List of business theorists

This is an annotated list of important business writers.[1] It is in alphabetical order based on last name. For quick navigation, click on one of the letters:

A

B

C

D

E

  • Andrew S.C. Ehrenberg
  • Michael Eisner
  • Chester Elton
  • Tunç Erem
  • Richard F. Ericson
  • Hans-Erik Eriksson (born 1961) - Swedish computer scientist and organizational theorist
  • Agner Krarup Erlang
  • Hamid Etemad

F

G

H

I

J

K

L

  • John Christian Langli
  • Jean-Claude Larréché
  • Kyoung Jun Lee
  • William Henry Leffingwell - office management (1910s–1940s)
  • Paul Leonardi
  • Harry Levinson
  • Theodore Levitt - marketing and globalization (1960s, 1970s)
  • Michael Lewis
  • Peter Lindgren (born 1961) - Danish organizational theorist
  • John Lintner - capital asset pricing model (1970s)
  • Ted London
  • Juan Antonio Pérez López
  • Jay Lorsch
  • Michael Lounsbury
  • Randi Lunnan (born 1963) - Norwegian organizational theorist, works on strategic alliances
  • Reijo Luostarinen (1939–2017) - Finnish organisational theorist
  • James Alexander Lyons (1861–1920) - American accountancy author

M

N

  • Peter Naudé - marketing and business networks
  • Nicholas Negroponte - human-computer interaction (1970s–1990s)
  • Nobuo Noda - Japanese business scholar
  • Kjell A. Nordström
  • Arne Nygaard (born 1957) - Norwegian organizational theorist

O

P

R

  • J. Donald R. de Raadt
  • Navi Radjou
  • N. Ravichandaran
  • Jeffrey Rayport
  • W. Charles Redding
  • Robert Reich
  • Fred Reichheld
  • Reg Revans
  • Jeremy Rifkin
  • Fritz Roethlisberger
  • Georges Romme
  • Mike Rother

S

T

U

  • Yoichi Ueno
  • Werner Ulrich
  • Lyndall Urwick

V

  • Peter Vaill
  • Andrew H. Van de Ven
  • Jan Vanthienen
  • Hal Varian
  • Antoaneta Vassileva
  • Henrik Virkkunen (1917–1963) - Finnish organizational theorist and professor of accounting
  • Henk Volberda
  • Victor Vroom

W

Y

  • Candace A. Yano

Z

  • Udo Zander (born 1959) - Swedish organizational theorist

See also

References

  1. The Harvard Business Review asked 200 management gurusthe business thinkers most often mentioned in the media and management literaturewho their gurus were. For their responses, see here.
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