Professor
Department of Business Analytics
Fulton Hall 460B
Telephone: 617-552-0465
Email: sam.ransbotham@bc.edu
IT security
Analytics
Strategic use of IT.
Artificial Intelligence
Sam Ransbotham is a professor of analytics at Boston College’s Carroll School of Management. He teaches “Analytics in Practice” and “Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence.” Ransbotham served as a senior editor at Information Systems Research, associate editor at Management Science, and academic contributing editor at MIT Sloan Management Review. He co-hosts the Me, Myself, and AI podcast, available on all major platforms. Ransbotham received a National Science Foundation Career Program award “in support of early-career faculty who have the potential to serve as academic role models in research and education,” for his analytics-based research in security. He was also honored with an INFORMS ISS Sandra A. Slaughter Early Career Award, which recognizes “early career individuals who are on a path towards making outstanding intellectual contributions to the information systems discipline.” Ransbotham earned a bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering, an MBA, and a doctorate, all from the Georgia Institute of Technology. Before earning his doctorate, he founded a software company with a globally diverse client list, including the United Nations IAEA (Vienna), FAO (Rome), WHO (Geneva), and WMO (London). Since 2015, he has been an editor for MIT SMR’s Big Ideas initiatives, including Artificial Intelligence and Business Strategy and Competing With Data & Analytics.
LAist: OpenAI looks to shift away from nonprofit roots and convert itself to for-profit company
GBH: Why there's no standard AI policy in higher education, and what professors are doing about it
Boston Globe: A robot in downtown Boston can paint your nails in 10 minutes for $10
Harvard Buisness Review: Can AI Help Your Company Innovate? It Depends
CBS News: Experts calm fears over impact AI could have on jobs
GBH: 5 things to know about artificial intelligence
Marketwatch: When driverless cars are attacked, who's the target?
NPR: When driverless cars are attacked, who’s the target?
WorldBank: How is Artificial Intelligence Transforming Firms?
Forbes: Closing the Corporate Gap on AI
HBR: Find the AI Approach That Fits the Problem You’re Trying to Solve
MIT Sloan School of Management: It’s time for everyone in your company to understand generative AI
MIT Sloan Management Review: Artificial Intelligence and Business Strategy
SAP: How HR Can Direct Use of AI and ChatGPT