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David BenDaniel
Professor at Cornell University
David J. BenDaniel was a highly influential professor of entrepreneurship at Cornell University's Samuel Curtis Johnson Graduate School of Management. He passed away on November 22, 2017, at the age of 86.12
Academic Career and Contributions
BenDaniel joined Cornell University in 1985 as a Senior Fellow of the Entrepreneurship and Personal Enterprise Program.2 He served as the Don and Margi Berens Professor of Entrepreneurship and professor of management at the Johnson School for over three decades.1
Key contributions to Cornell's entrepreneurship program include:
- Founding the Entrepreneurship at Cornell Program
- Establishing the Cornell Entrepreneur of the Year Celebration
- Founding Big Red Ventures, Johnson School's student-managed venture capital fund
- Developing 15 new courses in Entrepreneurship and Private Equity
- Teaching entrepreneurship and private equity courses to over 10,000 students1
Background and Industry Experience
BenDaniel's educational background was in physics and engineering:
- Bachelor's and Master's degrees in Physics from the University of Pennsylvania
- Doctorate in Engineering from MIT in 196012
Before joining academia, BenDaniel had a successful career in industry:
- Worked at General Electric for over 15 years, starting as a theoretical physicist and later launching GE's technical ventures operation
- Served as group vice president for advanced energy and technology at Exxon Enterprises
- Held executive positions in venture capital at Textron Corp. and Genesis Group International13
Recognition and Impact
BenDaniel was widely recognized for his contributions to entrepreneurship education:
- Received the Lifetime Achievement in Entrepreneurship Education Award from Entrepreneurship at Cornell in April 2017
- Cited as one of the top Entrepreneurship professors nationally in several publications
- Featured in prominent publications such as Fortune, Forbes, The Wall Street Journal, and Business Week13
His impact on students was significant, with many successful Cornell entrepreneurs crediting his classes and advice as central to their career paths.1