entrepreneurs, and related topics. He served two terms as an editor of Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice (1994-99), was a joint editor of the Journal of Management Studies until 2009 and is editor elect of the Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal. He is a member of the BVCA Research Advisory Board. He holds an honorary doctorate from the University of Ghent and was recently ranked #1 worldwide for publications in academic entrepreneurship.

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