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“CMI recognises that leadership is not about authority or tools alone”

Written by Jamie Oliver Tuesday 03 February 2026
Professor Naveed Yasin CMgr CCMI ChMC bridges entrepreneurship and academia, with particular expertise in the Middle East region
Professor Dr Naveed Yasin CMgr CCMI

Professor Naveed Yasin CMgr CCMI ChMC, a CMI Chartered Companion, is something of a rarity: an entrepreneurial academic. Born in Blackburn and raised in Huddersfield, he grew up in and around enterprise in a multigenerational family of gold jewellers, retailers, wholesalers and traders. From an early age, he says he learned how trust, reputation and family structure function as commercial infrastructure, and how judgement travels across generations as markets shift. And that knowledge led him to academia.

“I went to university originally to see whether ethnic business communities could learn anything from Western models and theories,” he says. “Then I realised it was often the other way around. A lot of what you find in textbooks was already happening in family businesses. People were doing it without calling it strategy or networks or capability. Once I saw that, I wanted to study it properly, not to romanticise it, but to explain its embeddedness across contexts.”

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That turned into a research career. He completed a sequence of qualifications, culminating in a PhD in immigrant entrepreneurship (2014). A decade later, he is nearing completion of a second doctorate.

A wide-ranging academic career

Naveed’s academic journey has been wide and, he says, deliberately applied. He has held posts across the UK, including at the University of West London and the University of Plymouth, and later as a senior lecturer at Manchester Metropolitan University. He then moved into strategic leadership roles in the Gulf, including as programme director at Muscat University, before becoming a full professor at several higher education institutions in Dubai and Abu Dhabi.

Today, he is full professor of entrepreneurship and management and director of the Abu Dhabi Management Incubator, which is linked to the Abu Dhabi Chamber of Commerce and the Abu Dhabi School of Management. Naveed says the incubator has “helped multiple student founders move from ideas to registered ventures, building capabilities in validation, go-to-market execution and early growth.”

A significant part of his work sits inside higher education systems that are, he says, expanding quickly and under scrutiny. He has led and advised on curriculum governance, quality assurance, partnership development and faculty development within transnational higher education arrangements linked to UK universities. 

“People assume growth is the hard part”

Naveed says he was instrumental in establishing the London South Bank University UAE Academic Centre, first as academic dean and then as vice president of academic affairs and executive dean. These are the roles, he adds, “where standards become practice, where policies become programmes, and where good intentions either become credible outcomes or collapse into paperwork”.

Keep reading – more from Naveed

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