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Ph.D.

Overview

The Ph.D. program prepares students for research and teaching careers at leading universities by focusing on original research and dissemination of knowledge through teaching and publication. The areas of study offered for the Ph.D. program are: Accounting, Finance, Marketing, Information Systems, Operations Management, Strategic, Organizational, and Entrepreneurial Studies.

Approximately 45 Ph.D. students are enrolled in the program. The number is small so that students can benefit from a high faculty-to-student ratio. In this setting faculty encourage graduate students to present at conferences, coauthor papers, and develop successful dissertations that appear in academic journals.

“The program provided me with invaluable opportunities to coauthor research papers with seasoned academics while also forming wonderful professional friendships with fellow Ph.D. students,” explains Marilyn Uy ('09 Ph.D.), Assistant Professor, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.

Students in the Ph.D. Program work with faculty as research assistants and they teach classes. This prepares scholars for academic careers (at professorial positions in colleges and universities) as seen by the near 100 percent placement rate for graduates.

“The faculty are extremely committed and devote a significant amount of their time to the Ph.D. program and student success,” says Amar Cheema (’02 Ph.D.), Associate Professor of Commerce, McIntire School of Commerce, University of Virginia.

After reading over our website, if you would like to discuss the Ph.D. program in more detail, please contact the faculty member who is the doctoral director for the area of study you are interested in. Their names and contact information are available on the Staff page.

To get a student's perspective on our program you may contact any of the Doctoral Business Student Assocation members.

Admissions

The goal of the Ph.D. program at the Leeds School of Business is to prepare students for careers in research and teaching at major universities so applicants are evaluated on their prospects of becoming leading scholars. Admission decisions are made based on a variety of factors including previous academic performance, work experience, test scores, letters of recommendation, research interests, and any other activities that present evidence of tenacity and scholarly potential.

Areas of Study

Graduates of the doctoral program at the Leeds School of Business earn a Ph.D. in Business Administration though they specialize in one area of study. At the time of application to the program students select from the following choices: Accounting; Finance; Marketing; Information Management; Operations Management; or Strategic, Organizational, and Entrepreneurial Studies.

Accounting

The accounting doctoral program provides students with a deep understanding of the most influential, modern accounting research, and with the tools needed to contribute state-of-the-art research that advances the discipline. Faculty will help you formulate interesting research questions and provide you with the training you need to obtain answers.

You will have the opportunity to take seminars from outstanding faculty in accounting, finance, and economics. Our program is built around intensive mentoring relationships between students and faculty, and the faculty consider it a privilege to work with outstanding Ph.D. students.

For more information about the accounting doctoral program contact Professor Alan Jagolinzer at alan.jagolinzer@colorado.edu.

Finance

Finance faculty and Ph.D. students study empirical and theoretical issues in corporate finance, structure of securities markets, valuation and asset pricing, derivatives, corporate governance, and information economics. Faculty look for applicants who have a depth of knowledge in specialized areas of finance and economics, strong command of research skills, and strong verbal and written communication skills.

For more information about the finance doctoral program contact Professor Nathalie Moyen at nathalie.moyen@colorado.edu.

Marketing

The marketing doctoral program places a very strong emphasis on developing research skills in preparation for productive careers at top research universities. Through a variety of coursework and research assistantship assignments where students work in collaborative relationships with faculty, students gain the skills necessary to conduct research that contributes to knowledge in the consumer behavior and marketing disciplines. Research interests of the marketing faculty and Ph.D. students includes consumer preferences and behavior, marketing communication and persuasion, auction marketing, new product introductions, pricing, and social responsibility. Research methods employed include empirical methods, theoretical modeling, and ethnographic studies.

For more information about the marketing doctoral program contact Professor Chuan He at chuan.he@colorao.edu.

Information and Operations Management

The objective of the Ph.D. program in operations and information management is to prepare students for a career in university research and teaching. The curriculum will vary based on the research interests and background of a student.

Research interests of the information management faculty include developing and testing behavioral theory of the individual and organizational uses of information technology, as well as technical issues in knowledge management and information retrieval. Research interests of the operations management faculty include the creation, understanding, and solution of mathematical models that represent important problems in business, economics, operations management, and resource allocation.

For more information about the information and operations management doctoral program contact Professor Kai Larsen at kai.larsen@colorado.edu.

Strategic, Organizational, and Entrepreneurial Studies

The Ph.D. program in strategic, organizational, and entrepreneurial studies emphasizes state-of-the-art research on firm strategy or organizational science, particularly as it applies to entrepreneurs and entrepreneurship. We define entrepreneurship broadly to encompass startup processes, innovation management, and new venture development. Many of our faculty and Ph.D. students research topics which bridge strategy and entrepreneurship, including entrepreneurial dynamics within and entry into industries, innovation and knowledge spillover across firms, opportunity exploitation, and social ventures. Other research topics bridge organizational science and entrepreneurship, including entrepreneurial cognition and decision making, startup team dynamics, organizational emergence, opportunity identification, career mobility, and self-employment.

For more information about the strategic, organizational, and entrepreneurial studies doctoral program contact Professor Maw-Der Foo at maw.foo@colorado.edu.

Current Students

As of Fall 2011 we have 47 students in our Ph.D. program, in the following areas of study:

  • Accounting: 11 students
  • Finance: 10 students
  • Marketing: 6 students
  • Information & Operations Management: 9 students
  • Strategic, Organizations, and Entreprenuerial Studies: 11 students

The average age of our students is 32, with an age range of 22 to 49.

Seventeen women and thirty men are currently enrolled. Nineteen of our students are international—from Canada, Chile, China, India, Italy, Korea, Kuwait, and Vietnam.

Testimonial

Based on the program's outstanding reputation in entrepreneurship—my area of study—I had high expectations for my time at Colorado. I can say today, without any doubt, that my experience at CU-Boulder exceeded those already high expectations.

The management department faculty were engaged, and always supportive of the students. I think what I appreciate most about the program was the fact that Ph.D. students were viewed as an integral part of the research community at the school. The faculty at Boulder encouraged internal research seminars, workshops, and they were always willing to engage me in discussion about my research.

Pursuing my Ph.D. at Colorado was certainly one of the most enjoyable and rewarding experiences in my life, and I am proud to call myself a graduate of the University.

J. Michael Haynie (Ph.D. '05)
Assistant Professor of Entrepreneurship
Whitman School of Management
Syracuse University

Ph.D. Placements

The Leeds Ph.D. program prepares graduates for academic careers at great universities all over the U.S. and the world. Here is a sampling of recent placements.

Accounting

Brian Burnett
Ph.D. 2011
Placement: University of Indiana
Dissertation: Essays on Disclosure and Legal Origin

Curtis Nicholls
Ph.D. 2010
Placement: Bucknell University
Dissertation: The Impact of Accounting & Auditing Enforcement Actions on Firms Cost of Equity Capital

Quihong Zhao
Ph.D. 2010
Placement: University of Missouri at Columbia
Dissertation: Credit Rating Agency Efficiency: Credit Watch, Monitoring Role, and Effects of Earnings Management

Greg Martin
Ph.D. 2009
Placement: University of Colorado Colorado Springs
Dissertation: Shareholder Rights’ Relation to Earnings Management: A Pre- and Post-Sarbanes Oxley Examination

Boochun Jung
Ph.D. 2007
Placement: University of Hawaii at Manoa
Dissertation: Information Asymmetry and the Relations Between Dividend Increases, Risk and Expected Future Earnings Changes

Stefan Fafatas
Ph.D. 2006
Placement: Washington & Lee
Dissertation: Auditor Risk Management Following Audit Failure

Yanhua “Sunny” Yang
Ph.D. 2006
Placement: University of Texas at Austin
Dissertation: Earnings Management as a Response to the Threat of Exchange Delisting

Ran Zhang
Ph.D. 2006
Placement: Peking University
Dissertation: Cash Flow Management and Its Market Pricing

Finance

Jun Lu
Ph.D. 2011
Placement: Central University of Finance and Economics in Beijing, China
Dissertation: Size, Leverage and Risk-taking of Financial Institutions

Jeffrey Merrell
Ph.D. 2011
Placement: United States Air Force Academy
Dissertation: Essays on Legal Origin and Corporate Governance: Evidence from Louisiana and Quebec

Surasak Ngammekchai
Ph.D. 2008
Placement: Central University of Finance and Economics in Beijing, China
Dissertation: How to Human Capital Assets Affect Cumulative Abnormal Returns During Merger and Acquisition?

Wei Wang
Ph.D. 2008
Placement: University of New Orleans
Dissertation: Two Essays on IPO Information Revelation

Moonsoo Kang
Ph.D. 2007
Placement: Loyola College
Dissertation: Does More Informed Trading Necessarily Lead to Higher Expected Returns?

Stefan Platikanov
Ph.D. 2007
Placement: Suffolk University
Dissertation: Essays on Firm Investments and Financial Constraints

Brian Bolton
Ph.D. 2006
Placement: University of New Hampshire
Dissertation: Corporate Governance and Firm Performance

Marketing

Kelly Herd
Ph.D. 2011
Placement: University of Indiana
Dissertation: Identity and Product Design

Ethan Pew
Ph.D. 2010
Placement: American University
Dissertation: Regulatory Fit Can Be More Than a Feeling: Evidence of Facilitated Processing for Prevention Fit in Investment Decision-Making Contexts

Caleb Waren
Ph.D. 2010
Placement: Bocconi University in Milano, Italy
Dissertation: What Makes Things Cool and Why Marketers Should Care

Qiuping Li
Ph.D. 2010
Placement: University of Nebraska at Kearney
Dissertation: Memory Reconstruction and Consumer Decision Making

Mark Ratchford
Ph.D. 2010
Placement: Vanderbilt University
Dissertation: Resource-Based Coalitions in Marketing Channels: A Cooperative Game Theoretic Analysis

Gina Mohr
Ph.D. 2009
Placement: Colorado State University
Dissertation: When Are Decisions Difficult? Goal Conflict and Compromise in Negatively Correlated Choice Environments

Rajesh Bagchi
Ph.D. 2008
Placement: Virginia Tech University
Dissertation: Reading the Seller’s Face: Moderating Effects on How Seller Concession Patterns Influence Buyer Price Expectations

Information Management

Tomasz Miaskiewicz
Ph.D. 2010
Placement: The New University of Lisbon
Dissertation: Bridging the Gap Between Consumers and Designers: The Role of Accurate and Effective Personas

Zainab AlQenaei
Ph.D. 2009
Placement: Kuwait University
Dissertation: An Investigation of the Relationship Between Consumer Mental Health Recovery Measures and Clinicians’ Reports Using Multivariate Analysis of the Singular Value Decomposition of a Textual Corpus

Dirk Hovorka
Ph.D. 2006
Placement: Bond University, Australia
Dissertation: Information Systems Foundations: Four Research Essays

Operations Management

Harald Reinertsen
Ph.D. 2010
Placement: Smith Stål Øst AS, Norway
Dissertation: Optimization of the Industrial Cutting Stock Problems – Production Scheduling in a Dynamic Stochastic Environment

Marco Better
Ph.D. 2007
Placement: OptTek Systems
Dissertation: Data Mining Techniques for Prediction in Discrete Data Applications

Fang Liang
Ph.D. 2007
Placement: PROS Pricing Solutions
Dissertation: The Hyperplan-Based Classification Techniques

Rahul Patil
Ph.D. 2006
Placement: Indian Institute of Management
Dissertation: Improved Techniques for Due Date Quotation in Realistic Production Environments

Strategic, Organizational, and Entrepreneurial Studies

Markus Fitza
Ph.D. 2010
Placement: Bentley University
Dissertation: IPO Underpricing From the Perspective of the Issuing Firm: Money Left on the Table or Strategic Gain?

Desiree Pacheco
Ph.D. 2009
Placement: Portland State University
Dissertation: The Quest for Legitimacy in Nascent Industries: Exploring the Interplay Across Institutional Actors in the Emergence of Renewable Energy Sectors

Asad Aziz
Ph.D. 2008
Placement: Colorado State University
Dissertation: Striving or Coasting on Collective Tasks: A Regulatory Focus Perspective

Charles Murnieks
Ph.D. 2007
Placement: United States Air Force Academy
Dissertation: Who Am I? The Quest for an Entrepreneurial Identity and an Investigation of its Relationship to Entrepreneurial Passion and Goal-Setting

Joy Godesiabois
Ph.D. 2007
Placement: Northeastern University
Dissertation: The Rise and Decline of Social Capitalists: A Longitudinal Study of Social Capital and Performance Among Startups in the Venture Capital Industry

Lawrence Plummer
Ph.D. 2007
Placement: Clemson
Dissertation: Good Neighbors or Bad? A Time-Space Model of the Effects of Entrepreneurial Entry on the Profits of Post-IPO Firms

Funding

The Leeds School of Business generally funds all of its Ph.D. students, both international and domestic. All applicants to the Leeds Ph.D. program who submit complete applications by the January 15 deadline are considered for funding. There is no funding application form. Those who have outside funding (government, military, etc.) should make note of that on the Ph.D. Applicant Information Form that is required as part of the application packet.

Tuition Waiver and Stipend

Student who are on funding work 20 hours per week as research and/or teaching assistants in exchange for a full tuition waiver and monthly stipend during the 9-month academic year. The 2011-2012 stipend amount is $19,054 for the academic year. The tuition waiver for the academic year is equal to approximately $13,400 for a Colorado resident, and $28,300 for a non-Colorado resident. Additionally, for students who are on funding for 20 hours per week, the university will cover 70% of the student's health insurance costs for the Student Gold plan. See the Wardenburg Health Center for details on student health insurance.

While the continuation of funding is contingent on satisfactory performance in the Ph.D. program, most students are funded for four years. Students may apply to the Doctoral Curriculum and Policy Committee (DCPC) for a fifth year of funding.

Summer Support

Summer funding is available through several different sources, including teaching and fellowships.

There are often opportunities to teach in CU's summer session, both at the business school and through the Division of Continuing Education. Summer teaching pays at least $3,000 per course.

Business doctoral students may apply for a $3,000 summer Gerald Hart Doctoral Research Fellowship. The Hart Fellowship program is designed to encourage and reward early involvement in scholarly research and publication by providing doctoral students with summer funding to work with a faculty member.

Doctoral students are sometimes supported by individual divisions or faculty members to assist faculty with research projects.

Information about other funding opportunities is available through the University of Colorado Boulder's Graduate School.

Research Requirements

Leeds faculty are actively engaged in cutting-edge research and scholarship. Leeds faculty enjoy working with Ph.D. students and view their mentoring role as an integral part of their scholarship.

The Leeds Ph.D. Program focuses on developing the necessary skills for the design and execution of original, innovative research and for the dissemination of knowledge through teaching and writing. To accomplish this, Ph.D. students must fulfill several important research requirements:

Research Assistant Assignments

A fundamental part of a Ph.D. education is working closely with faculty on research projects. During each semester of study, a Ph.D. student will be assigned to faculty research projects as a research assistant for up to 20 hours per week. This introduces students to the practice and process of academic research under the guidance of experienced faculty. RA assignments are made each semester in consultation with area faculty and Ph.D. students.

Summer Research Projects

During the first two summers of their enrollment, Ph.D. students are expected to work on significant research projects that result in conference presentations and publishable papers. During at least one of the two summers, students are expected to apply for and be awarded a Gerald Hart Summer Research Fellowship. A requirement of the Hart Fellowship is that a paper resulting from the research be presented at a Leeds School workshop during the academic year following the award.

Dissertation

Ph.D. students normally undertake the writing of a dissertation during the third and fourth years of their time as Ph.D. students. Dissertation topics are usually identified through coursework, through research projects with faculty, and from a student's own interests. It is important that your dissertation topic have the support and interest of the faculty in your area in order for you to make good progress toward its completion. Students select a dissertation advisor from the faculty whose research and interests match those of the proposed dissertation.

Most faculty members enjoy working with Ph.D. students and are pleased when asked to work with a student as a dissertation advisor. Working with the dissertation advisor, the student will prepare a Dissertation Proposal that is formally reviewed by the faculty during an oral presentation. The faculty may make recommendations for modifying the plan. Once the faculty approves a proposal, it becomes a template for completing the dissertation. A dissertation committee of five faculty will also be formed following the proposal. Upon completion of the dissertation and with approval of the dissertation advisor, the student will present and defend the dissertation during a formal oral Dissertation Defense presented to the dissertation committee, and other interested faculty and students. The committee may either approve the defense or ask that additional work be accomplished before granting approval.

Research Papers & Publications

In addition to successful completion of a dissertation, Ph.D. students are well-advised to complete and submit several research papers for publication prior to graduation. Faculty typically provide students with ample coauthoring opportunities during the course of the program. These papers can be from summer research projects, from dissertation research, or from other research projects. Papers may be coauthored with faculty and/or other Ph.D. students, or may be solo efforts. Placement prospects are much brighter for those students with submitted and published papers.

Teaching Requirements

All funded Leeds School of Business Ph.D. students teach the equivalent of one three-credit-hour class during each of three of their eight academic-year semesters in a normal four-year program. Summer teaching does not substitute for this requirement. Teaching assignments are determined by the division chair in consultation with the division's Ph.D. program director. Students who petition for and receive a fifth year of funding will teach one additional class. During semesters that they are teaching, students do not have additional RA or TA assignments.

In consultation with the Ph.D. director in their division, each Ph.D. student must work with the Leeds School's Lead Graduate Instructor or identify a faculty mentor who will provide advice during the student's first semester of teaching. The mentor will: (a) review the student's syllabus and teaching plan; (b) sit in on at least one of the student's classes and provide feedback; (c) meet with the student as needed throughout the semester to discuss the progress of the class; and (d) help the student interpret FCQs at the end of the semester and plan appropriate adjustments with respect to the student's next teaching assignment.

Teaching Workshops

All Ph.D. students must attend at least 13 Graduate Teaching Program workshops, at least three of which must be co-sponsored by the Leeds School and offered by Leeds School faculty. The Graduate Teaching Program offers workshops throughout the year. A schedule of their workshops can be found on their website. The Leeds School teaching workshops vary from year to year, and are generally offered during spring semester.

English Language Skills

Because speaking skills are vitally important to teaching, we provide instruction for non-native English speakers to improve their pronunciation and gain confidence in speaking before a large class. Prior to the beginning of their first semester, students whose native language is not English will meet with Dr. Antonia Johnson of ClearTalk Communications to have a speech assessment done, followed by a course of instruction of up to four semesters. The Leeds School Ph.D. Program will cover the cost of the assessment and instruction.

Frequently Asked Questions

General Questions

What is the purpose of the Ph.D. degree?

  • The Ph.D. program at the Leeds School of Business is designed to educate scholars for work as faculty members at other top-tier, research-oriented business schools in the United States and around the world. It is not intended to train individuals whose primary interest is teaching, or who desire to return to work in business and industry.

Can I earn a Ph.D. in business at the Leeds School while working?

  • The Leeds Ph.D. Program is a demanding full-time program intended to train students for a lifetime of scholarship. Given its demands, it is not possible or reasonable to work full-time or part-time in another activity and successfully complete a doctorate at the Leeds School at the same time.

Do you offer a distance learning Ph.D. program?

  • No. Our program is full-time and requires students to be in residence at least during the coursework phase of the program. Most students remain in residence throughout their entire program.

If I graduate with a Ph.D. from the Leeds School, can I possibly get a job at the Leeds School?

  • No. A widespread policy of universities around the country is that doctoral programs do not hire their own graduates. This insures that programs do not become ingrown and that scholarship is disseminated widely.

Admissions

What are the admission requirements?

  • Students applying to the Leeds Ph.D. Program must have an undergraduate degree from an accredited university or college. A masters-level degree is not required. Previous academic studies do not need to be in business, economics, or related fields. Leeds Ph.D. students come from diverse backgrounds including engineering, psychology, political science, other liberal arts, and the sciences. A complete description of the application process can be found on the Admissions page.

How do you make admission decisions?

  • Since our goal is to educate students for careers in research and teaching at major universities, we evaluate applicants on their prospects of becoming leading scholars in their areas. We take into account previous academic performance, work experience, test scores, and any other activities that present evidence of tenacity and scholarly potential. Since this evaluation is necessarily subjective, it is difficult to make categorical statements about what it takes to ensure admission to the Leeds Ph.D. Program.

Do I need to take the GMAT or GRE?

  • Yes, you must submit either GMAT or GRE scores as part of your application regardless of your previous educational experience. We do not waive this requirement. Your scores must be less than 5 years old as of the application deadline.
  • We prefer applicants with scores above the 90th percentile. In recent years admitted students who submitted GMAT scores have had an average score of 700. Admitted students who submitted GRE scores have had an average composite score (quantitative plus verbal) of 1313.

Do I need an MS or MBA degree?

  • No, you do not need to have an advanced degree for admittance to the Leeds Ph.D. Program. Many of our students enter the program with an undergraduate degree only. However, a graduate degree may help your application by demonstrating a foundation for advanced doctoral level work and by indicating your ability to do graduate-level work.

Do I need work experience?

  • Work experience is not a prerequisite for admission to the Leeds Ph.D. Program, but relevant experience can demonstrate a useful foundation for advanced doctoral level scholarship. Many of our students have worked for at least several years before joining our program.

How selective is the program?

  • Admission to any top doctoral program is highly selective and the Leeds Ph.D. Program is no exception. We receive dozens of applications annually in each area of study, but can admit an average of only two students per area. Actual admission ratios vary by year and by area.

How often do you admit students?

  • We admit students once a year. Application materials are due in January for admission the following fall semester. We do not admit students to start in the spring semester.

How do I schedule a visit?

  • Finalists for admission will be invited to campus in the spring; however, you are welcome to schedule a visit earlier on your own. If you would like to meet with a Doctoral Program Director you should contact that person directly to set up an appointment. Their names and contact information can be found on the Staff page. Campus tours are available from the university's Office of Admission.

The Leeds Ph.D. Program

What is the structure and time-line of the Leeds Ph.D. Program?

  • The Ph.D. program takes 4-5 years to complete. Typically the first two years are devoted to courses, with the remaining years devoted to researching and writing a dissertation. During the first four years of the program Ph.D. students also teach 3 classes, and work as research and/or teaching assistants.

How many courses are required?

  • You will need to complete at least 30 credit hours (10 courses) of graduate-level coursework and 30 hours of dissertation credit while enrolled in the Leeds Ph.D. Program. Many students take additional courses beyond this minimum in order to provide a better foundation for their dissertation research. Your curriculum will be determined by the requirements of your doctoral area, by your research interests, and by the advice of your doctoral advisors.

Can I transfer in credits from another university?

  • You can transfer up to 9 credit hours into the Leeds Ph.D. Program. The eligibility of transfer credits is determined by your area of study, by the faculty in your area, and by your research interests. Transfer credit must also be approved by the Graduate School. Approval of transfer credit cannot be done prior to admission. Doctoral students generally take 30 credit-hours of graduate coursework at CU regardless of their previous studies.

Will I work on faculty research projects?

  • A fundamental part of a doctoral education is working closely with faculty on research projects. For the first several years of your program you will work closely with faculty members on their research projects as a research assistant and during the summers on joint research papers. As you develop your dissertation you will begin to work more independently, but still under guidance of your faculty advisors. Beyond graduation many doctoral students choose to work with their dissertation advisors on ongoing research projects.

Will I do any teaching as a doctoral student?

  • An important part of your training as a doctoral student is to develop and refine your skills as a teacher. Consequently, the Leeds Ph.D. Program requires that its students attend 10 Graduate Teacher Program workshops and 3 Leeds School teaching workshops. While in the program, funded doctoral students must teach 3 courses during regular fall and spring semesters. Details about teaching can be found on the Teaching Requirements page of this website.

Ph.D. Student Life

What is life like as a Ph.D. student?

  • Life as a doctoral student is not unlike life as any student, except that it is far less structured. Coursework comprises only a fraction of a doctoral student’s time, with research activities comprising the remainder. Research by its nature is unstructured and exploratory, so the path ahead often is not obvious. Tenacity and self-motivation are paramount to success.

Will I receive any financial support as a Ph.D. student?

  • Yes. Students in the Leeds Ph.D. Program receive a full tuition waiver, a portion of health insurance costs, and stipend as long as they are in good standing with the department. Students work approximately 20 hours per week as research and/or teaching assistants in return for support. The 2011-2012 stipend is $19,054 for the nine-month academic year. While the continuation of financial aid is contingent on satisfactory performance, most students are funded for four years. Students may apply to the Doctoral Curriculum and Policy Committee (DCPC) to request a fifth year of funding. Fifth-year funding decisions are based a combination of factors including available funds, the student's progress in the program, and the division's support of the student.

Are there other ways to earn money as a Ph.D. student?

  • Doctoral students can earn additional money through summer teaching, summer research fellowships, or taking on additional RA and TA assignments beyond the 20 hours per week required. Students must be careful to balance the demands of their doctoral studies with the amount of additional work that they take on.

Will I have an office or place to work? What about computers?

  • All Leeds Ph.D. students are assigned an office. Offices generally are shared with one or more other students.
  • There are several computers, a printer, and a copier available for student use in a doctoral computer lab at the Leeds School of Business. Most students bring their own personal computers for use in their offices and the classrooms.

Video

Ph.D. Student Wins National Marketing Award

We celebrate award-winning Ph.D. student Kelly Herd.

Staff

Jennifer Dittenhofer
Program Assistant
303.492.4984
Koelbel 451
Maw-Der Foo
Strategic, Organizational, and Entrepreneurial Studies Program Director
303.735.5423
Koelbel S450F
Curriculum Vitae
Kai R. Larsen
Operations & Information Systems Program Director
303.735.6448
Koelbel 488
Curriculum Vitae
Nathalie Moyen
Finance Program Director
303.735.4931
Koelbel 483

Students

Anil Abbaraju
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 497
Abdul Rahman Al Taweel
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 468
Jonathan Black
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 473
James Blanchard
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 473
Adam Bordeman
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 473
Robyn Brooks
Ph.D. Student
David Brown
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 457
Sanghyuk Byun
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 455
Michael Conger
Ph.D. Student
463
Marc Cussatt
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 464
Jennifer Dinger
Ph.D. Student
Subhamoy Ganguly
Ph.D. Student
Patrick Heflin
Ph.D. Student
Judith Hermis
Ph.D. Student
473
Richard Hunt
Ph.D. Student
Ji Hoon Jhang
Ph.D. Student
Christina Kan
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 473
Shayne (Kip) Kiefer
Ph.D. Student
Nhan Le
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 466
Bridget Leonard
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 469
Daniel Lerner
Ph.D. Student
JingJing Li
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel S440
Jason Lunn
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 457
Kristin Luttecke
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel S438
Michael Manser
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 466
Karin McConnell
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 467
Emily Panxin
Ph.D. Student
Paige Patrick
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 468
Troy Pollard
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 464
Jose Ramirez
Ph.D. Student
Julie Schiro
Ph.D. Student
Abigail Schneider
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 473
Minsoo Seo
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 421
Subhiksha Swamy
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 468
Jeffrey Sweeney
Ph.D. Student
Jessica Weber
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel 469
Ying Xiao
Ph.D. Student
Koelbel S438
Mark Zais
Ph.D. Student
Yuchen Zhang
Ph.D. Student