Rob Handfield

at Haskayne School of Business

Biography

Haskayne School of Business

Rob Handfield, PhD., is the Consulting Editor of the Journal of Operations Management, an adjunct professor at the Haskayne School of Business and a global leader on the future of supply chain strategy and practice. His book, Supply Market Intelligence, is considered the premier managerial handbook on strategic sourcing. He is regularly quoted in periodicals such as the Wall Street Journal. Handfield has consulted with Fortune 500 companies, including Chevron, British Petroleum, Shell, Spectra Energy, Cheniere, DHL Supply Chain, Conoco Phillips and Federal Express. He has led conference workshops for the SCMAC in Toronto, the Institute for Supply Management, and the Negotiation Institute. He has published more than 100 articles in top management journals including Sloan Management Review, IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management and Journal of Product Innovation Management..

Read about executive education

Other experts

Thomas Malnight

Thomas Malnight is Professor of Strategy and General Management at IMD. His fields of interest are strategy, global trends, and accelerating organizational change. Professor Malnight works extensively with top leadership teams in challenging how they view their changing competitive landscape, h...

Mark Watson

Biography Watson’s research focuses on time-series econometrics, empirical macroeconomics, and macroeconomic forecasting. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and of the Econometric Society. Before coming to Princeton in 1995, Watson served on the economics faculty at Harva...

Todd Huffman

CEO at 3Scan I am based in: San Francisco   I am a neuroscience entrepreneur whose game-changing startup is improving the field of brain research. In my spare time I am busy with cryonics – the process of freezing a person’s brain posthumously – and an intentional community I helped build in...

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.