As a senior research fellow at eLab, a think tank operated by the international business school INSEAD since 1999, Nils Fonstad works on a leafy campus just south of Paris. While he deplores his lack of progress in learning French–he simply has not found time for language lessons–at least, he says, “I practice French talking to the fruit and vegetable vendors at my local street market.”
When he’s not shopping, however, he’s usually talking about his research on how organizations and governments use information and communication technologies to develop innovative business models, products, and services. Fonstad recently completed a study for the European Commission on how leaders from academia, the private sector, and government are working together to build Europe’s supply of professionals who are savvy in both IT and business. He believes that the lack of workers with such crossover skills costs Europe thousands of jobs each year.
Though far from MIT, Fonstad has fond memories of his former stomping grounds in Eastgate. Born and raised in the environs of the Institute, he often refers to himself as an MIT brat. His father, Clifton Fonstad, SM ‘66, PhD ‘70, the Vitesse Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, joined the faculty 40 years ago.
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