Dr. Dave Chatterjee is tenured Associate Professor, in the MIS... College of Business, The University of Georgia (UGA). He also...

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Dr. Dave Chatterjee is tenured Associate Professor, in the MIS department, at the Terry
College of Business, The University of Georgia (UGA). He also serves as the Chairman
Elect of the University's Program Assessment and Review Committee and is a member of
the Provost's Academic Program Review Committee and the University's Enterprise IT
Assessment and Advisory Committee. He has served as the Chairman of the Terry
College MBA Committee from 2013-2015 and as the Chairman of the Society for
Information Management (SIM) Atlanta from 2008-2015. SIM is a premier non-profit
knowledge sharing and networking community of senior IT executives, prominent
academics, and other thought leaders.
His interest and expertise lies in the various facets of enterprise information technology
(IT) governance and leadership – from technology sense-making to implementation and
change management, data governance, internal controls, information security, and
performance measurement. His work has been cited over a thousand times and published
in prestigious journals such as The Wall Street Journal, MIT Sloan Management Review,
and California Management Review and sponsored by industry. In addition to scholarly
writing, he actively engages with practice by authoring white papers and moderating
CXO panel discussions.
A leading IT educator, he specializes in executive education and has taught for several
years in the nationally ranked Terry College Executive MBA program and UNC Chapel
Hill's Global OneMBA program. He also teaches the IS course in UNC Chapel Hill’s
Masters of Accounting program.
Numerous accolades and honors have come his way, such as the Outstanding Executive
MBA Professor of the Year and UGA Outstanding Teaching Faculty Honoree. He has
been judging the annual Georgia Chief Information Officer (CIO) Awards since 2010.
The UGA Career Center has recognized his significant contributions to the development
and success of Management Information Systems (MIS) undergraduates.
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