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Supply chain management and information technology, manufacturing logistics, information security, web-centric product design collaboration, managing logistics for products with short life cycles such as toys, apparel, and computers.
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Eric Johnson, Associate Professor of Business Administration, and Director, Glassmeyer/McNamee Center for Digital Strategies, joined the Tuck faculty in 1999. Prior to coming to Tuck, he was a professor at management at Vanderbilt University.
An expert in supply chain management, manufacturing logistics, and information technology, Professor Johnson's current research topics include the impact of information technology on supply chain integration, information security, logistics for products with short life cycles.
Professor Johnson's research publications include: With R. Raubitschek, Product Sequencing: Co-evolution of Knowledge, Capabilities, and Products, Strategic Management Journal, 2000; with E.H. Bowman, Does Corporate Strategy Matter? Strategic Management Journal, 2001; with M. Lieberman, The Birth of Capabilities: Market Entry and the Importance of Pre-History, Industrial and Corporate Change, 2002; with E.E. Bailey, External Management Succession, Human Capital, and Firm Performance: An Integrative Analysis, Managerial and Decision Economics, 2003; with R. Adner, Corporate Effects and Dynamic Managerial Capabilities, Strategic Management Journal, 2003; with M.A. Peteraf, The Dynamic Resource-Based View: Capability Lifecycles, Strategic Management Journal, 2003; with K.M. Eisenhardt, Inter-temporal Economies of Scope, Organizational Modularity, and the Dynamics of Diversification, Strategic Management Journal, forthcoming.
Excelling in both teaching and research, Professor Johnson's achievements include the Dean's Award for Teaching Excellence; Winner of the CIBER/POMS international case competition; National Science Foundation Funding; and Accenture Award for outstanding research paper in logistics.
He is currently the department editor for Production and Operations Management; on the editorial board of International Journal of Logistics Management, and Manufacturing and Service Operations Management; and is the functional editor of Interfaces.
Professor Johnson received his undergraduate and masters' degrees from Pennsylvania State University and his doctorate from Stanford University.
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