【Topic】Managing Strategic Dynamics for Corporate Longevity
【Speaker】Burgelman, Robert A, Professor of Graduate School of Business, Stanford University
【Time】2007-3-8 15:00-17:00
【Venue】Weilun Building N.501
【Language】English
【Organizer】Department of Innovation and enterpreneurship, Department of Bussiness strategy and Policy
【Target Audience】Faculty member, Ph.D candidates, research fellows
【Backgound Information】
Robert A. Burgelman is the Edmund W. Littlefield Professor of Management
and Director of the Stanford Executive Program of the Stanford
University Graduate School of Business. Professor Burgelman joined
StanfordBusinessSchoolin 1981 and teaches courses in Strategic
Management and Strategic Management of Technology and Innovation. Since
1992 he has been co-teaching the course “Strategy and Action in the
Information Processing Industry”, together with the Chairman of Intel
Corporation. Before joining Stanford, he was on the Faculties ofAntwerp
University-UFSIA (1970-73)) andNew YorkUniversity(1978-81).
Professor Burgelman is the author of many articles on the
strategy-making process, internal corporate venturing, corporate
entrepreneurship, strategic business exit, and technology strategy,
which have appeared in leading academic journals. He is co-author of
Strategic Management of Technology and Innovation (4th edition,
McGraw-Hill-Irwin, 2004), the leading textbook in the field. Most
recently, he is coauthor of Strategic Dynamics: Concepts and Cases
(McGraw-Hill, 2006), which captures much of the material developed for
the MBA elective course called “Strategy and Action in the Information
Processing industry,” which he developed and co-taught with Andy Grove
since 1992.
Robert Burgelman carries out longitudinal field-based research on the
role of strategy in firm evolution. He has examined how companies enter
into new businesses (through corporate entrepreneurship and internal
corporate venturing as well as through acquisition) and leave others
(through strategic business exit), and how success may lead to
co-evolutionary lock-in with the environment. His research has focused
on organizations where strategic action is distributed among multiple
levels of management. He has written some 100 case studies of companies
in many different technology-based industries. He currently focuses on
the challenges posed by nonlinear strategic dynamics.