不良研究所 Desautels professors and lecturers recognized at Faculty Awards
Across programs and subject areas, the 不良研究所 Desautels Faculty of Management recognizes the vital role that research, teaching, service and media engagement play in enriching the student experience and inspiring the next generation of leaders through the annual Faculty Awards. This year we recognize the following outstanding members of our faculty:
Research
Celebrating excellence in teaching at Desautels
Across programs and subject areas, the Desautels Faculty of Management recognizes the vital role that teaching plays in enriching the student experience and in inspiring the next generation of leaders.
The Distinguished Teaching Award recipients Jiro Kondo and Lisa Cohen were honoured at 不良研究所鈥檚 2021 Management Convocation ceremony for their excellence in teaching.
Congratulations to the following recipients of the 2021 teaching awards!
Recapping the 2019 不良研究所 Accounting Research Conference
The 2019 不良研究所 Accounting Research Conference (MARC), organized by professors Hongping Tan, Dongyoung Lee, and Jingjing Zhang at the Desautels Faculty of Management, elevated the status of 不良研究所 as one of the major research hubs in Canada.
A little adrenaline goes a long way when it comes to business perspectives
A blog post at Virgin.com looks at how adventure-seeking CEOs come at business from a more open, experimental angle.
Desautels Professor Jingjing Zhang鈥檚 research shows that chief execs who fly small airplanes in their off-hours tend to be more open to innovation.
Desautels researchers link thrill-seeking CEOs to increased innovation
CEOs with a real taste for excitement can be a company鈥檚 best bet for upping its innovation cred, according to a paper co-authored by a Desautels professor Jingjing Zhang.
The paper studied 88 CEOs who were pilots, comparing them to 1,123 non-pilot chief executives over ten years. Pilot CEOs helped increase their companies鈥 patents by almost 67 per cent.
Adventurous CEOs make great innovators
According to a study performed in part by Desautels Assistant Professor of Accounting Jingjing Zhang, when it comes to chasing innovation, companies with risk-loving CEOs tend to pursue more original projects and 鈥済enerate more patents with greater market impact than their peers.鈥 This is because thrill-seeking personalities tend to be more open to new ideas, which translates well into the business space.