Dave Croasdell is the chairman of the Information Systems (IS) department and the Charles and Ruth Hopping Professor of Entrepreneurship at the University of Nevada, Reno, and is involved in many different areas on campus in addition to entrepreneurship and IS, including athletics and international programs.
Can you tell me a little bit about what youโre involved with?
Iโve been pretty fortunate because while I do wear a lot of hats, I feel like all the hats fit pretty well. First and foremost is being a faculty member here and interacting with the students. Thatโs great. Our students in the IS program are generally pretty bright and pretty highly engaged, so thatโs been pretty fun. Iโm chairman of the department, which means I do mostly just a lot of paper pushing. โฆ Iโve been highly engaged in international and global education. Iโm just coming off a stint as chairman of the universityโs international activities commission. โฆ The number of international conferences that this university has hosted in the last year is amazing. Itโs like 12 conferences in five years that weโve hostedโinternational. Iโve had the opportunity to work with Corina Black and the folks at the Northern Nevada International Center putting together a program for Young African Leadership Institute thatโs sponsored by the state department. So next summer we should have 25 young African business leaders here learning about how to do business in the United States. And Iโve taught abroad in almost every continent.
Thatโs pretty awesome.
Itโs very cool. Going to China and manufacturing facilities thereโit was fantastic. And then comparing it to things that are happening in Europe or in Spain. Mark Pingle and myself and Marcel Schaerer, who works in our Small Business Development Center, we just went to Chihuahua, Mexico, for the last five days. We just got back from this global entrepreneurship conference. โฆ So the idea is this notion of global entrepreneurship. Thereโs over 7 billion people on the planet, anyone of them is a potential customer. โฆ So about four or five years ago, the dean reached out to Mark Pingle in economics, and I jumped on board about the same time to boost that program a little bit, start offering more classes. We developed a minor program and started to get some traction with the Entrepreneurship Club and what not.
What would that be, exactly?
There [are] eight centers for cyber security excellence in the United States, but none, that Iโm aware of, on the West Coast. โฆ The idea of a cyber security center is very interdisciplinary. Itโs pulling from political science to do policy, from computer science to do sort of the hardware stuff, from IS to do our thing, from central IT to help support and manage that. Weโre trying to figure out what itโs going to look like. โฆ Itโs about working together, but obviously thereโs a lot of stuff going on right now with security and cyber security in particular. One of the cases thatโs fairly well known is something called Stuxnet, a software virus that was unleashed on nuclear facilities in Iran. They shut their whole plants down with software, and if it can happen to them, it can happen to us.
Are you looking at that becoming a minor program or something like that?
There will be courses that will be offered that will be part of a degree program in computer science or information systems or political science, depending on what the focus is. Weโre working on trying to develop a curriculum. Whether or not it ends up being a degree program, we donโt know yet, but at the very least it will be a certificate program.
Whatโs your favorite thing to be working with?
I really enjoy the entrepreneurship aspect. Itโs people with energy and people with ideas. We talk about not getting a job, but creating your job. So I think for me itโs the entrepreneurship, but the global aspects of it and exploring that in research and talking about it in classes and working on that with various different entities on campus. Thatโs probably been where I get the greatest thrill.
