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Strategic Management & Entrepreneurship (SM&E)
The field of Strategic Management & Entrepreneurship (SM&E) deals with the creation, growth, transformation and performance of firms and industries, and investigates the effectiveness of various attributes and actions of an organization and its top management teams in order to gain competitive advantage and achieve organizational goals. Example topics of (SM&E) study include competitive advantage, industry evolution, technological change, product ecosystems, boundaries of the firms, contracting theory, transaction cost economics, mergers, acquisitions, alliances. The behavioral area within SM&E focuses on reputation, status, organizational identity whereas the sociological area focuses on networks, population ecology and status. The Entrepreneurship area of the program looks at creation of new firms, employee mobility, the role of venture capitalists, and entrepreneurship within firms.
SM&E Curriculum
Major Specification (18 credits)
Students are required to take nine
substantive courses in various SM&E
content areas, such as
Organizational Theory, Sociological
Foundations of Strategy, Boundary of
the Firm, Firm Sustainability,
Behavioral Strategy and Asymmetric
Information and Decision Making,
Industrial Organization Economics,
Innovation and Entrepreneurship,
SM&E foundations or other topics
offered based on faculty expertise.
Students are also required to attend
and participate in the Students
Presentations Series (SPS) and
Career and Professionalization
Seminar Series (CAPSS) sessions each
semester during the program – as
these sessions will focus on
developing critical research and
career-related knowledge, skills,
and attitudes.
Minor Specification (12 credits) Students may choose a set of courses for their minor that significantly enhances their ability to make scientific contributions to their major field and that will improve their placement prospects. These courses could be from within the M&O department, other departments within Smith, or outside of Smith. This option can often encompass a selection of courses both inside and outside the department. For example, many students in SM&E take one or more courses in the Economics Department, but other options, such as information technology, OB/HR, sociology, are also possible.
Research Methodology (Research
Tools) Requirement (15 credits)
Students are required to take the following research methods courses:
1. A general research foundation course that covers basic method topics relevant for business research.
2. Two econometrics courses covering basics of statistical theory, various models of regressions like linear, non-parametric, censured models, structural models etc.
3. Three short courses of advanced methods topics such as endogeneity, factor analysis and structural equation modeling, mediated and moderated regression, social network analysis, multilevel modeling, and other advanced topics offered by the M&O department.
4. Additional courses for remaining credits can be taken either within the M&O department or from relevant offerings outside Smith.
Summary of Typical SM&E Curriculum
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Fall |
Spring |
Summer |
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Student Status: PhD Student |
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Year 1 |
Core Classes
Method Classes
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Core Classes
Method Classes
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Complete 1st Year
Research Paper
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Year 2 |
Core Classes
Method Classes
Minor Classes |
Core Classes
Method Classes
Minor Classes |
Comprehensive Exam
Complete 2nd Year Research Paper |
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Student Status: PhD Candidate |
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Year 3 |
Method Classes (if needed)
Elective Classes (if needed) |
Method Classes (if needed)
Elective Classes (if needed) |
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Year 4
Dissertation proposal |
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Year 5
Graduation |
Academic Requirements
Requirements for advancement from “Ph.D. student” status (years 1-2) to “Ph.D. candidate” status (years 3-5)
1. Completion of, and satisfactory grades in, all Curriculum requirements
2. A completed First Year Research Paper
3. A passing grade on the Comprehensive Exam
4. A completed Second Year Research Paper
First Year Research Paper Requirement The intent of the first
year paper is to develop student
skills in writing the theoretical
framework of a paper. The paper may
be based on course research papers
or be based on a different original
idea.
Comprehensive Examination
Students must pass a comprehensive examination at the end of their 2nd year to proceed in the program. This exam will cover all core material covered during the two first years.
Second
Year Research Paper Requirement Ideally, a second year research paper project will involve the student from the inception of the project. This is because students are likely to learn the most and have the best prospects for a publication in a top journal if they join a project at its inception so that they can participate in all phases, including conceptualization, design, data collection, analysis, and write-up. It may be best to think of the project as similar to a master’s thesis in terms of the scope and quality of the project.
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