The Most Influential Business Professors of 2023

Thinkers50 Winners: Starting Top Left: Antonio Nieto-Rodriguez (IE), Amy Edmondson (Harvard), Zeynep Ton (MIT), Adam Grant (Wharton), Sheena Iyengar (Columbia), Linda Hill (Harvard)

Thought leader? It sure has a nice ring to it. You can almost picture it. The jet-set life. Fat speaking fees. Interviews with all the big outlets. Consulting gigs with the powerful firms. Access to all the right circles – and the adoration of all the right people.

Self-employment: control over your time with a steady income to boot.

HARVARD AND WHARTON LEGENDS TOP THE LIST

Ah, business faculty can dream from their brownstone stoops. For many, their research is relegated to dusty journals with the occasional peer citation. It’s not easy being a business professor, watching companies make the same mistakes in their haste and hubris – all the knowledge and none of the influence. Still, some ideas eventually break though. A book hits the bestseller list, a TED Talk goes viral, or a podcast resonates. In some cases, their research helps us make sense of how the world is evolving. Other times, they package old truths in new ways. At their best, they reveal the symbiotic relationships behind the disparate elements. In the process, they show us where to move, how to spend, when to act, and why it matters.

And these ideas inspire new models and markets that inevitably produce better options and experiences.

Every two years, these thinkers are honored by Thinkers50, an organization that recognizes the best management ideas. For the second consecutive time, Thinkers50 honored Harvard Business School’s Amy Edmondson as the top business thinker. Wharton’s Adam Grant moved up four spots to rank as the runner-up. Paul Polman and Andrew Winston, authors of Net Positive: How Courageous Companies Thrive By Giving More Than They Take, debuted in the Top 10 at #3.

BUSINESS SCHOOL FACULTY DOMINATE THE LIST

Des Dearlove

Thinkers50 was founded in 2001 by two business professors – Des Dearlove and Stuart Crainer – who’ve taught at IE Business School and Oxford University and collaborated on The Financial Times Handbook of Management. Since then, Thinkers50 has emerged as the “Oscars of Management Thinking” according to The Financial Times. Held in odd numbered years, Thinkers50 accepts online nominations from May to July of those years from the general public. From there, nominations are examined by the Thinkers50 Panel of Advisors. While the process is democratic, it is not necessarily transparent. The panel, together with Dearlove and Crainer, compile the ranking using “proprietary methodology” for evaluating the contributions of the nominees, weighing their impact over both the long-term and the past two years.