Dingman Center for
Entrepreneurship Announces
New Leadership and Expands Campus Role
College Park, Md. – September 18, 2012 – The University of
Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business announced new leadership of the
Dingman Center for Entrepreneurship as the center moves
to further integrate the entrepreneurial process into the student experience.
Elana Fine will head the Dingman Center in her new role as managing director.
Rajshree Agarwal, professor of Entrepreneurship and Strategy, will provide
leadership for research and formal education programs fostered by the center as
academic director. The Dingman Center’s new leaders take the helm as the center
moves to better integrate entrepreneurship education throughout the curriculum
across campus, a cornerstone of President Wallace Loh’s strategic initiatives
for the University of Maryland.
“Elana joins a long line of innovative and successful leaders of the Dingman
Center for Entrepreneurship,” said G. “Anand” Anandalingam, dean of the Robert
H. Smith School of Business. “I am confident that with this new leadership, the
Smith School will elevate its activities in the area of innovation and
entrepreneurship in support of the university's strategy and the mission of the
State of Maryland. The Dingman Center will take its place as one of the nation's
pre-eminent institutions where both the education and practice of
entrepreneurship are pursued vigorously.”
The Dingman Center has a more than 25-year history of providing University of
Maryland students with practical experiences and opportunities to pitch their
business ideas, receive feedback from experienced entrepreneurs and access
funding. Fine will lead the center’s growth as a top national and regional
incubator of entrepreneurship, and Agarwal will work to expand the center’s role
in curriculum and research. In addition to providing resources for students, the
Dingman Center plays an integral role in the Washington-Baltimore region’s
entrepreneurial community. Its Dingman Center Angels program provides area
entrepreneurs with mentoring on funding pitches and access to one of the
region’s most active groups of angel and venture capital investors.
Fine joined the Dingman Center in 2010 as the director of venture investments
and was promoted to associate director in January. Before joining the Dingman
Center, Fine was an associate and vice president at the Boston office of
Revolution Partners, a national middle market investment bank specializing in
mergers and acquisitions and private capital advisory for the technology
industry. She advised on transactions ranging between $5 million and $100
million, including venture investment for both early- and late-stage private
companies, sell-side and buy-side acquisitions, and fairness opinions. Fine also
served as the bank’s chief financial officer from 2003-2006 and administered the
firm’s internal controls and budge as it grew to $10 million annually.
Prior to Revolution Partners, Fine worked as a consultant with Accenture. She
earned an MBA in finance and accounting from the University of Chicago’s Booth
School of Business and a BS in finance, magna cum laude, from the Smith School.
Agarwal joined the Smith School of Business in 2010 as the Dean’s Chair in
Strategy and Entrepreneurship. Previously, Agarwal was the John Georges
Professor of Technology and Strategy at the University of Illinois. Her research
interests focus on the implications of entrepreneurship and innovation for
industry and firm evolution. She has published articles in the top industry
journals, receiving numerous awards for her work. She is an associate editor of
the Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal and the editor of the SSRN
Entrepreneurship and Economics Journal. She has received research grants from
the Kauffman Foundation, the Mellon Foundation, the Marketing Science Institute,
the National Science Foundation, and the US Department of Agriculture. Agarwal
has a PhD in economics from the State University of New York at Buffalo.
About the Dingman Center for
Entrepreneurship
The Dingman Center for Entrepreneurship has been at the forefront of
entrepreneurship education and practice for over 25 years. The Center’s primary
activities include helping students build their ventures, creating experiential
learning opportunities and providing regional entrepreneurs with access to
capital. Key programs for University of Maryland students include Pitch Dingman,
weekly walk-in sessions to pitch business ideas to experienced entrepreneurs for
feedback, Cupid’s Cup, an annual business competition sponsored by Under Armour
founder Kevin Plank, and the China Business Plan Competition, an annual
competition and global studies trip in partnership with Peking University.
Within the region, the Center operates Dingman Center Angels, the most active
angel investor network with more than 40 members and 30 companies funded since
2005.
About the Robert H. Smith School of Business
The Robert H. Smith School of Business is an internationally recognized leader
in management education and research. One of 12 colleges and schools at the
University of Maryland, College Park, the Smith School offers undergraduate,
full-time and part-time MBA, executive MBA, MS in business, PhD and executive
education programs, as well as outreach services to the corporate community. The
school offers its degree, custom and certification programs in learning
locations in North America and Asia.