Kiawah Island, SC
April 12, 2015
April 12, 2015
April 15, 2015
6
10.18260/1-2--25191
https://peer.asee.org/25191
586
At Stanford University since 1995, Professor Tom Byers focuses on education regarding high-growth entrepreneurship and technology innovation. He is the first holder of the Entrepreneurship Professorship endowed chair in the School of Engineering, and is also a Bass University Fellow in Undergraduate Education. He has been a faculty director since the inception of the Stanford Technology Ventures Program (STVP), which serves as the entrepreneurship center for the engineering school. STVP includes the Mayfield Fellows work/study program for undergraduates, the Accel Innovation Scholars for PhD students, and the Entrepreneurship Corner (ECorner) collection of thought leader videos. He is a principal investigator and the director of the Epicenter, which is funded by the National Science Foundation to stimulate entrepreneurship education at all USA engineering and science colleges. He is the co-author of an entrepreneurship textbook called Technology Ventures: From Idea to Enterprise that is published by McGraw-Hill.
He is a past recipient of the prestigious Gordon Prize by the National Academy of Engineering in the USA and Stanford University's Gores Award, which is its highest honor for excellence in teaching. He has been a member of advisory boards at UC Berkeley, the Harvard Business School, the World Economic Forum, Conservation International, and several private enterprises. Tom was executive vice president and general manager of Symantec Corporation during its formation, and started his business career at Accenture. Tom holds a BS in Industrial Engineering and Operations Research and an MBA from UC Berkeley. He also earned a PhD in Business Administration (Management Science) at UC Berkeley.
Richard B. Brown received his bachelors and masters degrees in electrical engineering from Brigham Young University. Following graduation, he designed computers and instrumentation in California and Missouri. He returned to school at the University of Utah in 1981 and received an electrical engineering Ph.D. in 1985, at which time he joined the faculty of the University of Michigan Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS) where he developed their highly respected integrated circuit design (VLSI) program.
Byers, T., & Brown, R. (2015, April), Entrepreneurship and Innovation Paper presented at 2015 EDI, Kiawah Island, SC. 10.18260/1-2--25191
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