Do a PhD degree

in Business Development and Technology



The PhD programme in Business Development and Technology is an internationally recognised PhD programme at Aarhus BSS that prepares graduates to create new knowledge that is important for both research and society.



As a PhD student in Herning, you will become part of an ambitious and interdisciplinary environment with close links to business and industry and international partners. The programme includes advanced courses, teaching, research communication and ends with a dissertation documenting your results. The PhD programme is aimed at people wanting a research-based career in academia, business, the public sector or in NGOs.



PhD profiles

Meet our PhD students and find out about their research, backgrounds and professional interests. Click on the individual profiles to learn more about their projects and see how their work is generating new knowledge in the field of business development and technology.

See all PhD profiles:

PhD Students

Courses for PhD students

The Department of Business Development and Technology offers PhD programmes that strengthen your research skills and provide insight into the symbiotic relationship between business development, technology and practice.

Introduction to Systematic Literature Reviews as a Scientific Inquiry

Period Spring semester
Course type PhD seminar
ECTS 5
Instructor Sven Kunisch, PhD
Room TBA | Birk Centerpark 15 | Herning
Day 1  16 April 2026
Days 2-4 20-22 May 2026
Paper submission deadline 3 July 2026
Maximum enrolment The maximum number of students is 20
Academic prerequisites Enrolment is restricted to PhD students. The seminar is open to all PhD students, but preference will be given to PhD students from the PhD programme at the Department of Business Development and Technology, followed by PhD students from other PhD programmes at Aarhus BSS Graduate School.
Compulsory literature All articles marked with *
Background

While a literature review is part of any research project, including a PhD dissertation, systematic literature reviews have emerged as a form of scientific inquiry and a stand-alone research project. They encompass “a class of research inquiries that employ scientific methods to analyse and synthesize prior research to develop new knowledge for academia, practice and policy-making” (Kunisch et al., 2023, p. 5). Thus, systematic literature reviews can play a crucial role in advancing scientific knowledge and promoting progress in society. 

This type of research spans a wide range of methods, including qualitative and quantitative approaches (meta-analysis and bibliometric analysis). These methods can help address a variety of research purposes aimed at generating new knowledge for the benefit of science and society. For example, Annual Reviews publishes literature reviews that “capture current understanding of a topic, including what is well supported and what is controversial; set the work in historical context; highlight the major questions that remain to be addressed and the likely course of research in upcoming years; and outline the practical applications and general significance of research to society” (www.annualreviews.org).

Learning objectives

This PhD seminar exposes participants to the ‘world of possibilities’ in systematic literature reviews in various fields. The seminar enables PhD students to understand basic purposes and approaches of different types of systematic literature reviews and to apply them properly to their own individual research topics.  

Specifically, after completion of the PhD seminar, participants should be able to:

  • Plan and conduct a systematic literature review as part of a research project (i.e. a form of scientific inquiry).
  • Consider a wide range of purposes for conducting a systematic literature review (and making different knowledge contributions).
  • Consider various approaches for search and selection as well as for analysis and synthesis.
  • Discuss considerations for purpose-method fit as well as aspects of rigor and impact in line with systematic literature reviews.
  • Present own methodology and discuss relevant methodological considerations related to their own literature review as part of a research project.

Participants also prepare a first draft of a literature review based on well-grounded review methods, which could be developed into a research paper for their PhD dissertation.

Format and schedule

This PhD seminar comprises four days of class discussions, readings and class preparation. Participants must be prepared for each session, i.e. they are expected to have carefully read and engaged with each reading assignment prior to class. This includes reading the mandatory articles marked with (*), which are a combination of classic articles on certain review methods and more recent articles that conduct a rigorous and impactful literature review. The teaching format is mainly ‘flipped classroom’ (more details on this are provided below, along with the details on the examination and session leadership).

Days Topics
Day 1 Welcome and introduction:
1. Introduction to review research
Optional Individual consultation with session leaders
Day 2 Planning the review:
2. Types of literature reviews and knowledge contributions
3. Specific types (integrative, problematising and critical reviews)
4. Systematicity (rigor, trustworthiness, among others)
Day 3 Search and selection of the data:
5. Sample selection and search (databases; broad vs. narrow search; keywords; types of data, e.g. grey literature)

Analysis and synthesis of the data:
6. Qualitative approaches: qualitative analysis, coding and synthesis
7. Quantitative approaches: meta-analysis, bibliometric analysis
Day 4 Writing and publishing the research paper:
8. Presenting insights and publishing
9. Possible outlets / possibly guest lecture / trends and tips and tricks
Final paper Submission of a (short) literature review research paper
Exam details

Successful completion of the PhD seminar is based on the following two requirements:

  1. Session leadership (individual or group assignment): 50%
  2. Research paper (individual assignment): 50%

Both parts must be passed to successfully to complete the seminar. 

1. Session leadership

Each person (or group) will act as a session leader for one session (i.e. one of the topic areas). The session leader is expected to act as an expert (a team) on the topic and facilitate class discussion. 

Each session has a duration of approx. 90 minutes. Participants should spend about 2/3 of their time on the method aspect and the remaining 1/3 on EITHER the critical analysis of the selected article OR on a practical exercise. The output should be a PowerPoint presentation as well as a two-page summary of the topic area (a Word document) OR an exercise.

Within each topic area, participants should elaborate on the following aspects in particular:

  • Key ideas
  • Alternatives and key considerations
  • Practical suggestions
  • Critical analysis of a selected article OR practical exercise (e.g. how to search, etc.)

2. Research paper

Each participant must submit a literature review research paper. Participants can choose a specific domain and review method. The purpose of this paper is to enable PhD students to carry out an initial systematic review in the context of their PhD dissertation topic and to develop their skills to conduct rigorous and impactful literature reviews as part of a stand-alone research project.

The research paper should address at least the following aspects:

  1. Motivate a systematic literature review (review purpose and methods). This should be done in the introduction, which should briefly describe the domain, identify the research purpose and state what the participant plans to do to tackle the identified problem in the literature. Each of these issues should be addressed in one or a few short paragraphs.
  2. Carry out an initial systematic literature review of the extant knowledge in the specific domain and other fields related to the issue. The review method should be clearly described.
  3. Conduct the analysis for a subset of the literature (approx. 20-30 articles) and synthesise the initial insights from the systematic literature review (in a framework, model, typology, etc.).
  4. Develop initial ideas for future research. This is optional.

Style guide: maximum five pages of text plus two pages of references (and graphs); single-spaced; 11 Times New Roman points.

Workload
Workload type Working hours
Preparatory assignments (general reading) 10
Participation in class 20
Preparation for session leadership / presentation topics 40
Reading for other sessions 20
Literature review research paper 60
Total (5 ECTS) 150

Introduction to Systematic

Literature Reviews as a Scientific Inquiry
Period Spring semester
Course type PhD seminar
ECTS 5
Instructor Sven Kunisch, PhD
Room TBA | Birk Centerpark 15 | Herning
Day 1  16 April 2026
Days 2-4 20-22 May 2026
Paper submission deadline 3 July 2026
Maximum enrolment The maximum number of students is 20
Academic prerequisites Enrolment is restricted to PhD students. The seminar is open to all PhD students, but preference will be given to PhD students from the PhD programme at the Department of Business Development and Technology, followed by PhD students from other PhD programmes at Aarhus BSS Graduate School.
Compulsory literature All articles marked with *
Background

While a literature review is part of any research project, including a PhD dissertation, systematic literature reviews have emerged as a form of scientific inquiry and a stand-alone research project. They encompass “a class of research inquiries that employ scientific methods to analyse and synthesize prior research to develop new knowledge for academia, practice and policy-making” (Kunisch et al., 2023, p. 5). Thus, systematic literature reviews can play a crucial role in advancing scientific knowledge and promoting progress in society. 

This type of research spans a wide range of methods, including qualitative and quantitative approaches (meta-analysis and bibliometric analysis). These methods can help address a variety of research purposes aimed at generating new knowledge for the benefit of science and society. For example, Annual Reviews publishes literature reviews that “capture current understanding of a topic, including what is well supported and what is controversial; set the work in historical context; highlight the major questions that remain to be addressed and the likely course of research in upcoming years; and outline the practical applications and general significance of research to society” (www.annualreviews.org).

Learning objectives

This PhD seminar exposes participants to the ‘world of possibilities’ in systematic literature reviews in various fields. The seminar enables PhD students to understand basic purposes and approaches of different types of systematic literature reviews and to apply them properly to their own individual research topics.  

Specifically, after completion of the PhD seminar, participants should be able to:

  • Plan and conduct a systematic literature review as part of a research project (i.e. a form of scientific inquiry).
  • Consider a wide range of purposes for conducting a systematic literature review (and making different knowledge contributions).
  • Consider various approaches for search and selection as well as for analysis and synthesis.
  • Discuss considerations for purpose-method fit as well as aspects of rigor and impact in line with systematic literature reviews.
  • Present own methodology and discuss relevant methodological considerations related to their own literature review as part of a research project.

Participants also prepare a first draft of a literature review based on well-grounded review methods, which could be developed into a research paper for their PhD dissertation.

Format and schedule

This PhD seminar comprises four days of class discussions, readings and class preparation. Participants must be prepared for each session, i.e. they are expected to have carefully read and engaged with each reading assignment prior to class. This includes reading the mandatory articles marked with (*), which are a combination of classic articles on certain review methods and more recent articles that conduct a rigorous and impactful literature review. The teaching format is mainly ‘flipped classroom’ (more details on this are provided below, along with the details on the examination and session leadership).

Days Topics
Day 1 Welcome and introduction:
1. Introduction to review research
Optional Individual consultation with session leaders
Day 2 Planning the review:
2. Types of literature reviews and knowledge contributions
3. Specific types (integrative, problematising and critical reviews)
4. Systematicity (rigor, trustworthiness, among others)
Day 3 Search and selection of the data:
5. Sample selection and search (databases; broad vs. narrow search; keywords; types of data, e.g. grey literature)

Analysis and synthesis of the data:
6. Qualitative approaches: qualitative analysis, coding and synthesis
7. Quantitative approaches: meta-analysis, bibliometric analysis
Day 4 Writing and publishing the research paper:
8. Presenting insights and publishing
9. Possible outlets / possibly guest lecture / trends and tips and tricks
Final paper Submission of a (short) literature review research paper
Exam details

Successful completion of the PhD seminar is based on the following two requirements:

  1. Session leadership (individual or group assignment): 50%
  2. Research paper (individual assignment): 50%

Both parts must be passed to successfully to complete the seminar. 

1. Session leadership

Each person (or group) will act as a session leader for one session (i.e. one of the topic areas). The session leader is expected to act as an expert (a team) on the topic and facilitate class discussion. 

Each session has a duration of approx. 90 minutes. Participants should spend about 2/3 of their time on the method aspect and the remaining 1/3 on EITHER the critical analysis of the selected article OR on a practical exercise. The output should be a PowerPoint presentation as well as a two-page summary of the topic area (a Word document) OR an exercise.

Within each topic area, participants should elaborate on the following aspects in particular:

  • Key ideas
  • Alternatives and key considerations
  • Practical suggestions
  • Critical analysis of a selected article OR practical exercise (e.g. how to search, etc.)

2. Research paper

Each participant must submit a literature review research paper. Participants can choose a specific domain and review method. The purpose of this paper is to enable PhD students to carry out an initial systematic review in the context of their PhD dissertation topic and to develop their skills to conduct rigorous and impactful literature reviews as part of a stand-alone research project.

The research paper should address at least the following aspects:

  1. Motivate a systematic literature review (review purpose and methods). This should be done in the introduction, which should briefly describe the domain, identify the research purpose and state what the participant plans to do to tackle the identified problem in the literature. Each of these issues should be addressed in one or a few short paragraphs.
  2. Carry out an initial systematic literature review of the extant knowledge in the specific domain and other fields related to the issue. The review method should be clearly described.
  3. Conduct the analysis for a subset of the literature (approx. 20-30 articles) and synthesise the initial insights from the systematic literature review (in a framework, model, typology, etc.).
  4. Develop initial ideas for future research. This is optional.

Style guide: maximum five pages of text plus two pages of references (and graphs); single-spaced; 11 Times New Roman points.

Workload
Workload type Working hours
Preparatory assignments (general reading) 10
Participation in class 20
Preparation for session leadership / presentation topics 40
Reading for other sessions 20
Literature review research paper 60
Total (5 ECTS) 150

Introduction to Research Methods for Business and Technology

Period Autumn semester
Course type PhD seminar (5 ECTS)
ECTS 5
Instructor

Sven Kunish (Course Responsible)
Christian Tang Lystbæk (Day 1)
Birke Otto (Day 2)
Madalina Pop (Day 3)
John Vestergaard Olesen (Day 4)
Anders Frederiksen (Day 5)
Robert Alphinas / Francesco Chinello (Day 6)
Sven Kunisch (Day 7)

Room

 Birk Centerpark 15 | Herning

3 Nov Room 8003-3042
18 Nov Room 8002-2052
19 Nov Room 8002-2126
26-28 Nov Room 8002-2052 
16 Dec Room 8002-2052

Dates 3 Nov, 18-19 Nov, 26-28 Nov, 16 Dec 2025
Paper submission deadline 12 December, 2025
Maximum enrolment The maximum number of students is 20
Academic prerequisites  The seminar is open to internal and external PhD students. Preference for enrolment will be given to PhD students from the PhD programme at the Department of Business Development and Technology and students from other PhD programmes at Aarhus BSS.
Compulsory literature All articles marked with *
Background

The main objective of this course is to prepare doctoral students with fundamental and advanced knowledge about research methodologies to design and conduct interdisciplinary research in the intersection between business development and technology areas. The course distinguishes itself by equipping doctoral students to investigate relevant empirical questions and problems in the intersection between business and technologies. This course covers the main qualitative and quantitative research methodologies capable of solving issues in the intersection between business development/technology.

The course is divided in three main topic areas:

  1. Foundations of research and knowledge development, and implications for research design choices in interdisciplinary research in business and technology
  2. Qualitative methodologies for interdisciplinary research in business and technology
  3. Quantitative and experimental methodologies for interdisciplinary research in business and technology
Learning objectives

After completion of this PhD course, participants should be able to:

  • Understand the main research methodologies for interdisciplinary research in business and technology.
  • Critically assess research designs using different methods in scientific articles in business and technology research.
  • Develop a research design for research projects included in their own PhD thesis that aim to advance knowledge in the intersection between business development and technology.
  • Decide and implement the appropriate research methodologies with specific application to issues in interdisciplinary research at the intersection of business development and technology according to the formulated research question.
Format and schedule

This course is comprised of seven days of teaching in addition to preparing readings and assignments per session. Participants are expected to have carefully read the recommended articles prior to class. The mandatory articles are indicated (*) in the references list of the course. It includes a combination of seminal and instrumental articles on the qualitative and quantitative methodology discussed, as well as the examples of articles implementing those methods.

The teaching format includes readings for each session, lectures, hands-on practical exercises in the classroom and mandatory final assignment and presentation.

Each day is comprised of three to four sessions (details to be defined by the teacher):

  • Session 1: 09:00 am – 10:30 am
  • Session 2: 11:00 am – 12:30 pm
  • Lunch
  • Session 3: 01:30 pm – 03:00 pm
  • Session 4: 03:30 pm – 05:00 pm
Assignments

Final assignment: Research design proposal

This assignment aims to develop student skills in an elaborate, rigorous, and robust research design of a study. Each student must submit a detailed proposal for a research design utilizing the elements and the methodologies covered in the course. Appropriate methodologies (i.e., qualitative, quantitative, or the combination of both) should be described according to the research problem and examine research questions. This proposal could be incorporated in one of the research papers in the PhD thesis.

Style guide for the final assignment:

The document can include five to seven pages of text plus one page of references; single-spaced; 11 Times New Roman points.

Supporting literature for the assignment:

Hair Jr., J., Page, M., & Brunsveld, N. (2019). Essentials of Business Research Methods (4th ed.). Routledge. AU Library link: https://doi-org.ez.statsbiblioteket.dk/10.4324/9780429203374

Introduction to Research

Methods for Business and Technology
Period Autumn semester
Course type PhD seminar (5 ECTS)
ECTS 5
Instructor

Sven Kunish (Course Responsible)
Christian Tang Lystbæk (Day 1)
Birke Otto (Day 2)
Madalina Pop (Day 3)
John Vestergaard Olesen (Day 4)
Anders Frederiksen (Day 5)
Robert Alphinas / Francesco Chinello (Day 6)
Sven Kunisch (Day 7)

Room

 Birk Centerpark 15 | Herning

3 Nov Room 8003-3042
18 Nov Room 8002-2052
19 Nov Room 8002-2126
26-28 Nov Room 8002-2052 
16 Dec Room 8002-2052

Dates 3 Nov, 18-19 Nov, 26-28 Nov, 16 Dec 2025
Paper submission deadline 12 December, 2025
Maximum enrolment The maximum number of students is 20
Academic prerequisites  The seminar is open to internal and external PhD students. Preference for enrolment will be given to PhD students from the PhD programme at the Department of Business Development and Technology and students from other PhD programmes at Aarhus BSS.
Compulsory literature All articles marked with *
Background

The main objective of this course is to prepare doctoral students with fundamental and advanced knowledge about research methodologies to design and conduct interdisciplinary research in the intersection between business development and technology areas. The course distinguishes itself by equipping doctoral students to investigate relevant empirical questions and problems in the intersection between business and technologies. This course covers the main qualitative and quantitative research methodologies capable of solving issues in the intersection between business development/technology.

The course is divided in three main topic areas:

  1. Foundations of research and knowledge development, and implications for research design choices in interdisciplinary research in business and technology
  2. Qualitative methodologies for interdisciplinary research in business and technology
  3. Quantitative and experimental methodologies for interdisciplinary research in business and technology
Learning objectives

After completion of this PhD course, participants should be able to:

  • Understand the main research methodologies for interdisciplinary research in business and technology.
  • Critically assess research designs using different methods in scientific articles in business and technology research.
  • Develop a research design for research projects included in their own PhD thesis that aim to advance knowledge in the intersection between business development and technology.
  • Decide and implement the appropriate research methodologies with specific application to issues in interdisciplinary research at the intersection of business development and technology according to the formulated research question.
Format and schedule

This course is comprised of seven days of teaching in addition to preparing readings and assignments per session. Participants are expected to have carefully read the recommended articles prior to class. The mandatory articles are indicated (*) in the references list of the course. It includes a combination of seminal and instrumental articles on the qualitative and quantitative methodology discussed, as well as the examples of articles implementing those methods.

The teaching format includes readings for each session, lectures, hands-on practical exercises in the classroom and mandatory final assignment and presentation.

Each day is comprised of three to four sessions (details to be defined by the teacher):

  • Session 1: 09:00 am – 10:30 am
  • Session 2: 11:00 am – 12:30 pm
  • Lunch
  • Session 3: 01:30 pm – 03:00 pm
  • Session 4: 03:30 pm – 05:00 pm
Assignments

Final assignment: Research design proposal

This assignment aims to develop student skills in an elaborate, rigorous, and robust research design of a study. Each student must submit a detailed proposal for a research design utilizing the elements and the methodologies covered in the course. Appropriate methodologies (i.e., qualitative, quantitative, or the combination of both) should be described according to the research problem and examine research questions. This proposal could be incorporated in one of the research papers in the PhD thesis.

Style guide for the final assignment:

The document can include five to seven pages of text plus one page of references; single-spaced; 11 Times New Roman points.

Supporting literature for the assignment:

Hair Jr., J., Page, M., & Brunsveld, N. (2019). Essentials of Business Research Methods (4th ed.). Routledge. AU Library link: https://doi-org.ez.statsbiblioteket.dk/10.4324/9780429203374

PhD dissertations

Dive into the latest research from our PhD programme. Here you can read the finished dissertations by our PhD students as a way of gaining insight into their projects. 

Get an overview of the latest PhD dissertations:

2025

Sort by: Date | Author | Title

2024

2021

Sort by: Date | Author | Title

Avgoustaki, D. D. (2021). Growth perspectives of indoor vertical farms in cities. [PhD dissertation, Aarhus University]. Aarhus Universitet.

2020

Sort by: Date | Author | Title

Lerche, J. (2020). Offshore wind project production system: reducing construction duration through planning. [PhD dissertation, Aarhus University]. Aarhus BSS, School of Business and Social Sciences, Aarhus University.







Contact Sven or Christina if you would like to know more about the PhD programme at the Department of Business Development and Technology


Head of programme

Sven Kunisch

Professor Department of Business Development and Technology

PhD Secretary

Christina Nørgaard Kuhr

Member of Administrative Staff Department of Business Development and Technology