Winter 2021–2022

Office Hours: Motivating Action Through Marketing

Portrait photo of Gary Ottley
Listen

Gary Ottley MBA’97 feels strongly about the power of marketing. Before arriving at Babson College as an instructor in 2008, he worked for 11 years as a marketing consultant for three firms, and he currently teaches core marketing courses to graduate students.

“I would argue that marketing as a discipline has more power than almost any other business discipline in terms of what it does and what it can do,” the senior lecturer says. “It’s the part of business that convinces people to change their behaviors and has the power to move things from Point A to Point B.”

Ottley’s doctoral work examined the marketing strategies of companies committed to the principles of “conscious capitalism,” and he is convinced that business can and should play a role in addressing complex issues such as income inequality, climate change, and all types of reform. “The very term ‘reform’ implies a change—in behaviors, in attitudes, in actions,” Ottley says. “Marketing has always played a role in all of those changes and phenomena.”

A popular instructor known for animated lectures and a deep voice that carries hints of his childhood in Trinidad and Tobago, Ottley recently received the Dean’s Graduate Teaching Award for his work with students in the full-time, part-time, and blended MBA programs. “If you are in a graduate program at Babson, there is a likely chance that you’ll be in one of my classes at one point or another,” he says. Ottley also teaches undergraduates periodically and has developed and delivered executive education programs.

He recently served on a diversity, equity, and inclusion (DE&I) taskforce, convened early in 2021 to advise the Graduate Academic Policy Committee on ways to advance DE&I initiatives in the graduate school. Increasing the diversity of races, cultures, backgrounds, and perspectives is one of Babson’s critical objectives. In the course of taskforce discussions, Ottley says, he brought up the structural barriers that might prevent students from both enrolling and thriving at Babson, such as income inequality or the challenges faced by international students trying to obtain student visas.


DIGITAL BOOKSHELF: Check out the latest publications by Babson faculty


One of the College’s major initiatives was the creation of the Inclusive Teaching Training Program for faculty members, and Ottley says he’s heartened to see the Babson community taking efforts seriously—and taking action. Making an effort to attract and support students and faculty members from marginalized groups will only strengthen Babson’s programs, Ottley stresses.

“We teach students how to make decisions, and to try to get the best out of those decisions,” he says. “That’s what entrepreneurship is all about. The more and better perspectives you get into that decision-making process, the better your decisions are going to be.”

Posted in Community

More from Babson Magazine »

Latest Stories

Andrew “Zach” Zacharakis applauds while sitting at a table during a BCERC dinner
Honoring Andrew ‘Zach’ Zacharakis for 20 Years as BCERC Director As the 45th annual entrepreneurship research conference returns to Babson’s campus, BCERC pays tribute to Professor Andrew “Zach” Zacharakis for two decades of service. Zacharakis shares reflections of BCERC and its impact.
By
Eric Beato
Editor / Writer
Eric Beato
Eric Beato is the Editor of Babson Thought & Action and Babson Magazine. A native of Chicago and a graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism, Eric has worked as an editor and writer at newspapers across the country, including the Chicago Sun-Times and Boston Herald. Eric joined Babson College in 2019 after working as the communications director for a private educational travel company and as the managing editor of six regional sports publications.
June 16, 2025

Posted in Community, Entrepreneurial Leadership

Public safety dog surrounded by students.
It’s All in the Name: Hero the Dog Brings Safety and Smiles to Babson Trained by the state police, Babson’s newest Public Safety dog comes with unique skills to boost campus safety and community engagement.
By
Hillary Chabot
Writer
Hillary Chabot
Hillary Chabot is a writer for Babson Thought & Action and Babson Magazine. An award-winning journalist, she is known for her insightful reporting and dedication to detailed storytelling. With a career spanning over two decades, she has covered a wide range of topics, from presidential campaigns and government policy to neighborhood issues and investigative series. As a reporter for The Boston Herald, Hillary earned a reputation for tenacity and integrity. Her work at Babson College fuels her passions—to learn something new every day and conduct thoughtful, empathic interviews. She’s thrilled to be at Babson College, where students, faculty, staff members and classes provide compelling copy daily.
June 12, 2025

Posted in Community

Runners pose for a photo on a rainy day at Babson
The 10K for Babson: A Rainy Run and a New Fundraising Record  Those running and walking in the 10K for Babson faced soggy conditions, but the annual event raised the most money in its history for the Melissa Shaak Student Emergency Fund.
By
John Crawford
Senior Journalist
John Crawford
A writer for Babson Thought & Action and the Babson Magazine, John Crawford has been telling the College’s entrepreneurial story for more than 15 years. Assignments for Babson have taken him from Rwanda to El Salvador, from the sweet-smelling factory of a Pennsylvania candy maker, to the stately Atlanta headquarters of an NFL owner, to the bustling office of a New York City fashion designer. Beyond his work for Babson, he has written articles and essays for The Philadelphia Inquirer, Notre Dame Magazine, The Good Men Project, and other publications. He can be found on Twitter, @crawfordwriter, where he tweets about climate change.
June 11, 2025

Posted in Community