Email: Rajiv.Kohli@mason.wm.edu
Program: Online MBA
Credentials:
John N. Dalton Memorial Professor of Business
Ph.D., Information Systems, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Bachelor of General Laws, University of Pune
Honorary Fellow, Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge
Fellow, MIT Center for Information Systems Research
Area: Operations and Information Technology
Expertise: Health information technology, healthcare information systems, business value of information technology, IT innovation
Rajiv Kohli is the John. N. Dalton Memorial Professor of Business at William & Mary. He is ranked as the No. 1 scholar in health information technology thought leadership study and studies have ranked him among the top 20 MIS researchers worldwide. He has taught at the University of Notre Dame, Lehigh University, and the University of Maryland system as well as held visiting positions at MIT and at universities in Asia, Europe, and New Zealand. Rajiv is an Honorary Fellow at the Cambridge Judge Business School at the University of Cambridge as well as a Fellow at MIT Center for Information Systems Research.
For over 15 years, Rajiv has worked or consulted with IBM Global Services, SAS Corporation, United Parcel Service, Encana Oil & Gas (USA) Inc., AM General, MCI Telecommunications, Westinghouse Electronics, Wipro Corporation, and Godrej Industries in addition to several health care organizations. Prior to joining full-time academia, he was a project leader in decision support services at Trinity Health.
Rajiv’s research is published in MIS Quarterly, Management Science, Information Systems Research, MIS Quarterly Executive, Journal of Management Information Systems, Journal of Operations Management and Decision Support Systems, among other journals. He is a co-author of the book “The IT Payoff: Measuring Business Value of Information Technology Investment,” serves as a senior editor for Information Systems Research, and is a member of the editorial boards of several international journals. He has previously served as a senior editor of MIS Quarterly.