Experts
Tom Stewart
Chief Marketing & Knowledge Officer, Booz & Company
After the Copenhagen Climate Council was considered a failure, how should we prepare for COP-16 in Mexico? Big Think's live roundtable on March 26, 2010 in Houston was moderated by Tom Stewart, Chief Marketing and Knowledge Officer at Booz & Co. On the panel: Peter Voser, CEO of Royal Dutch Shell; Vinod Khosla, founding CEO of Sun Microsystems; and Marc Stuart, Co-Founder of EcoSecurities. Read More
Booz & Company’s Tom Stewart with a summary of the Big Think global economic forum. Read More
In the vein of Rodney King, Tom Stewart asks,'why can't we all just get along?' Read More
Tom Stewart talks about the slow change of New York City. Read More
Tom Stewart is excited by innovation and confronting problems. Read More
The struggle between thinking people and anti-intellectualism. Read More
The themes of the mind never change, Tom Stewart says. Read More
Above all, Tom Stewart is a good father first. Read More
Tom Stewart talks about his views on the Great Generation and tells the story of true leadership. Read More
Tom Stewart is inspired by the new age of leadership. Read More
Tom Stewart's creative process is far from orderly. Read More
Tom Stewart cites climate change and global poverty as the greatest Read More
Tom Stewart says creativity isn't a linear, consistent phenomenon but rather happens in clumps. Read More
There's no historical precedent for this rate of growth. Read More
Tom Stewart discusses how the European and American systems differ. Read More
Tom Stewart says there is poetry in both management and leadership. Read More
Tom Stewart works to create better leaders. Read More
A skirt Tom made Stewart fall in love with the city. Read More
About Tom Stewart
Thomas A. Stewart is the Chief Marketing and Knowledge Officer (CMKO) of the global management consulting firm Booz & Company. Stewart most recently served as editor and managing director of Harvard Business Review, and is a best-selling author, an authority on intellectual capital and knowledge management, and an influential thought leader on global management issues and ideas.
During Stewart’s six years with Harvard Business Review, the magazine was a two-time finalist for general excellence in the National Magazine Awards, and received an “Eddie” in 2007 from Folio Magazine.
Previously, Stewart served as the editorial director for Business 2.0 and as a member of Fortune’s Board of Editors. He is the author of two books, Intellectual Capital: The New Wealth of Organizations, and The Wealth of Knowledge: Intellectual Capital and the 21st Century Organization, published by Doubleday Business in 1998 and 2003, respectively.
Stewart is a fellow of the World Economic Forum. He is a summa cum laude graduate of Harvard College, and holds an honorary Doctor of Science degree from Cass School of Business at City University, London.