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Matt Marx is the Bruce F. Failing, Sr. Chair in Entrepreneurship at the Cornell SC Johnson College of Business, where he is the inaugural Faculty Director of Entrepreneurship@Cornell. He serves as a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) and an Associate Editor at Management Science. Previously, he was an Associate Professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management and the Boston University Questrom School of Business.

 

Professor Marx's research focuses on reducing barriers to the commercialization of science and technology, which he experienced firsthand during a decade as an executive and engineer at two startups in the speech-recognition industry that achieved a combined $1.4 billion dollars in equity value. His articles have appeared in journals from multiple disciplines including Management Science, the Review of Financial Studies, Organization Science, the American Sociological Review, and Science. His work on employee non-compete agreements and job mobility played a key role in policy reforms for Hawaii and Massachusetts. Press coverage includes the New York Times, BBC, The Economist, Washington Post, Boston Globe, The Atlantic, Wired, Fortune, Forbes, and Bloomberg.

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As part of the Innovation Information Initiative steering committee, Professor Marx curates large-scale, open datasets for the scientific commons. Available at relianceonscience.org, his citations from worldwide patents to scientific articles has been downloaded more than 50,000 times and was featured at Supercomputing 2018. His work has been supported by more than $2 million in grants and awards from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the National Science Foundation, and the Kauffman Foundation.

 

Professor Marx holds six patents as well as a B.S. in Symbolic Systems from Stanford University; a masters' degree from the MIT Media Lab; and both MBA and doctoral degrees from Harvard University. 

 

I am the Bruce F. Failing, Sr. Chair in Entrepreneurship at the Cornell SC Johnson College of Business. I am also a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), an Associate Editor at Management Science, a Steering Committee member for the Innovation Information Initiative, the curator of relianceonscience.org, and the inaugural Faculty Director of Entrepreneurship@Cornell.

 

My research focuses on eliminating barriers to entrepreneurship, both in commercializing academic science and by increasing participation of underrepresented communities. 

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Professor Marx's research focuses on reducing barriers to the commercialization of science and technology, which he experienced firsthand during a decade as an executive and engineer at two startups in the speech-recognition industry that achieved a combined $1.4 billion dollars in equity value. His articles have appeared in journals from multiple disciplines including Management Science, the Review of Financial Studies, Organization Science, the American Sociological Review, and Science. His work on employee non-compete agreements and job mobility played a key role in policy reforms for Hawaii and Massachusetts. Press coverage includes the New York Times, BBC, The Economist, Washington Post, Boston Globe, The Atlantic, Wired, Fortune, Forbes, and Bloomberg.

​

As part of the Innovation Information Initiative steering committee, Professor Marx curates large-scale, open datasets for the scientific commons. Available at relianceonscience.org, his citations from worldwide patents to scientific articles has been downloaded more than 50,000 times and was featured at Supercomputing 2018. His work has been supported by more than $2 million in grants and awards from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the National Science Foundation, and the Kauffman Foundation.

 

Professor Marx holds six patents as well as a B.S. in Symbolic Systems from Stanford University; a masters' degree from the MIT Media Lab; and both MBA and doctoral degrees from Harvard University. 

 

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