INSIDE LOOK ON PROFS
We take an inside look on our faculty as they share candidly about teaching and research.
Why did you become a professor?
Xiuping Li
When I was 5, I wanted to be a farmer; while my sister, three years my senior, wanted to be a female scientist just like Madame Curie...
How did you become a professor?
Leonard Lee
Growing up, I always loved going to school, and in fact, the whole concept of learning. I had the privilege of studying under some excellent teachers in my early years in school.
If you were an undergrad again, you would be . . .
Prem Shamdasani
An entrepreneur, climate activist, social media influencer and a kiasu student doing as many internships and overseas exchanges as possible!
What do you think it takes to be a great researcher?
Junhong (on leave) Chu
For my line of research – quantitative modelling – hard work and perseverance are necessary.
What key lessons did you learn from your PhD studies?
Min Kim
There are two critical lessons that I have learned when I studied for my PhD. First, keep a keen eye on marketing practices that we take for granted in our everyday lives...
What was your favourite class when you were an undergraduate and why?
Siok Kuan Tambyah
One memorable, though not entirely favourite, class as an undergraduate Marketing major was “marketing communications” (as it was titled then).
Where do you get your research ideas from?
Jochen Wirtz
I like my research to address real-world management problems. Key input to my ideas on what troubles managers is teaching in our Executive MBA programmes.
Did any of your professors leave an impression on you?
Swee Hoon Ang
I remember well my first Marketing prof. He was an entertainer! No, not the song-and-dance type. But he had this chest of Marketing war stories which he would regale us...
What do you think is the key to research success?
Noah Lim
To me, the biggest key to research success is the ability to embrace unexpected empirical results. Oftentimes, in my experiments, my co-authors and I encounter findings that run contrary to our initial hypotheses...
What pearls of wisdom have your research experience given you?
Yan Zhang
Many research projects do not go smoothly. Once, I was working on a gifting project. As a young assistant professor then, I was gungho and plunged head-on, trying different experimental designs and measures.
Why did you want to teach at NUS?
Samer Hajjar
To teach at NUS Business School is to join an institution whose history is intertwined with Singapore’s extraordinary economic growth story of the last few decades. NUS Business School is also consistently ranked top among business schools in the world.
What made you want to be a professor?
Yuting Zhu
I have always wanted to be a creator and to publicise new things, like new ideas, new knowledge, and new products. Being a professor not only gives me a platform to realise these goals but also the autonomy to determine what I want to create and publicise. I love my job, and it fulfils all my expectations of how my life should be.