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Louis
W. Stern is the John D. Gray Distinguished Professor
Emeritus of Marketing at the Kellogg School of Management
of Northwestern University. Professor Stern joined the
Northwestern faculty in 1973. Prior to that he was Professor
of Marketing at The Ohio State University. He was appointed
to the Ohio State faculty in 1963 after having spent
two years at the industrial research firm Arthur D.
Little, Inc., Cambridge, Mass. From January 1965 until
June 1966, he served as a principal economist for the
National Commission on Food Marketing in Washington,
D.C., and during the 1969-70 academic year, he was a
visiting associate professor of business administration
at the University of California, Berkeley. From 1977
to 1980, he served as Chairman of the Department of
Marketing at Northwestern, and from 1983 to 1985, he
was Executive Director of the Marketing Science Institute,
Cambridge, Mass. During the 1984-85 academic year, he
was the Thomas Henry Carroll Ford Foundation Visiting
Professor at Harvard Business School. From 1998 to 2001,
concurrent with his position at Northwestern, he was
appointed a visiting scholar at the Haas School of Business
at The University of California, Berkeley. In 2004,
he was designated the Dorinda and Mark Winkelman Distinguished
Scholar at The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania,
a Senior Fellow of the Wharton School, and co-director
of Wharton's Jay H. Baker Retailing Initiative, positions
he holds in addition to the John D. Gray professorship
at Kellogg.
Professor
Stern's research efforts have focused on issues related
to designing and managing marketing channels and on
antitrust issues. His articles have appeared in a wide
variety of marketing, legal, and behavioral science
journals. Among the books he has co-authored are Marketing
Channels (Prentice-Hall, 6th Ed., 2006), Management
in Marketing Channels (Prentice-Hall, 1989), and Legal
Aspects of Marketing Strategy: Antitrust and Consumer
Protection Issues (Prentice-Hall, 1984). His article
"Distribution Channels as Political Economics:
A Framework for Comparative Analysis" (with Torger
Reve) was named the best article on marketing theory
to appear in the Journal of Marketing during 1980. In
1986, he received the Paul D. Converse Award from the
American Marketing Association for "outstanding
contribution to theory and science in marketing."
In 1989, he was named "Marketing Educator of the
Year" by Sales and Marketing Executives-International,
and in 1990, he received the same honor from the Sales
& Marketing Executives of Chicago. In 1992, he was
voted "Outstanding Professor of the Year"
by the students at Kellogg. He has received six times
the "Outstanding Professor Award for Electives"
from Kellogg's Executive Masters Program. In 1994, he
was selected as the recipient of the American Marketing
Association/Irwin Distinguished Marketing Educator Award,
which is designed to be "the highest honor a marketing
educator can receive." Also in 1994, he was named
as one of the twelve best teachers in U.S. business
schools by Business Week magazine. In 1999, his Kellogg
classroom was purchased and named in his honor by his
former students, friends, clients, and family. And,
in June 1999, he was the first recipient of Kellogg's
newly created Special Lifetime Achievement Award for
Teaching Excellence.
Professor
Stern has participated in distinguished lecturer/visitor
series at numerous universities. He has taught at the
Hernstein Institute in Vienna and at the Norwegian School
of Economics and Business Administration in Bergen,
and has been a faculty associate at the Management Centre
Europe in Brussels. He has frequently been an invited
faculty member at the American Marketing Association's
annual doctoral and faculty consortiums. He has also
testified before committees of the U.S. House of Representatives
on anti-trust matters. Professor Stern has served on
the editorial boards of the Journal of Marketing, the
Journal of Marketing Research, and Marketing Letters.
He was on the Board of Directors of the Council of Better
Business Bureaus, Inc. from 1978 to 1983.
Among
the numerous business firms for which he has consulted
are IBM, Ford, Hewlett Packard, S.C. Johnson, Brunswick,
Roche Laboratories, Steelcase, ExxonMobil, Xerox, Boise
Cascade, Johnson & Johnson, and Motorola. He has
also served as a consultant to the Federal Trade Commission
and as an academic trustee of the Marketing Science
Institute. Professor Stern is a member of the American
Marketing Association and the American Association of
University Professors.
Address:
Northwestern University, Kellogg School of Management,
2001 N. Sheridan Rd., Evanston, Illinois 60208-2001;
telephone: 847-491-2718; fax: 847-491-2498
Email: lwstern@kellogg.northwestern.edu
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