Sloan Distinguished Professor of Management
Professor of Managerial Communication
Deputy Dean
Biography | Publications
JoAnne Yates, Deputy Dean and Sloan Distinguished Professor of Management, has been at MIT Sloan since 1980. Before joining the Deans' Office she developed and taught in the Communication for Managers core course. Her research examines communication and information as they shape and are shaped by technologies and policies over time, in both contemporary and historical organizations. In her work on contemporary organizations, she collaborates with Wanda Orlikowski (of MIT Sloan's Information Technology group) and various students and researchers to study how groups and organizations use communication and information technologies, and how that use shapes their work. Specific studies have looked at the use of technologies such as electronic mail, instant messaging, BlackBerrys, and corporate blogging. Her most recent historical book, Structuring the Information Age: Life Insurance and Technology in the Twentieth Century, provides insight into the largely unexplored evolution of information processing in the commercial sector and the underrated influence of corporate users in shaping the history of modern technologies. She is currently collaborating with her husband, Craig N. Murphy, Professor of Political Science at Wellesley College, on a study of the history of voluntary consensus standard setting.
Web Site: http://scripts.mit.edu/~jyates/
Contact Information
Office: E52-475
Tel: 617-253-7157
Fax: 617-258-6617
E-mail: jyates@mit.edu
Support Staff
Name: Kathleen R. Doyle
Tel: 617-253-5555
E-mail: kdoyle@mit.edu
Group(s)
Research Center(s)
General Expertise
Insurance; Blogs; Communication practices; E-mail; Managerial communication; Organizational communication; Managerial communication; Organizational communication; Writing and presentation skills; Gender issues, workplace; Diversity; Groupware; Information systems; Working virtually; Information technology; Information technology, history of; Information technology, social aspects; Knowledge sharing; Wireless communication; Management of information technology; Changing work environments; Leadership; Organization studies; Organizational change; Teams; Work environments; Future of work; Knowledge management; Blackberry; Information technology, impact of; Innovation; Legacy information; Managing change; Mobile computing; Electronic communication; MBA