Mark Albion


Mark Albion, born on April 3, 1951, is an American business theorist, real-estate broker, social entrepreneur and author of values-based business literature.

Biography

Albion received his post-secondary degrees from Harvard University, including a BA in Economics, a joint MA/MBA and a joint PhD/DBA in Business Economics from Harvard University and Harvard Business School. His doctoral thesis received the AMA's award for Best Doctoral Dissertation of 1981.
From 1982 to 1988, Albion served as an assistant professor and then an associate professor at Harvard Business School, where he taught MBA retail management and marketing classes, and developed a curriculum to introduce the personal computer into the MBA program. He helped create joint doctoral programs with other Harvard schools. He was featured by 60 Minutes as one of the top young business-school professors in the country.
In 1986, Albion's mother's was fighting cancer and he connected with responsible business leaders who in 1987 formed the Social Venture Network. In the summer of 1988, Albion left Harvard Business School to develop a community of service-minded MBAs. Over the next 30 years, he made speaking trips to universities and their business schools to build a network for students interested in transforming enterprise to create a world of more social and economic justice, serving as Faculty Founder of what is today called Net Impact. Business Week dubbed Albion "the savior of b-school souls."
From 2009 to 2010, Albion served in the Office of the President at Babson College to help integrate social values and sustainability into the college, and founded the inaugural Changemaker Campus Team.
In 2011, Albion co-founded with neuroscientist Dr. Mrim Boutla, , which provides an e-learning, self-leadership career platform to help students, alums and professionals get clear, connected and hired for well-paying social impact jobs that fit their values. As of 2014, the company had 52 university clients and had won several awards for its ed-tech platform, including Ashoka's Cordes Innovation award in 2013.
Albion is heavily involved in interfaith religious events, as a teacher and participant, and most significantly in adult Jewish education, earning a two-year degree from Hebrew College in 2002.
Albion became a prominent representative used by the Jewish Reform Movement's adult education Meah program 2003–2007.
Professional recognitions, selected:
Albion became a pioneer in inspiring MBAs to leverage business principles to build a better world. His work was lauded by leaders as diverse as Mother Teresa and Ronald Reagan, as mentors and supporters.

Net Impact

In 1988, Albion began speaking at U.S. business schools about purposeful careers with social impact. In 1993, Faculty Founder Albion and a few other SVN members launched with 13 MBA students Students for Responsible Business . SRB was renamed Net Impact in 1999. The leading global non-profit organization empowers a new generation to use their careers to drive transformational change in the workplace and the world. With Liz Maw as CEO since 2004, Net Impact currently supports over 300 autonomous volunteer-run chapters and a membership base of over 100,000, with programs and networking events centered on topics such as corporate social responsibility, social entrepreneurship, social enterprise management, nonprofit management, social intrapreneurship, international development, and environmental sustainability, attended by millions of students and young professionals each year.

Speeches

Since 1986, Albion has given over 625 speeches at business schools and universities on 5 continents. His work in helping successful leaders achieve positive social and environmental change through business principles was featured in numerous publications, including BusinessWeek,"The Green MBA" for Lifestyles of Health and Sustainability,"", "" and "". Mark has given several college commencement speeches, such as one to 4200 in Northeastern graduate schools on June 6, 2014, entitled . On October 3, 2015, Albion gave a TEDx Talk at the 150th anniversary of the private school he attended, in Southboro, MA. That talk was entitled with the central message that achievement should be based in love not be a vehicle to get love.

United Nations

Between 1995 and 1996, Albion was tasked by the United Nations to lead a research team to uncover key success factors to develop young socially responsible global leaders. He presented the results of this research in an official speech to the United Nations in 1996, which led to his first personal mentorship meeting with Mother Teresa.

The Good Life Parable

Based on his 1997 published story and similar to a 1963 German-written story, in 2008, Mark's created the 3-minute animated movie "" produced with Free Range Studios. Winner of four sustainability awards in 2009, the "Good Life Parable" was selected to be distributed to 61M potential viewers through the Outside TV on Sunday nights between November 2010 and November 2011. Special Oscar recognition in 2013.

Writings

Albion is the author of several books concerning living a life of service, discussing leaving what you know to find what you love , imbedding what you love into your career, and developing the skills needed to scale your passion and serve others. In addition, Albion published dozens of columns in publications such as UNREASONABLE.is, Aish.com and Fast Company, as well as over 160, 4000-word monthly newsletters. Published from 1996 to 2008, Albion's newsletters was subscribed to by millions of readers across 87 countries. Albion lives in Dover, Massachusetts with his wife Joy. They have two daughters.
Several themes run through Albion’s writings:
Books, a selection:
Articles, a selection: