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Karl Wennberg appointed Professor at SSE

The Stockholm School of Economics Board of Directors has appointed Karl Wennberg Professor of Business Administration. Dr. Wennberg’s work focuses broadly on entrepreneurship, organizational change, and the macro-level implications of organizational dynamics.

He is largely influenced by economic sociology, an area concerned with how social structures and mechanisms influence economic action and outcomes.

Professor Wennberg works at SSE’s Department of Management and Organization and the SSE Center for Entrepreneurship and Business Creation

"I started out doing research on the mechanisms that lead individuals to close down their businesses and continued with critical studies of policy support systems for entrepreneurship. Currently I am doing research on the demography and hiring practices in new firms, the demography of corporate boards, and this year I am launching a new project on cultural diversity in management teams", Karl Wennberg says.

Dr. Wennberg was a post-doctoral fellow at Imperial College London, and has served on the SSE faculty since 2009. He has been guest researcher at universities in Spain, Australia and the UK, and since 2014 he has also been affiliated with the Institute of Analytical Sociology at Linköping University. He sits on the Editorial Boards of Academy of Management Journal, Journal of Business Venturing, Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal and Entrepreneurship Theory & Practice, and is consulting editor of the International Small Business Journal.

“While a good deal of economic theory and popular discourse portrays entrepreneurship and business creation as rational profit-maximizing capitalism, something I’ve come to understand in my many studies of entrepreneurs is that creating a business is in the end a predominantly social activity. Convincing others to join a new venture, getting stakeholders to support it, and encouraging customers to try the product offering all require creativity and people skills more than anything else. The potential profit is often something that eventually come in the long run,” says Dr Wennberg when asked about some of his findings. 

About the Center for Entrepreneurship and Business Creation

The Center for Entrepreneurship and Business Creation was established at the Stockholm School of Economics in 2001 following a generous donation from the Stefan Persson family foundation.

The aim of The Center for Entrepreneurship and Business Creation is to increase knowledge and understanding of entrepreneurship and business creation. It does this by contributing to the research field of entrepreneurship in general and the research on creative processes in particular by an explicit focus on the process as such and on the core of this process - creative action where the actor is essential.

Read more about the Center for Entrepreneurship and Business Creation 

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