The Brock School of Business at Samford University invites applications for an open-rank, tenure-track position in Strategic Management in the Entrepreneurship, Management, and Marketing Department to begin August 2013. Required qualifications include an earned doctorate in management or related field. ABDs with experience teaching Strategic Management courses may also be considered.
Standard teaching loads are three courses per semester, and the anticipated schedule will be two sections of undergraduate and one section of MBA Strategic Management in the Fall and Spring semesters. Salary is commensurate with qualifications and experience.
We invite you to visit our website, http://www.samford.edu/business for more details about the Brock School of Business, including initiatives to establish a world-class entrepreneurship program. The Brock School of Business is accredited by AASCB International and has over 550 students in its undergraduate, MAcc, and MBA programs.
Samford University, founded in 1841, is a private, Christian university with historic ties to the Alabama Baptist Convention enrolling approximately 4,500 undergraduate and graduate students. US News & World Report ranked Samford fourth in the South and sixth on the "Great Schools, Great Price" list of Southern universities in its 2012 edition of America's Best Colleges. The university is located in a suburb of Birmingham, Alabama, a metropolitan area of approximately one million people that has transformed from a heavy industrial base to an economic center for healthcare, finance, R&D, and international business. Samford University is an equal opportunity employer.
Formal review of applications will begin immediately and continue until the position is filled. To apply, please submit a current vita, samples of scholarly work, evidence of teaching effectiveness, and the names of three references to ftlohrke@samford.edu. School representatives will interview interested candidates for this position during the upcoming Academy of Management meeting in Boston.