WOLFSDORF BRENNER, INCORPORATED
Negotiation & Conflict Management
For Technology People
WOLFSDORF BRENNER, INCORPORATED
Negotiation & Conflict Management
For Technology People
Tracey Wolfsdorf Brenner is Founder and President of WOLFSDORF BRENNER, INCORPORATED. A Harvard trained mediator and former technology director and senior engineer, Dr. Brenner integrates engineering with communication, negotiation, and conflict transformation expertise to guide tech-driven people and businesses. She also serves on the SRA International roster for conflict management, as a mediator for the Massachusetts District and Housing Courts, and as a supervisor for student mediators at the Harvard Mediation Program.
Dr. Brenner has over 10 years experience in academic, governmental, and industrial institutions in research, development, and manufacturing. She has participated in technology transfer initiatives, developed new programs and technologies, established inter and intra-organizational partnerships, negotiated complex purchasing and technology development agreements, and created consensus around contentious issues - including health and human safety in the workplace.
Dr. Brenner’s academic experience also informs her consulting practice. She developed and taught the first Technology Negotiations executive education workshops with colleagues at the Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School, and the joint graduate/undergraduate course in the Technology Management Program at the University of California at Santa Barbara.
Dr. Brenner holds a Ph.D. in Materials Science and Engineering from Northwestern University, and undergraduate degrees from the University of Pennsylvania. She has lectured at the University of California at Los Angeles, Harvard University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Columbia University, and has worked in/with organizations including NASA, Intel Corporation, Digital Semiconductor, Kopin Corporation, and Argonne National Labs.
©2006-2010 Wolfsdorf Brenner, Incorporated. All rights reserved.
Image credits: NASA Images.
A service of the Internet Archive