Katherine Kellogg

Professor of Work and Organization Studies at Sloan School of Management

Schools

  • Sloan School of Management

Expertise

Links

Biography

Sloan School of Management

Kate Kellogg is the David J. McGrath jr (1959) Professor of Management and Innovation and a Professor of Business Administration in the Work and Organization Studies Department at the MIT Sloan School of Management.

Kellogg teaches, researches, and writes about institutional change and new models of work and employment in healthcare.  Before coming to MIT, she spent six years in management consulting at Bain & Company and Health Advances, and several years as vice president of sales and marketing for the Baltimore/Washington American Red Cross.

She received her BA in biology and psychology from Dartmouth College, her MBA from Harvard Business School, and her PhD in management from the MIT Sloan School of Management. 

Research Interests:  Institutional Change, Organizational Change, Professions, Interdisciplinary Collaboration, Healthcare

Read about executive education

Other experts

Linda Scott

Linda is best known for her creation of the concept of the Double X Economy. She is a founder of Power Shift, the Oxford Forum for Women in the World Economy. The Double X Economy is a perspective that describes the global economy of women in both the developed and developing world, and the role...

Marc Hardy

Dr. Marc Hardy is the Director of Nonprofit Executive Programs at the University of Notre Dame.  He is only one of a dozen people in the world to hold a Ph.D. in Philanthropic Studies from the Lilly Family School of Philanthropy at Indiana University. He has taught nonprofit leadership and manage...

Mark Hacker

Mark Hacker is the managing director at the Alta Leadership Group, a boutique consultancy based in Denver, Colorado. His focus is on leadership development, talent management and executive-level coaching. His work as senior faculty at the Human Capital Institute (HCI) includes facilitating seven...

Looking for an expert?

Contact us and we'll find the best option for you.

Something went wrong. We're trying to fix this error.