John M. Stopford

John Morton Stopford (Sep, 16, 1939 - August 13, 2011) is a British organizational theorist, consultant, and Professor of the London Business School, and Head of its Strategic and International Management Area. He is known for his work on management of multinationals, corporate entrepreneurs, and competition.[1][2]

Life and work

Stopford obtained his engineering degrees on the job at Oxford and at MIT, and as a Ford Foundation Fellow obtained his PhD at Harvard Business School.[3]

Stopford had started his career in the late 1950s in the Rotterdam docks. Back in the UK he became craft apprentice at Baker Perkins, a British engineering company based in Peterborough. In the late 1950s he moved to the US, where he participated in the Saturn 1 programme. Back in Europe in the 1960s he joined Royal Dutch Shell in the Netherlands and later in the UK. For some time he was managing director in Guyana for Booker McConnell, before he started his academic career at the Manchester Business School.

In 1971 Stopford moved to the London Business School, where he was Professor of International Business from 1974 to 2002, and founded and chaired the Strategic and International Management Area. He has been Visiting Professor at the Kiel Institute of World Economics in Germany and the Nihon University in Tokyo, Japan. In the year 1995-96 he was elected Vice-President of the Academy of International Business.[3]

Selected publications

Articles, a selection

References

  1. Galbraith, Jay R., and Daniel A. Nathanson. Strategy implementation: The role of structure and process. St. Paul, MN: West Publishing Company, 1978.
  2. Williamson, Oliver E. The economic institutions of capitalism. Simon and Schuster, 1985.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Dr John M. Stopford, BA (Oxford) SM (MIT) DBA (Harvard) at managementlab.org. Accessed 23.01.2015.

External links