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Bruce Barringer
Bruce is an Associate Professor at UCF, with a doctorate from the University of Missouri. His research interests include corporate entrepreneurship, firm growth, and business alliances. Bruce serves on the editorial review boards of Entrepreneurship Theory & Practice and the Journal of Small Business Management.
Raj Echambadi
Raj is an Associate Professor of Marketing at UCF, with academic credentials including a doctorate in Marketing from the University of Houston. Raj's current research focuses on three areas: management of innovations, management of customer relationships, and method issues pertaining to non-normality.
Rob Folger
Rob earned his Ph.D. from University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill, in 1975. He is the Gordon J. Barnett Professor of Business Ethics at UCF. Rob has written over 100 publications, and has been invited to give presentations in seven countries. Rob’s research interests include ethics, social psychology, and organizational behavior.
Cameron earned his Ph.D. in Business Administration from Penn State University before joining UCF. Cameron’s scholarly interests are technological entrepreneurship and organizational creativity. He is especially interested in how creative ideas, social networks, and resources interact during the emergence of new business ventures.
Melissa Frye
Melissa earned her Ph.D. in Management (finance) from Georgia Institute of Technology and her B.S. in Finance from Florida State University. Melissa concentrates her research in the areas of corporate finance, corporate governance, agency theory, financial institution, initial public offerings, venture capital, and mutual funds.
Glenn Harrison
Glenn is a professor in the Economics department at UCF. Glenn received his Ph.D. and M.A. from UCLA after receiving a Master’s and Bachelor’s in Economics from Monash University in Australia. Glenn’s research interests include Experimental Economics, Environmental and Resource Economics, and International Trade Policy.
Michael McDonald
Michael is an assistant professor at UCF, focusing his research in the area of executive leadership and issues related to boards of directors and their effectiveness. His current research projects examine the effects of directors' executive experiences on board effectiveness and the strategies that CEOs use to reclaim power and influence following changes in board composition
Tom O'Neal
Dr. O’Neal is the Associate Vice President for Research and the Director of the Office for Research and Commercialization at UCF. Tom was a key member in the establishment of the UCF Technology Incubator, which was recently named the Incubator of the Year by the National Business Incubator Association. Tom also serves on the Florida High Tech Corridor Council.
Roberto Ragozzino
Roberto obtained his Ph.D. in Business Policy and Strategy from the Fisher School of business, at the Ohio State University. His research focuses on corporate strategy and entrepreneurship.
MB Sarkar
MB is an Associate Professor of Strategy and Entrepreneurship in the Management department. He received his Ph.D. from Michigan State University and his research interests lie in technology & innovation management and inter-organizational collaborations.
Marshall Schminke
Marshall Schminke is a professor of Management at UCF, where he specializes in strategic management and business ethics. He received his doctorate from Carnegie Mellon University, and prior to arriving at UCF in 1999, he served on the faculties of the University of Iowa, the University of Colorado, the Centro de Education para la Salud in the Dominican Republic, and held an endowed chair in managerial ethics at Creighton University. His thoughts on business ethics and strategy have appeared in over 30 newspapers and magazines, including the Chicago Tribune, Newsday, and the New York Times.
Daniel Tzabbar
Danny is an Assistant Professor of Entrepreneurship and Strategy with a Ph.D. from the University of Toronto. His research incorporates related interests such as exploring the ways that firms’ human and intellectual capitals interact to affect entrepreneurial firm competitive viability, strategic alliance formation, R&D team knowledge diversity, and decision-making processes leading to strategic change.
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