Thomas W. Malone

Faculty

Thomas W. Malone

Support Staff

Get in Touch

Title

About

Academic Area

Thomas W. Malone is the Patrick J. McGovern (1959) Professor of Management at the MIT Sloan School of Management and the founding director of the MIT Center for Collective Intelligence. At MIT, he is also a Professor of Information Technology and a Professor of Work and Organizational Studies. Previously, he was the founder and director of the MIT Center for Coordination Science and one of the two founding codirectors of the MIT Initiative on Inventing the Organizations of the 21st Century. Malone teaches classes on organizational design, information technology, and leadership, and his research focuses on how new organizations can be designed to take advantage of the possibilities provided by information technology.

Malone predicted in an article published in 1987 many of the major developments in electronic business over the following 25 years, including electronic buying and selling for many kinds of products. In 2004, Malone summarized two decades of his research in his critically acclaimed book, The Future of Work. His newest book, Superminds, appeared in May 2018. Malone has also published over 100 articles, research papers, and book chapters. He is the coeditor of four books.

Malone has been a cofounder of four software companies and has consulted and served as a board member for a number of other organizations. He is also an inventor with 11 patents.

His background includes work as a research scientist at Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC), a PhD from Stanford University, an honorary doctorate from the University of Zurich, and degrees in applied mathematics, engineering, and psychology.

 

Honors

Malone receives award from U.S. Presidential Scholars Foundation

September 24, 2024

Best paper award presented to Malone and co-authors

December 22, 2023

Malone named as Honorary Fellow of Argentinian Engineers Center

Publications

"When Combinations of Humans and AI are Useful: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis."

Vaccaro, Michelle, Abdullah Almaatouq, and Thomas Malone. Nature Human Behaviour Vol. 8, No. 12 (2024): 2293-2303.

"Supermind Ideator: How Scaffolding Human-AI Collaboration Can Increase Creativity."

Heyman, Jennifer L., Steven R. Rick, Gianni Giacomelli, Haoran Wen, Robert J. Laubacher, Nancy Taubenslag, Pranav Ragupathy, Jared R. Curhan, Thomas W. Malone, Max Sina Knicker, and Younes Jeddi. Collective Intelligence Vol. 3, No. 4 (2024).

"Who2chat: A Social Networking System for Academic Researchers in Virtual Social Hours Enabling Coordinating, Overcoming Barriers and Social Signaling."

Park, Soya, Jaeyoon Song, David R. Karger, and Thomas W. Malone. Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction Vol. CSCW1, No. 158 (2024): 1-34.

"Superminds at Work: The Promise of Human-AI Collaboration."

Malone, Thomas W. Asian Management Insights, March 2024.

"Supermind Design for Inventing Smarter Organizations: Applying a New Organizational Design Approach in a Professional Services Setting."

Laubacher, Robert, Annalyn Bachman, Kathleen Kennedy, and Thomas W. Malone, MIT Sloan Working Paper 6961-23. Cambridge, MA: MIT Sloan School of Management, December 2023.

Load More

Recent Insights

Ideas Made to Matter

The top 10 MIT Sloan Ideas Made to Matter articles of 2025

They’re nearly all about artificial intelligence, with a guest appearance from quantum computing.

Read Article
Ideas Made to Matter

When humans and AI work best together

A combination of AI and humans works best in tasks where humans outperform AI and in those that involve creating content.

Read Article
Load More

Media Highlights

Press USA Today

What AI got right. Lessons for the rest of the business world.

"A lot of tech companies today have a lot of workers who are more receptive to using technology so they're experimenting with AI on their own," said professor Thomas Malone. "If you're in an old-line company and nobody knows how to spell AI, then it's harder to get them to use it." he joked. Non-tech companies can work to hone their workplace culture by hiring people at multiple levels with an understanding of AI, added Malone.

Read Article
Load More

Executive Education

Executive Education Course

Artificial Intelligence

This online program from the MIT Sloan School of Management and the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) challenges common misconceptions surrounding AI and will equip and encourage you to embrace AI as part of a transformative toolkit. With a focus on the organizational and managerial implications of these technologies, rather than on their technical aspects, you’ll leave this course armed with the knowledge and confidence you need to pioneer its successful integration in business.

  • Apr 15-Jun 2, 2026
  • May 27-Jul 14, 2026
  • Oct 7-Nov 24, 2026
  • Aug 26-Oct 13, 2026
  • Jan 28-Mar 17, 2026
  • Jul 8-Aug 25, 2026
  • Mar 4-Apr 21, 2026
  • Nov 18, 2026-Feb 2, 2027
View Course
Executive Education Course

Navigating AI

This program is designed to help you meet the escalating demand for strategic AI-and machine learning-informed leadership and gain a strategic advantage for your organization in an AI-driven world.

  • Jun 24-Nov 17, 2026
  • Apr 15-Sep 8, 2026
  • Feb 4-Jun 30, 2026
  • Sep 2, 2026-Feb 23, 2027
View Course
Load More