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Peter Johnson (entrepreneur)

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Peter Johnson
Born1956 (age 67–68)
York, England
NationalityBritish
EducationMA, D Phil
MA, MBA
Alma materOxford University
Stanford University
Employer(s)Exeter College
Oxford University
TitleEmeritus Fellow

Peter Johnson is a British academic[1] and entrepreneur[2] who is the founder[3][4] of Venturefest,[5] an entrepreneurial festival. He is an Emeritus Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford. His most notable publications relate to the formal economic underpinnings of business strategy[6] and valuation,[7] and to the philosophical status of physical constants[8] - such as the speed of light - in scientific theories.

Education

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Born in York in 1956, Johnson moved to Hertfordshire in 1962. He attended local state schools until the age of 13 when he won a Fleming Scholarship to Eton College awarded by Hertfordshire.[citation needed] He excelled at Eton[9] and was appointed Captain of the Oppidans. In 1974 he won an Open Scholarship to Balliol College, Oxford,[9] to read Physics and Philosophy under Prof. Bill Newton-Smith. In 1978 his top First Class degree, emphasising Theoretical Physics, Logic and the Philosophy of Physics, led to a Masters in the Philosophy of Science, at Stanford University in 1979.[10]

Career

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Strategy consulting

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Johnson became Bain and Company’s first Oxbridge associate and eighth employee in Europe in 1979. In 1981, Johnson went to Stanford Business School, graduating as an Arjay Miller Scholar[11] and equal top student in finance. Johnson then joined LEK Consulting, an offshoot of Bain in Europe, and was the first non-founding equity partner. He founded the Paris office in 1989.[12]

Academia

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Johnson returned to Balliol College in 1993 to undertake a doctorate in the philosophy of science. In 1996 his thesis ‘The Constants of Nature’, was published by Ashgate Publishing.[13] While pursuing his doctorate, Johnson was involved in the planning and resourcing of the Said Business School, Oxford, designing core elements of the MBA curriculum and managing external corporate relations. In 1996 he was elected Ernest Butten Fellow in Management[14] at Balliol College. From 1996 to 1999, as the Director of Corporate Relations and acting Operations Director, Johnson worked with the Dean, John Kay, and Academic Director, Colin Mayer. Johnson also developed policy and governance initiatives including the bid for the Science Enterprise Challenge[15] on behalf of the University. In 1999, Johnson was appointed University Lecturer (Associate Professor in US terminology) in New Business Development and Tutorial Fellow at Exeter College.[16]

Entrepreneurship

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Original Venturefest 1999 Poster

Johnson taught strategy and entrepreneurship, leading him, with the help of David Sainsbury to launch[17] an entrepreneurial festival, Venturefest,[18] on behalf of Oxford and Brookes universities in 1999. The goal was to establish the entrepreneurial equivalent of the Cannes Film Festival. The first fair attracted over 1800 attendees over two days, helped by support from the Gatsby Charitable Foundation, Oxford County Council, IBM, Reuters, McKinsey. Such was its success in the early years[19][20][21] that it spawned other Venturefest events in London and York, and has extended throughout England and Scotland.[5] In setting up Venturefest, Johnson drew on his experiences as an angel investor, and as a non-executive director of university spin outs (Oxford Phosphor Systems – Opsys Ltd., and Cambridge Flat Projection Displays Ltd.[2]), and of early-stage venture funders Egan & Talbot,[22] and QTP[2] in Oxford and Cambridge. He pursued further entrepreneurial engagement in an active executive role, including at Cartezia Ltd,[23] a specialist digital business-building consultancy and incubator.

Investment

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At a number of Oxford Colleges, the Finance and Investment Bursar (CFO, CIO) is chosen from the academic fellows, on a rotating basis. Johnson twice played this role at Exeter College, 2000-1, and 2004-7.[24] He implemented major changes in investment policy, introducing a variant of Swensen’s Yale model, and establishing an external advisory committee comprising members from Apax Partners, Tudor,[25] Adam Street,[26] UBS, and London Business School. On a leave of absence from Exeter College 2007-9, Johnson deepened his investment acumen as an equity partner in a US hedge fund, D3 Family Fund,[27] a small-cap equities specialist.

Philosophy of science/physics research

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Johnson’s book, The Constants of Nature, reprinted by Routledge in 2018, builds on earlier work concerning the ontological status of the constants that appear in physical theory by Norman Campbell,[28] Herbert Dingle[29] and Julio Palacios.[30] Dingle, Mach, Bridgman and others had asserted that physical constants such as G, the gravitational constant, ε0 or μ0, the permittivity and permeability of free space, had only a conventional status. This arose because dimensional analysis, in particular Buckingham’s π Theorem, allows any instance of a given constant to be removed, or its dimensions altered, by changing the choice of the fundamental dimensions and quantities in which the equations of physics are written. Johnson established that this conclusion was only warranted once a system for the measurement of physical quantities had been defined (which permitted multiple dimensional representations of a given physical quantity under which its dimensions might be altered, or its occurrence made superfluous). By providing a more fundamental, pre-measurement framework to define constants, using predicates and operators following the methods of axiomatic set theory, Johnson demonstrated that constants are not undermined by conventionalism, and established a realist underpinning for physical constants as architectural features within the physics that describe the universe in which we exist. Johnson then went on to explicate more generally what this notion of realism entailed, employing for the most part The Natural Ontological Attitude (NOA) as expounded by Arthur Fine.[31]

Finance and strategy research

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In his early strategy research, Johnson developed alternative measures of financial performance which were robust and less prone to manipulation. In collaboration with Howard Thomas,[32] he established that there was good statistical evidence for the use of Resource Margin Accounting (RMA),[7] also known as the Return on Value Added (ROVA) or Return on Net Output (RONO) familiar to economists. In 2005, Johnson published Astute Competition: The Economics of Strategic Diversity,[33] integrating the concepts, tools and theories that he had developed in his consulting work, teaching, and entrepreneurial activities. Johnson explains the competitive heterogeneity[34] of businesses in terms of opportunity rents earned from the astute deployment of distinct business models in empirically defined strategic ecosystems.

Concerned about the fluidity and imprecision shown by those who loosely employ the term strategy in business and academic dialogue, in later work Johnson has defined formally what business strategy is and outlined a taxonomic approach to describe business models using matrices and tensors: business genomics. Emulating earlier work by Ramsay[35] and Hotelling,[36] in his joint paperwith Nicolai Foss, Johnson uses the calculus of variations - more generally Pontryagin’s Maximum Principle in Control Theory - to optimise the path of resource utilisation for a business pursuing an optimal strategy,[37] proving that the optimal path ifs the shortest path in resource space in accordance with the Principle of Least Action.

Johnson has similarly addressed the concern that the concept of a business model is lacking formalisation in the current academic literature. To describe formally how the business deploys its resources, Johnson extended the matrix business model framework he introduced in Astute Competition. In a paper[38] published in 2017, Johnson demonstrated how matrix methods may usefully be deployed to characterise the architecture of resources, costs, and revenues that a business uses to create and deliver value to customers which defines its business model. Systematisation of this technique (Johnson settles on a business genomic code of seven matrix elements of a business model) would support a taxonomical approach to empirical studies of business models in the same way that Linnaeus’ taxonomy revolutionised biology.[39]

Selected publications

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Books and chapters

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  • Johnson, P., (2013), ‘Value-based Planning’, in Encyclopaedia of Management, 3rd Edition, Volume 13, Wiley, New Jersey.
  • Johnson, P., (2013), ‘Value-based Strategy’, in Encyclopaedia of Management, 3rd Edition, Volume 13, Wiley, New Jersey.
  • Johnson, P., (2007), Astute Competition – The Economics of Strategic Diversity, Elsevier, Oxford.
  • Johnson, P., (2003), 'Strategy and Valuation’ in Faulkner D. O. and Campbell A. (eds.) The Oxford Handbook of Strategy Volume 1, OUP, Oxford.
  • Johnson, P., (2000), 'Beyond EVA: Resource Margin Accounting’, in T. Dickson (ed.) Mastering Strategy, London, Pearson.
  • Johnson, P., (1997), The Constants of Nature: A Realist Account, Ashgate, Aldershot; reprinted (2018), Routledge, Abingdon.

Key papers

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  • Johnson, P., (2017), Business Models: Formal Description and Economic Optimisation, Managerial and Decision Economics, Vol. 38-8, 1105-1115.
  • Johnson, P., Foss, N. J., (2016), Optimal Strategy and Business Models: A Control Theory Approach, Managerial and Decision Economics, Vol. 37-7, 515-529.
  • Johnson, P., Thomas, H., (2007), Resource Margin Accounting: An Elucidation and Preliminary Empirical Testing, Management Decision, Vol. 45, No.3, 420-433.

References

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  1. ^ "Dr Peter Johnson Emeritus Fellow, Exeter College Oxford". Exeter College, Oxford. April 2021.
  2. ^ a b c "Dr Peter Johnson Directorships". Companies House UK. April 2021.
  3. ^ Katherine, Campbell (17 June 1999). "GROWING BUSINESS:VENTUREFEST The ice-cream route to seeding technology". Financial Times. p. 21.
  4. ^ "Oxford to host business and innovation fair". Oxford University Gazette. 129/No.4505: 877–878 – via SOLO.
  5. ^ a b "Innovate UK GOV - What are Venturefests?". Innovate UK. 2 September 2015.
  6. ^ Johnson, P,. Foss, N. J. (December 2016). "Optimal Strategy and Business Models:A Control Theory Approach". Managerial and Decision Economics. 37–7 (8): 515–529. doi:10.1002/mde.2738 – via JSTOR.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ a b Johnson, P., Thomas, H. (April 2007). "Resource Margin Accounting: An Elucidation and Preliminary Economic Testing". Management Decision. 45–3: 420–433. doi:10.1108/00251740710745052 – via JSTOR.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ Johnson, Peter (1997). The Constants of Nature - A Realist Account. Abingdon, Oxford: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-34931-5.
  9. ^ a b Jones, J., ed. (1993). Balliol College Register (6th ed.). Abingdon: Thomas Leach. p. 448.
  10. ^ "Philosophy of Science Stanford" (PDF). Stanford University.
  11. ^ "Certificate & Award Recipients". Stanford Graduate School of Business.
  12. ^ "LEK Paris Overview". L.E.K. Consulting. Sep 2022.
  13. ^ Peter, Johnson (1997). The Constants of Nature - A Realist Account. Aldershot: Routledge. ISBN 1-84014-102-6.
  14. ^ Jones, J., ed. (2005). Balliol College Register (7th ed.). Abingdon: Thomas Leach. p. 278.
  15. ^ "Science Enterprise Challenge - Monday 15 February 1999 - Hansard - UK Parliament".
  16. ^ "Emeritus Fellow in Management". Exeter College, Oxford.
  17. ^ "Venturefest's 18th Anniversary". Venturefest. 2017.
  18. ^ "Venturefest Oxford | For innovators, investors and entrepreneurs". Venturefest Oxford. Retrieved 2022-09-15.
  19. ^ Hartford, Maggie (13 March 2000). "City flexes its high-tech muscles". Oxford Mail.
  20. ^ "How to be a dot-com millionaire". Oxford Mail. 28 April 2000.
  21. ^ Akkerhuys, Zarah (5 June 2000). "Inventors sought for ideas display". Oxford Mail.
  22. ^ "Egan & Talbot". My Capital. April 2021.
  23. ^ "Cartezia Commercialising Science and Technology-enabled Innovation". Cartezia. April 2021.
  24. ^ Oxford University Calendar 2004/5. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2004. p. 234. ISBN 0-19-951904-8.
  25. ^ "Tudor Investment Corporation". Tudor. April 2021.
  26. ^ "Adams Street". Adams Street Partners. April 2021.
  27. ^ "D3 Family Fund". Insider Monkey. April 2021.
  28. ^ Campbell, Norman (1928). An Account of the Principles of Measurement and Calculation. London: Longmans.
  29. ^ Dingle, Herbert (1950). "A Theory of Measurement". British Journal for the Philosophy of Science. 1 (1): 5–26. doi:10.1093/bjps/I.1.5. JSTOR 685667 – via JSTOR.
  30. ^ Palacios, Julio (1964). Dimensional Analysis. London: MacMillan.
  31. ^ Fine, Arthur (1984). The Natural Ontological Attitude. Berkeley: University of California. pp. 83–107.
  32. ^ "Howard Thomas, Dean Singapore Management University". Google Scholar. April 2021.
  33. ^ Johnson, Peter (2007). Astute Competition: The Economics of Strategic Diversity. Oxford: Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-08-045321-7.
  34. ^ Hoopes, D. G.; Madsen, T. L. (Oct 2003). "Why is there a Resource-based View? Toward a Theory of Competitive Heterogeneity". Strategic Management Journal. 24 (10): 889–902. doi:10.1002/smj.356 – via JSTOR.
  35. ^ Ramsey, F.P. (1928). "A Mathematical Theory of Saving". Economic Journal. 38 (152): 543–549. doi:10.2307/2224098. JSTOR 2224098.
  36. ^ Hotelling, H (1931). "The Economics of Exhaustible Resources". Journal of Political Economy. 39 (2): 137–175. doi:10.1086/254195. S2CID 222432341 – via JSTOR.
  37. ^ Johnson, P.; Foss, N..J (May 2016). "Optimal Strategy and Business Models: A Control Theory Approach". Managerial and Decision Economics. 37–7 (8): 515–529. doi:10.1002/mde.2738 – via JSTOR.
  38. ^ Johnson, P. (December 2017). "Business Models: Formal Description and Economic Optimization". Managerial and Decision Economics. 38–8 (8): 1105–1115. doi:10.1002/mde.2849 – via JSTOR.
  39. ^ Calisher, CH (2007). "Taxonomy: what's in a name? Doesn't a rose by any other name smell as sweet?". Croatian Medical Journal. 48 (2): 268–270. PMC 2080517. PMID 17436393.
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