Archie L. Jones
Senior Lecturer of Business Administration
Senior Lecturer of Business Administration
Archie Jones is Senior Lecturer at the Harvard Business School with an appointment in both the Finance and Entrepreneurial Management Units. In addition to teaching required curriculum courses in both units, Archie is a co-founder and course head for an elective field course: Scaling Minority Businesses and co-teaches an elective field course: The HBS Impact Fund. In recognition of his positive impact on the Harvard Business School community, he was awarded the 2021 Robert F. Greenhill Award.
Archie Jones is Senior Lecturer at the Harvard Business School with an appointment in both the Finance and Entrepreneurial Management Units. In addition to teaching required curriculum courses in both units, Archie is a co-founder and course head for an elective field course: Scaling Minority Businesses and co-teaches an elective field course: The HBS Impact Fund. In recognition of his positive impact on the Harvard Business School community, he was awarded the 2021 Robert F. Greenhill Award.
He is a Managing Director of Six Pillars Partners, and has held executive positions with both public and private companies including Merrill Lynch, Parthenon Capital, Kenexa and IBM and NOW Corporation. With his focus on strategy, private equity and corporate M&A transactions, Archie has led investments across a variety of industries and sectors in the US, Asia and Europe. Archie continues to serve on the Board of Directors of several corporations and non-profit organizations.
In 2021, Archie was recognized by Savoy Magazine as one of the Most Influential Black Corporate Directors. He currently serves as a Director of Fleetcor Technologies, Inc. (NYSE:FLT) and Jobvite, Inc.; Board Chair for Project Evident; and serves on the board of Mickey Leland Kibbutzim Foundation. He also serves as an Investor in Residence at the Russell Innovation Center for Entrepreneurs and as an Executive in Residence at New Profit, Inc.
Archie is a Certified Public Accountant and a graduate of Morehouse College and Harvard Business School.
- Featured Work
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Most leadership books are written for people who are already labeled as “leaders”—corporate execs, high-ranking managers, entrepreneurs. They may not speak to the underrepresented young person or uncommon experienced person with a dream to create change in the world, or that entry-level employee with big ideas about how their organization could be better. But these individuals have just as much capacity to lead as a CEO, just as much entrepreneurial drive as a startup founder, and they can benefit from lessons in leadership from an honest, authentic teacher and coach.
Leadership, as Archie L. Jones Jr. explains it, is the power of social influence that maximizes the efforts of others toward the achievement of a goal. Anyone with a goal that they need to enlist others to help achieve is, at least potentially, a leader—whether they are a student or a professor at Harvard Business School.
In The Treasure You Seek, Jones sets out to share his lessons with an audience beyond his classroom. Readers will learn how to establish, build, and leverage their leadership capital—their resources and influence— utilizing the “5 Cs” framework—Capability, Culture, Communication, Connection, and Confidence— to achieve their goals. Your treasure may be social impact, political influence, productive community engagement, or creating and leading a healthy, happy family. Whatever treasure you seek, leadership capital is the resource to help you get there.
Scaling Minority Businesses (SMB) is an MBA elective that focuses on the unique challenges that Black and Latinx business owners face as they scale. The course was created by Professor Bussgang and his colleagues Professors Archie Jones and Henry McGee. - Books
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- Jones, Archie. The Treasure You Seek: The Treasure You Seek. ForbesBooks, 2024. View Details
- Cases and Teaching Materials
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- Gibson, Hise, Archie L. Jones, Nicole Gilmore, and Ai-Ling Jamila Malone. "Uncle Nearest: Creating a Legacy." Harvard Business School Case 824-047, January 2024. (Revised May 2024.) View Details
- Bussgang, Jeffrey J., Archie Jones, Henry McGee, and Terrance Rogers. "Field Course: Scaling Minority Businesses." Harvard Business School Course Overview Note 823-052, September 2022. (Revised March 2024.) View Details
- Jones, Archie L., Jeffrey J. Bussgang, and Henry McGee. "Clara Wu Tsai and Brooklyn Loan Innovation." Harvard Business School Case 822-124, March 2022. (Revised January 2023.) View Details
- Jones, Archie L., Leonard A. Schlesinger, Pippa Tubman Armerding, and Kuria Kamau. "Doing Business in Nairobi, Kenya." Harvard Business School Case 323-086, February 2023. (Revised February 2024.) View Details
- Jones, Archie L., Mel Martin, and Amy Klopfenstein. "Evaluating the Impact of Hillside Harvest." Harvard Business School Case 823-017, August 2022. (Revised September 2023.) View Details
- Teaching
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This course addresses the issues faced by managers who wish to turn opportunity into viable organizations that create value, and empowers students to develop their own approaches, guidelines and skills for being entrepreneurial managers.
This course teaches students how to:
- Identify potentially valuable opportunities.
- Obtain the resources necessary to pursue an opportunity and to create an entrepreneurial organization.
- Manage the entrepreneurial organization once it has been established.
- Grow the business into a sustainable enterprise.
- Create and harvest value for the organization's stakeholders.
The Field Course: Investing for Impact was born out of the efforts of HBS students and faculty in the spring of 2020 and offered for the first time in fall semester of 2021.
This course seeks to help students understand why certain business founders lack access to capital and whether small investments of $25,000 to $50,000 (made from an intermediary Donor Advised Fund) might help these businesses grow to deliver financial returns and measurable community impacts.
In addition to a weekly seminar (which includes case discussions, panels of expert guests and field experience), students work in small groups with their faculty mentors to conduct due diligence on a business for possible investment. Working closely with entrepreneurs to understand each company’s needs and opportunities, groups are responsible for completing a full diligence report and bringing their investment recommendation to the Investment Committee for discussion and approval. The course is designed to provide students with hands-on experience and training that they can use to pursue careers in the growing field of impact investing.
This course examines the role of finance in supporting the functional areas of a firm, and fosters an understanding of how financial decisions themselves can create value.
Topics covered include:- Basic analytical skills and principles of corporate finance.
- Functions of modern capital markets and financial institutions.
- Standard techniques of analysis, including capital budgeting, discounted cash flow valuation, and risk analysis.
The FIELD Global Immersion (FGI) is a semester-long first-year (RC) MBA course. The course is a capstone of sorts, and it requires students to build on learnings from their first-year courses and apply them to real-world business problems. At the beginning of the semester students are paired with a Global Partner (GP) company in one of 16 cities that has a product or service challenge they would like the team to address with their local consumers.
The course culminates in a one-week Immersion at the end of the semester, at which time students travel to their assigned Immersion location and meet in person with their GP and local consumers. To maximize the experience, students are asked to travel to a city and country in which they have no significant prior work, travel or life experience.
Scaling Minority Businesses (SMB) is a field course designed to leverage the intellectual power and community of Harvard Business School to address the vital needs of Black-owned enterprises as they face the twin tasks of surviving and growing. The course utilizes three approaches to learning—traditional case-based classes, talks by subject experts, and hands-on consulting assignments with Black-owned businesses in the greater Boston-area. It will provide students with the opportunity to draw upon and strengthen their learnings from a range of RC courses including, but not limited to, TEM, Marketing, Strategy, and TOM. Students will receive hands-on experience wrestling with key issues in scaling a small business and will gain an understanding of the historic and systemic barriers to growth faced by Black businesses.
The arc of the course covers three modules: (1) Challenges of Systemic Racism and Inequities; (2) Challenges of Access to Capita; and (3) Challenges of Access to Customers.
The growth of private equity internationally has been dramatic, to the point that the asset class has been both lauded as the savior and vilified as the cause of our current economic malaise. Over the past two decades, private equity- ranging from venture capital to buy- outs and even to certain activities by absolute return funds (hedge funds) -has come to play an increasingly important role in shaping our economy. Their promise of "above market" returns has attracted investments from pension funds upon which millions of our elders rely and universities which educate future contributors to society. Yet private equity organizations often operate in mysterious ways, with little public visibility. This course seeks to understand how these organizations work, why they take the forms that they do, and where crucial problems-and opportunities for innovation-exist. We examine the strategies and incentives of the various players and how they maneuver through the business cycle. Cases are recent and class speakers are common so the current private equity environment and the changing landscape are features of every class.
- Awards & Honors
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Received the 2024 Dr. James I. Cash Advancing Pathways Award.Named one of 100 Black Board Members Making a Difference by Board Prospects in 2024.Named one of the Most Influential Black Corporate Directors by Savoy Magazine in 2021.Received the Robert F. Greenhill Award for Outstanding Service to the HBS Community for 2020–2021.
- Additional Information
- Areas of Interest