Difference between revisions of "Fellow:Adam Marcinkowski"

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(Created page with "=Adam Marcinkowski= Adam is a junior Mechanical Engineering student and University Innovation Fellow Candidate at the Colorado School of Mines. He transferred from the United ...")
 
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=Adam Marcinkowski=
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= Adam Marcinkowski =
Adam is a junior Mechanical Engineering student and University Innovation Fellow Candidate at the Colorado School of Mines. He transferred from the United States Air Force Academy where his academic background was in Political Science with a focus on how to innovate within large organizations.
 
  
At the Air Force Academy and an internship at Facebook, Adam's research asked two questions: what is it about the DNA of Silicon Valley companies that makes them so agile and adaptable? How do we export those elements to other organizations elsewhere? His work combined the good (growth mindset, rapid experimentation, culture building), the bad (the many ways bureaucracies try to kill innovation) and the ugly (building political capital, navigating bureaucracies, and culture change).
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Adam is a junior Mechanical Engineering student and University Innovation Fellow Candidate at the Colorado School of Mines. He transferred from the United States Air Force Academy where he studied Political Science with a focus on how to innovate within large organizations. Adam became a UIF candidate to join the ranks of take-charge, unconventional change leaders.
  
Adam is able to use this organizational innovation mindset as a Mines Venture Associate at Mines' Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation. He helps develop entrepreneurial thinking in his fellow engineering students, while helping student organizations and clubs launch initiatives and adopt innovation strategies.
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Adam is currently a Mines Venture Associate at his university's Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation. He helps launch and coordinate innovative and entrepreneurial activities across the Mines campus. These include the hackathon-like "Hackmines Innovation Challenge", the Mines Maker Society, campus makerspaces, the Golden Startup Festival pitch competition, and more. A firm believer in the benefits of a competitive spirit, Adam has either captained, launched, and/or helped popularize different business and engineering competitions across campus.
  
Besides innovation and entrepreneurship, Adam is heavily involved in aerospace on campus. His specific passion, and the reason he's at Mines, is space mining. He is currently the project lead for a NASA lunar mining design competition, VP of the American Institute for Aeronautics & Astronautics (AIAA), and the chairman of AIAA's Space Resources Committee.
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A systems-level thinker trained in organizational intrapreneurship and innovation, Adam also hopes to put his educational background to the test. His stint as an Air Force researcher in Silicon Valley was spent investigating two key questions: what is it about the DNA of Silicon Valley companies that makes them so agile and adaptable? More importantly, how do we export those elements to other organizations? His work combined the good (growth mindset, rapid experimentation, culture building), the bad (the many ways bureaucracies try to kill innovation) and the ugly (building political capital, navigating bureaucracies, and culture change).
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Besides innovation and entrepreneurship, Adam is heavily involved in aerospace on campus. Adam's mission in life is to help move human civilization off-world so that we can live permanently in space and on other planets. The best way to do this, he believes, is through space mining - a major reason Adam transferred to Mines, Planet Earth's top-ranked mining university and the only one to have a program in Space Resources. But large-scale human space colonization relies just as much on the human aspect as it does fuel, construction, and manufacturing. Still a social scientist at heart, Adam hopes to help others rethink education, ethics, and society for the 21st century.

Revision as of 02:28, 27 January 2018

Adam Marcinkowski

Adam is a junior Mechanical Engineering student and University Innovation Fellow Candidate at the Colorado School of Mines. He transferred from the United States Air Force Academy where he studied Political Science with a focus on how to innovate within large organizations. Adam became a UIF candidate to join the ranks of take-charge, unconventional change leaders.

Adam is currently a Mines Venture Associate at his university's Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation. He helps launch and coordinate innovative and entrepreneurial activities across the Mines campus. These include the hackathon-like "Hackmines Innovation Challenge", the Mines Maker Society, campus makerspaces, the Golden Startup Festival pitch competition, and more. A firm believer in the benefits of a competitive spirit, Adam has either captained, launched, and/or helped popularize different business and engineering competitions across campus.

A systems-level thinker trained in organizational intrapreneurship and innovation, Adam also hopes to put his educational background to the test. His stint as an Air Force researcher in Silicon Valley was spent investigating two key questions: what is it about the DNA of Silicon Valley companies that makes them so agile and adaptable? More importantly, how do we export those elements to other organizations? His work combined the good (growth mindset, rapid experimentation, culture building), the bad (the many ways bureaucracies try to kill innovation) and the ugly (building political capital, navigating bureaucracies, and culture change).

Besides innovation and entrepreneurship, Adam is heavily involved in aerospace on campus. Adam's mission in life is to help move human civilization off-world so that we can live permanently in space and on other planets. The best way to do this, he believes, is through space mining - a major reason Adam transferred to Mines, Planet Earth's top-ranked mining university and the only one to have a program in Space Resources. But large-scale human space colonization relies just as much on the human aspect as it does fuel, construction, and manufacturing. Still a social scientist at heart, Adam hopes to help others rethink education, ethics, and society for the 21st century.