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Matthew Brady

Matthew Brady

Matthew Brady, assistant teaching professor in Organizational Leadership and Information Analytics, arrived at Leeds in 2020. In just five years, he鈥檚 made a remarkable impact鈥攄esigning three听 courses, launching the (now the Colorado Sustainability Challenge), and co-founding the . He also manages to run a startup and balances it with family life as a devoted husband and father of three.

Tech and teaching the thoughtful way听

Walk into Brady鈥檚 office and it feels like an oasis鈥攃lean, organized and lined with sound panels that look like a painting evoking impressionistic skies. That blend of form and function mirrors his teaching, bringing a sense of beauty to technology鈥攕omething that on the surface may seem contradictory. His courses鈥擟ustomer Success with Salesforce CRM, Low-Code for Citizen Developers, and AI & Automation for Tomorrow鈥檚 Societies鈥攁re built around the concept of embedding ethics and empathy into innovation鈥攁nd Brady demonstrates that it's not only a goal鈥攊t's possible.

His passion lies in using tech to address real-world challenges like healthcare access, energy overuse and even loneliness. One example: He built a custom AI chatbot trained on his course materials to serve as a teaching assistant. 鈥淪tudents learn how to use the tool to elevate their work, not have it do the work for them,鈥 he said.

His innovative approach earned him the David B. Balkin and Rosalind & Chester Barnow Endowed Innovation Teaching Award鈥攑resented at Commencement as his daughter, Alexandra Brady (MBusAn鈥25, Ebio鈥24), received her diploma. It was a milestone moment he鈥檒l never forget, especially after their extended family missed being together for her earlier graduations due to the pandemic and other obligations.

鈥淢y goal is to push students to prepare for leadership,鈥 he said. 鈥淭ech will play a major role, but we have to train both the hands and the heart.鈥

In the age of AI, that means asking: 鈥淗ow do you empathize with people whose jobs will be replaced? How do we upscale those members of our communities to do work that matters?鈥

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鈥淢y goal is to push students to prepare for leadership. Tech will play a major role, but we have to train both the hands and the heart.鈥

Matthew Brady, assistant teaching professor

He encourages students to see themselves as changemakers. 鈥淚 tell them the AI headlines shouldn't instill undue fear鈥攂ecause they鈥檒l be the ones driving that AI and modernization.鈥

Brady sees Leeds students as uniquely prepared. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e entering internships or full-time roles with skills they can immediately apply,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd part of that maturity is knowing what you don鈥檛 know鈥攁nd how to seek guidance and direction.鈥

鈥淭hese are elite students,鈥 he said, saying that Leeds brings in the country鈥檚 most talented students bar none. 鈥淭hey genuinely want to know how business can affect real problems in our society.鈥

Real-world lessons from a startup veteran听

Matthew Brady addresses student during an event

Brady brings teaching passion to the classroom, inspired in part by his mother, a teacher. He also brings deep entrepreneurial experience from five successful ventures. In 2020, after selling a company to private equity, Brady chose to and founded , a platform that helps companies optimize performance.

鈥淢y goal with Volley is to help organizations make better decisions using data and align people around maximizing outcomes,鈥 he said. His startup launch was followed by a call for someone to teach a course on Salesforce at Leeds, and Brady knew he could share his insights in the classroom.

At Leeds, Brady helps students marry data science鈥攆inding patterns in large datasets鈥攚ith decision science, which he emphasizes goes far beyond analytics.

He stresses that good decisions also rely on the intangible: gut feelings, emotional cues and human instincts. 鈥淵ou only have the information you have at the time,鈥 he said. 鈥淟ater, you gain more. So, how do you prove a decision was the best鈥攅ven if it didn鈥檛 work out?鈥

That鈥檚 the kind of thinking he instills in students, encouraging them to bet on themselves, too. One team that did鈥擣oodWise鈥攕tarted at the Sustainability Hackathon, won the New Venture Challenge and became a real business.

Brady also works to dispel the myth that business students aren鈥檛 technical. 鈥淪tudents think if they鈥檙e not in computer science or engineering, they must not be technical. No way,鈥 he said. 鈥淏usiness school doesn鈥檛 mean you鈥檙e not technical鈥攊t means you use strategic business frameworks and playbooks to accelerate the impact of technology.鈥

Fail faster, learn faster

Brady鈥檚 own path wasn鈥檛 linear. He began at Purdue University intending to become an engineer but struggled through two years before switching majors. That pivot, he said, shaped his future.

鈥淲hat I learned was that I鈥檇 rather fail quickly and get feedback early.鈥 It鈥檚 a philosophy he brings to teaching, mirroring the iterative pace of the software development world鈥攚hat he calls 鈥減lan, do, check, act.鈥

鈥淵ou find out how things are going and course correct. That鈥檚 the ethos of Agile software development,鈥 he said. Conversely, 鈥測ou could spend six months building something only to learn the customer didn鈥檛 like your original design.鈥

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鈥淲e have to think through the implications of any tool鈥攚hether it鈥檚 a hammer or AI. How can it be used to advance human flourishing?鈥

Matthew Brady, assistant teaching professor

He also wants students to understand their value. 鈥淚 want them to know their capabilities, value and earning potential鈥攏ot just salary-wise, but the hourly rate they should charge for things like building a website or app or AI agent.鈥 That awareness helps them balance paid work with pro bono efforts, he said.

Brady regularly brings guest speakers into class to expand students鈥 perspectives and reinforce the importance of ethical tech. 鈥淲e have to think through the implications of any tool鈥攚hether it鈥檚 a hammer or AI. How can it be used to advance human flourishing?鈥

Despite being an AI advocate, he challenges students to question the urgency around it. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been in development for decades, but there are cautionary tales. We can鈥檛 let technology displace humans in leading decisions, organizations or even mentoring or counseling.鈥

To Brady, the goal is clear: 鈥淟et AI do the jobs we don鈥檛 want鈥攍ike a robotic vacuum鈥攕o we can focus on being the creative human beings that we are鈥攄oing the things we鈥檙e uniquely capable of.鈥