Fiona Murray


Fiona Elizabeth Murray is the Associate Dean for Innovation at the MIT Sloan School of Management. She is a member of the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom's Council for Science and Technology.

Early life and education

Murray studied chemistry at the University of Oxford, where she earned her bachelor's degree in 1989 and Master's in 1990. She moved to the United States for her graduate studies, where she worked in applied science at Harvard University. For her research Murray studied decision making surrounding renewable energy policy in China. After completing her doctorate Murray returned to the University of Oxford, where she was appointed a lecturer at the Saïd Business School. She held a fellowship at St Catherine's College, Oxford.

Research and career

Murray was appointed to the faculty at the MIT Sloan School of Management in 1999, where she serves as the William Porter Professor of Entrepreneurship. At MIT, Murray works on the commercialisation of scientific research and the development of mechanisms that can better connect academics to entrepreneurs. She specialises in biotechnology, biomedical science and clean energy. She helps scientific start-ups and spin-outs to develop their business strategy, partnering the public and private sectors. She teaches two courses at the MIT Sloan School of Management, including innovation teams and new enterprises, and launched the Martin Trust Center for MIT Entrepreneurship Entrepreneurship & Innovation degree in 2006. Her research considers the role of women in the commercialisation of science.
Murray is co-Director of the MIT Innovation Initiative. This role has seen her partner with communities in Africa, launching programs to support African entrepreneurs in their fundraising, networking and business proposals, as well as initiatives that champion diversity in innovation. She was elected to the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom's Council for Science and Technology in 2014. In 2015 she was made a Commander of the British Empire in the New Year Honours for her services to entrepreneurship.
In 2020 Murray showed that women scientists are less likely to score highly on their grant applications because of the words that they use. Specifically, women are 16 % less likely to score highly on their grant proposals, which Murray attributes to different communication styles between men and women. She found that women use fewer of reviewer's favourite words, and more of the words that are associated with lower scores. She has studied the differences between men and women's patenting rates, as well as investigating where women inventors are located.

Selected publications

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