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Faculty
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| Gary Rhoads, Center Director & Professor of Entrepreneurship & Marketing |
| Bill Price, Center Managing Director |
Nile Hatch, Academic Director, Professor of Entrepreneurship |
| Craig Earnshaw, Teaching Professor & Senior Entrepreneur-in-Residence |
| Steve Gibson, Teaching Professor |
Hal Heaton, Associate Center Director & Professor of Finance |
| John Richards, Associate Center Director & Teaching Professor |
| Brent Strong, Professor in Engineering and Engineering Technology |
| Gary Williams, Associate Center Director & Teaching Professor |
Ron Lindorf, Entrepreneur-in-Residence, Professor of Entrepreneurship |
| Kimberly Scoville, Professor of Entrepreneurship |
Faculty Involvement
Our objective is to have entrepreneurship and intrepreneurship integrated throughout the Marriott School and across all disciplines on campus.
Twenty faculty members (or about 17% of the total business school faculty) will be involved in teaching courses whose primary focus
is on some element of entrepreneurship this year.
The Center for Entrepreneurship provides support to faculty teaching entrepreneurship classes in several
ways. The Center offers four full professorships as follows: (1) The Nyal McMullin Professorship in Entrepreneurship held by Donald H.
Livingstone; (2) Denny Brown Professorship in Entrepreneurship held by Dr. Hal B. Heaton; (3) O. Leslie Stone Professorship in Entrepreneurship
held by Dr. W. Gibb Dyer; (4) Lorin Farr Professorship in Entrepreneurship held by Brent Strong of the BYU School of Technology. Providing this
professorship to someone in the School of Technology enables the Center for Entrepreneurship to partner in education and ideas. Additionally, the
Center provides the following fellowships: (1) Stephen M. Covey Fellowship held by Dr. Gary K. Rhoads; 2) Thorsell Fellowship in Sales held by
Dr. Michael J.Swenson.
While we offer a number of courses specifically focused on entrepreneurship, the mainstream
curriculum of the Marriott School allows students to learn about entrepreneurial principles.
Faculty who teach business classes are selected from those who have expressed an interest in the field
of entrepreneurship. Spreading these opportunities throughout faculty and offering them the opportunity to utilize Founders and their
cases in these classes are great recruiting tools to expand the number of faculty interested in entrepreneurship.
On-campus mentoring is provided by several experienced entrepreneurs, who provide up to 20 hours a week, without
compensation, in mentoring, plus teaching in the classroom. Most of these individuals have attended some form of entrepreneurial
educational program, such as the SEE programs at Babson College.
Many of our entrepreneurship classes involve team-teaching with faculty and Entrepreneur Founders. A
group of more than 120 entrepreneurs, who come at their own expense, discuss cases written on their companies and teach entrepreneurship
principles based on their own experiences. Adjunct Professors, who generally come from the entrepreneurial "real world," teach some
courses specifically designed to meet current needs and trends.
Outside Recognition of Faculty
W. Gibb Dyer, Jr., one of our faculty, has traveled to Barcelona to present to the faculty of IESE, a well-known international business
school in Europe on the subject of entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial careers. Hal B. Heaton, another member of the faculty, and Associate
Director of the Center for Entrepreneurship, has been recognized as Outstanding Teacher by graduating students and listed in the
Business Week "Guide to the Best Business Schools."
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