Professor, Information Management
Graduate School of Management
University of California, Irvine (Irvine, CA)
EDUCATION
Ph.D. - Business Administration, University of Rochester, 1987
MS - Business Administration, University of Rochester, 1983
MS - Computer Science, Indian Institute of Technology, 1980
AWARDS
Doctoral Dissertation Award, best dissertation in the information systems field (co-winner)
International Center for Information Technologies, 1987-1988.
Outsourcing World Achievement Award, Academic Category, PricewaterhouseCoopers and Michael Corbett and Associates, 2002.
Outstanding Faculty Award, Andersen Consulting, 1989-1990..
Economics of Information Systems Management; Information Technology and Business Strategy; E-commerce; Information Systems Budgets; Sourcing of Information Systems Services.
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KEY PUBLICATIONS -
King, J. L., & Gurbaxani, V. (1994). Institutional factors in information technology innovation. Information Systems Research 5(2): 139-169.
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Brynjolfsson E, Malone T. W., Gurbaxani, V, & Kambil, A. (1994). Does information technology lead to smaller firms. Management Science 40 (12): 1628-1644.
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Gurbaxani, V., & Whang, S. (1991). The impact of information systems on organizations and markets. Communications of the ACM 34(1): 59-73.
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Kenneth L. Kraemer
Professor, Information Systems
Director of the Center for Research on Information Technology and Organizations
Graduate School of Management
University of California (Irvine, California)
EDUCATION
Ph.D. – Public Administration, University of Southern California, 1967
M.P.A. – Public Administration, University of Southern California, 1965
M.S.C. & R.P. – City and Regional Planning, University of Southern California, 1964
B. Architecture – University of Notre Dame, 1959
RESEARCH INTERESTS
Use and Impact of Information Technology in Organizations; Globalization of Information Technology Production and Use; Management of Information Systems
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KEY PUBLICATIONS -
King, J. L., & Kraemer, K. L. (1984). Evolution and organizational information systems: An assessment of Nolan's stage model. Communications of the ACM 27(5): 466-475.
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Kraemer, K. L., & King, J. L. (1988). Computer-based systems for cooperative work and group decision making. ACM Computing Surveys 20(2): 115-146.
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Kraemer, K. and S. Dewan (2000). "Information Technology and Productivity: Evidence from Country-level Data." Management Science 46(4): 548-562
| | Haim Mendelson
Professor, Electronic Business and Commerce, and Management
Codirector, Center for Electronic Business and Commerce
Codirector, Strategic Uses of Information Technology Executive Program
Graduate School of Business
Stanford University (Stanford, California)
EDUCATION
Ph.D. – School of Mathematical Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel, 1979
MSc – Management Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel, 1977
BSc, Mathematics and Physics, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel, 1972
INDUSTRY EXPERIENCES
Consulting Experience: The American Stock Exchange, The Analysis Group, Bain & Company, Bausch & Lomb, Chicago Board of Trade, Chicago Board Options Exchange, Credit Management Services, Eastman Kodak Company, Gordon Capital Corporation, Invensys, The Israel Telecommunications Agency, JP Morgan, KPMG Consulting, Meliora Research Associates, Microsoft, Mid-America Institute for Public Policy Research, The National Association for Attorneys General – Antitrust, The New York Stock Exchange, Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt, Pomeranz, Levy, Haudek, Block & Grossman, Rochester Gas and Electric, ScotiaMcLeod Inc., The Tel-Aviv Stock Exchange, UniForum, H. Warshow & Sons, Xerox Corporation
RESEARCH INTERESTS
Electronic business, electronic networks, and financial markets.
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KEY PUBLICATIONS -
Mendelson, H., Whang, S. J. (1990). Optimal incentive-compatible priority pricing for the M/M/1 queue. Operations Research 38(5): 870-883.
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Amihud Y., & Mendelson, H. (1986). Asset pricing and the bid ask spread. Journal of Financial Economics 17(2): 223-249.
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Mendelson, H. (2000). Organizational architecture and success in the IT industry. Management Science 46(4): 513-529.
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