DeGroote professor named top business and management scientist in Canada

A headshot of Robert G. Cooper

Robert G. Cooper, a DeGroote School of Business professor emeritus, has been named the top business and management scientist in Canada and ranked 21st globally by Research.com.


During the 40 plus years Robert G. Cooper has spent as a thought leader in product innovation management, a great deal has changed. But the DeGroote School of Business professor emeritus’ philosophy has remained consistent – find big problems and come up with big solutions. The approach has led to much success.

Most recently, Cooper’s approach helped to earn him the No. 1 Canadian and No. 21 global spots on the 2022 edition of Research.com’s Top 1000 Scientists in Business and Management rankings.

Cooper isn’t the only McMaster faculty in the Canadian Top 20. DeGroote’s Nick Bontis, associate professor, strategic management, was ranked ninth while Elko Kleinschmidt, professor emeritus, was ranked 20th. Their rankings give McMaster the distinction of being one of only two Canadian universities with three spots in the Top 20.

“I was surprised when I learned about the ranking,” says Cooper. “When I started to go through it, I saw other names I recognized and I was thrilled. It’s an honour to be included among incredible names and some of my colleagues.”


Years of Innovation

A leading academic researcher platform, Research.com’s rankings are based on qualitative and quantitative analysis of publications and citations. So, while Cooper’s ranking may have surprised him, his body of work backs his positions on the lists.

Having spent more than 40 years studying the practices and pitfalls of over 3,000 new products for thousands of companies, Cooper has assembled the world’s most comprehensive product innovation and management research. The prolific author and innovator has published more than 100 academic articles and 13 books, including the best-selling Winning at New Products, which is now in its fifth edition.

“I’ve always loved innovation and even as a kid, I was always asking, ‘Is there a better way to do this?’” says the former marketing and policy professor. “I always looked for the practical application of science in my own work. I’m still that way today, it’s a driving force.”


In addition to his 40,155 citations and 132 publications, Cooper has also pioneered groundbreaking product innovation discoveries. Almost 80 per cent of North American companies implement his Stage-Gate® Idea-to-Launch Process.

Cooper says McMaster played a crucial role in his ability to advance his research. He joined the university in 1983 through a connection with one of his fellow Top 20 researchers.

“McMaster put me in an environment with like-minded people,” he says. “One of them was Elko Kleinschmidt. He was my PhD student when I taught at McGill. When Elko came to McMaster, he told me to come along. It was so important to have people to collaborate with, especially because at that time this area of innovation research was very new. Also, most schools wouldn’t afford me what McMaster did, which was the opportunity to really spend time on this by being flexible. Then, the head of a DeGroote advisory council set up a chair for me to fund my research. That wouldn’t have happened anywhere else.”

Another Top 20 Connection

That’s not where the connections end between the three Top 20 ranked McMaster researchers. While Cooper and Kleinschmidt’s careers made them collaborators, they also have a special relationship with Bontis. Today, he is internationally recognized as a leading strategy and management expert. But in 1998, when Bontis’s career was in its early stages, his admiration for Cooper and Kleinschmidt played a role in his interest in joining DeGroote’s faculty.

“When I was interviewing for the job at McMaster, it was Bob and Elko who took me out for lunch,” he says. “They were what you wanted to aspire to, and to have them as mentors meant a lot. Fast forward 24 years later, and we still have that connection.”

DeGroote’s only 3M National Teaching Fellow, an exclusive honour reserved for the country’s top university professors, Bontis says his Research.com ranking is a testament to two things. The first is his love for the field of intellectual capital. The second is DeGroote’s commitment to research.

“Having three researchers in the Top 20 speaks to the quality of research and how important it is to translate that research into the real world,” he says. “We’ve all been able to make that transformation from academia to teaching excellence to community impact. Maybe that’s one of the secrets of getting into the Top 20: find a research question that not just researchers are interested in but also that students, the business community and the world are interested in.”

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