767 Jon M. Huntsman Hall
3730 Walnut Street
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Research Interests: competitive strategies in global markets, innovation and organic growth, marketing management, strategic formulation processes and methods, and foresight capabilities.
Links: CV
George S. Day is the Geoffrey T. Boisi Professor Emeritus at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. He founded the Mack Institute for Innovation Management at the Wharton School, where he is presently Faculty Emeritus in Residence. He was previously the Executive Director of the Marketing Science Institute and is currently an Academic Trustee.
He has consulted to numerous corporations such as General Electric, IBM, Metropolitan Life, Unilever, E.I. DuPont de Nemours, W.L. Gore and Associates, Coca-Cola, Boeing, LG Corp., Best Buy, Merck, Johnson & Johnson, and Medtronic. He is the past chairman of the American Marketing Association and serves on Boards of Directors including the Free Library of Philadelphia, the Zoological Society of Philadelphia and the Lower Merion Conservancy. He is also the co-chair of the Ag Sustainability Center of the Sonoma County Winegrowers and a Trustee of the Marketing Science Institute.
Dr. Day has authored twenty books in the areas of marketing innovation and strategic management, including: Peripheral Vision: Detecting the Weak Signals that Can Make or Break Your Company (with Paul Schoemaker) 2006, Strategy from the Outside-In: Profiting from Customer Value (with Christine Moorman) 2010, and Innovation Prowess: Leadership Strategies for Accelerating Growth, 2013. His most recent book is See Sooner/Act Faster: How Vigilant Leaders Navigate Digital Turbulence (with Paul Schoemaker) 2019.
He has won ten best articles award and one best book award, and two of his articles were among the top 25 most influential articles in marketing science in the past 25 years. He was honored with the Charles Coolidge Parlin Award in 1994, the Paul D. Converse Award in 1996, the Sheth Foundation award in 2003, and the Mahajan Award for career contributions to strategy in 2001. In 2004, he received the AMA/Irwin/McGraw-Hill Distinguished Marketing Educator Award. In 2015 he was chosen as one of eleven “Legends in Marketing,” and in 2017 he was awarded the William L. Wilkie, “Marketing for a Better World” award. In 2020 he was awarded the Sheth Medal, a bi-annual award for exceptional contributions to marketing scholarship and practice.
September 2023
George Day (Forthcoming), Capturing Innovation Opportunities: Learning from Growth Leaders.
George Day (2023), Diagnosing the Market-Driven Approach to Innovation: Learning from Practice, Strategic Management Review.
George Day (2023), Accelerating growth with strategic innovation: Putting market driving into context, Industrial Marketing Management.
George Day (2022), Commentary on Formulating Strategy from the Outside In, Long Range Planning.
George Day and Roger Dennis (2022), Overcoming the preparedness paradox: five initiatives to ready businesses for an uncertain future disruption, Strategy & Leadership, 50 (5), pp. 9-14.
George Day (2022), Why Working Backwards Works Better, Management and Business Review (MBR), 2 (2), pp. 41-47.
Abstract: Working backwards is a signature method that Amazon uses to assess its innovation initiatives. The system works because the company has the essential ingredients: leadership commitment, investment in finding opportunities, empathy at all levels, and collective curiosity. All firms can use working backwards to assess, challenge, and rethink how they innovate.
George Day and Gregory P Shea (2021), Innovating How Innovation Works at Procter & Gamble, Strategy & Leadership.
P. J. H. Schoemaker and George Day (2021), Preparing Organizations for Greater Turbulence, California Management Review.
Abstract: Vigilant organizations excel at seeing looming threats and embryonic opportunities sooner than rivals, which prepares them to act faster when needed. Four drivers distinguish vigilant from vulnerable organizations, which can be used to design a roadmap to improve organizational acuity and preparedness. The fulcrum of these changes rests with the leadership team by demonstrating a strong commitment to vigilance at all levels, and reinforcing this by making targeted investments in foresight capabilities. These strategic moves also need to be supported by corresponding changes in the strategy-making process and by ensuring accountability and coordination of vigilance activities throughout the enterprise.
George Day and Karissa Kruse (2020), How vigilant leaders prepare for a turbulent future, Strategy & Leadership.
George Day, P. J. H. Schoemaker, Sue Todd (2020), Is Your Supply Chain Ready For What’s Next?, Supply Chain Management Review .
Business success is increasingly driven by a firm's ability to create and capture value through innovation. Thus, the processes used by firms to develop innovations, the choices they make regarding how to commercialize their innovations, the changes they make to their business models to adapt to the dynamic environment, and the strategies they use to position and build a dominate competitive position are important issues facing firms. In MGMT. 892, you will learn to address these issues through an action learning approach. MGMT. 892 is a 1.0-credit course conducted in the spirit of an independent study. By working on consulting projects for leading global companies, you will develop and then apply your knowledge about innovation management and help these firms better understand the challenges and opportunities posed by emerging technologies and markets.
This course views marketing as both a general management responsibility and an orientation of an organization that helps one to create, capture and sustain customer value. The focus is on the business unit and its network of channels, customer relationships, and alliances. Specifically, the course attempts to help develop knowledge and skills in the application of advanced marketing frameworks, concepts, and methods for making strategic choices at the business level.
A student contemplating an independent study project must first find a faculty member who agrees to supervise and approve the student's written proposal as an independent study (MKTG 899). If a student wishes the proposed work to be used to meet the ASP requirement, he/she should then submit the approved proposal to the MBA adviser who will determine if it is an appropriate substitute. Such substitutions will only be approved prior to the beginning of the semester.
Winner (with Christine Moorman) for Strategy from the Outside-In (McGraw-Hill 2010)
"The Path to Customer Centricity" with Denise Shah, Roland Rust, A. Parasuraman and Richard Staelin.
Award for Aligning the Organization with the Market (MSI Report 05-110).
For the best article published in the Journal of Marketing that has made a long term contribution to the field of Marketing
AMA/McGraw-Hill Irwin Distinguished Marketing Educator
Erskine Fellow, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand
For career contributions to marketing strategy, awarded by the American Marketing Association
From the Wharton Graduate Association
For teaching excellence at The Wharton School, 1992, 1997, 1998
For research on interfunctional issues
For outstanding contributions to the development of the science of
marketing, awarded by the American Marketing Association.
For best working paper “The Capabilities of Market-Driven Organizations”
For most significant contribution to marketing theory and thought for the article “The Capabilities of Market-Driven Organizations.” This article was also the runner-up for the Alpha Kappa Psi Foundation Award.
In recognition of outstanding contributions to marketing and marketing education
INFORMS Society for Marketing Science picked my article "The Capabilities of Market-Driven Organizations" which appeared in the Journal of Marketing in 1994 as one of the Top 20 articles that have most affected the practice of marketing science.
For most significant contribution to marketing theory and thought, Jointly with Mary Lambkin for article on “Evolutionary Processes in Competitive Markets: Beyond the Life Cycle.”
In 1980 and 1988
For most significant contribution to marketing practice, Jointly with Robin Wensley for article on “Assessing Advantage: A Framework for Diagnosing Competitive Superiority.”
For outstanding contributions to the use of computers in the field
of business education
For ACustomer-Oriented Approaches to Identifying Product Markets,” with Allan D. Shocker and Ray Srivastava
For most significant contribution to marketing practice, 1978, for article on “Diagnosing the Product Portfolio”
With publication of Buyer Attitudes and Brand Choice Behavior in 1970 by Free Press
1964 and 1965
Banks are facing a new era of digital transformation. In this article, Wharton’s George Day and co-author Cassie Solomon explain how a traditional finance firm has embraced the evolution of fintech and thrived. …Read More
Knowledge at Wharton - 7/11/2023Let us introduce you to the new chairman of the Wharton Board of Overseers.
Wharton Magazine - 07/29/2013