The Martin Trust Entrepreneur Center announced that Ana Bakshi has been appointed as the new executive director. Bakshi played this role at the start of the fall semester and will work closely with the Managing Director, Professor Aulet of the Practice Act of the Ethernet Inventor to take the center to a higher level.
Aulet said: “ANA has the only qualification to hold this position. “I’ve been impressed by my commitment since I first met her 12 years ago, and she is committed to creating the highest quality entrepreneurial centres and institutions, first at King’s College London and then at Oxford University. This ideal skill focuses on experience leading senior growth companies and is recently an award-winning AI-level startup that is your senior business – I’ve been rewarding our business – I’ve been rewarding us. and the entire field. ”
A rapidly changing environment is essential to raising standards for entrepreneurial education
Raising standards for innovation-driven entrepreneurial education is both timely and urgent. Changes are getting faster and faster every day, especially with the pace of artificial intelligence and are generating new problems that need to be solved and exacerbate existing problems in climate, healthcare, manufacturing, jobs, education and economic stratification, to name just a few. The world needs more entrepreneurs and better entrepreneurs.
Bakshi joined the Trust Center at an exciting time in history. MIT is at the forefront of helping to develop people and systems that can use entrepreneurial mindsets, skills and operations to turn challenges into opportunities. Bakshi’s profound experience and success will be the key to unlocking this opportunity. “I’m honored to be part of the Trust Center at such a critical moment,” said Barksey. “In an era defined by extraordinary challenges and extraordinary possibilities, the future will be built by those who are bold enough to try, and MIT will be at the forefront.”
Transforming academic research into real-world impacts
Bakshi has a decade of experience building two world-class entrepreneur centers from scratch. She has served as founding directors at King’s College and Oxford University. In this position, she is responsible for all aspects of these centers, including fundraising.
While at Oxford, she wrote a data-driven approach to determining the effectiveness of results, a 61-page study, “Universities: Drivers of Prosperity and Economic Recovery.”
As director of Oxford Foundry, the Center for Interuniversity Entrepreneurship at Oxford University, Buckshee is committed to investing in ambitious founders and talent. The center is supported by global entrepreneur leaders such as the founders of LinkedIn and Twitter, as well as corporate partnerships including Santander and EY, as well as investment funds including Oxford Science Enterprise (OSE). Foundry and King’s College-backed startups have raised more than $500 million in funding and created nearly 3,000 jobs covering a wide range of industries including health technology, climate technology, cybersecurity, fintech, fintech and deep technology, focusing on world-class science.
In addition, she established the first digital online learning platform at Oxford University, establishing a very successful and economically sustainable school of entrepreneurs.
After working in the private sector, Bakshi worked for nearly two years at the rapidly growing artificial intelligence startup (COO), with offices in London and New York City, serving as Chief Operating Officer (COO) in the private sector. She was the first C-Suite employee at Quench.ai, serving as COO and now a senior consultant, helping companies unlock value from their knowledge through AI.
The right position, the right time, the right person moves at the speed of MIT AI
Since its inception, subsequently turbocharged through the creation and operation of Radlab in the 1940s and continues to this day, entrepreneurship is at the heart of MIT’s identity and mission.
“MIT has been a leader in entrepreneurship for decades. Now, this is the school’s third stop, as well as teaching and research,” said Mark Gorenberg ’76, MIT Corporate Chairman. “I’m excited to be a transformative leader in ANA’s joining the Trust Center team and I look forward to her impact on MIT students and the wider academic community as we move into an exciting new phase of company building driven by accelerating the use of AI and emerging technologies.”
“Entrepreneurship as an entrepreneurial entrepreneurship that creates impact is even more important to our future as we rethink management education. Having experienced and accomplished leaders in the academia and the entrepreneurial world, especially in AI, strengthens our commitment to becoming a global leader in this field,” Richard M. Locke, John D. M. Locke, Choard M. Locke, John Choard M. Locke, John Choard M. Locke c.
“MIT is a unique hub for research, innovation and entrepreneurship, and this particular combination has a huge positive impact that will thrive around the world,” said Frederic Kerrest, co-founder of MIT Sloan MBA ’09, Okta. “In a rapidly changing AI-driven world, ANA has the skills and experience to further accelerate MIT’s global leadership in entrepreneurial education to ensure our students launch and expand the next generation of groundbreaking, innovation-driven startups.”
Prior to her time at Oxford and King’s College, Bakshi served as an elected councilor representing 6,000-plus constituents, held roles in international nongovernmental organizations, and led product execution strategy at MAHI, an award-winning family-led craft sauce startup, available in thousands of major retailers across the UK Bakshi sits on the advice council for conservation charity Save the Elephants, leveraging AI-driven and scientific ways to reduce human wildlife conflict and protect elephant populations. Her work and influence have spread all over the world foot,,,,, ForbesBBC, eraand Mountain. Bakshi was awarded the top 50 women in UK technology twice in 2025.
“As AI changes the way we learn, how we build and how we scale, my focus will expand on expanding its support for phenomenon talent through skills, ecosystems and support for phenomenon talent (students and faculty) that transform knowledge into impact,” Bakshi said.
It has had an impact so far
The Trust Center was established in 1990 by the late Professor Edward Roberts and serves all MIT students in all schools and disciplines. It supports over 60 courses and a wide range of extracurricular programming, including the Delta V Academic Accelerator. Much of the work of the center is produced through a disciplined entrepreneurial approach that provides a mature approach to creating new businesses. More than a thousand schools and other organizations around the world use disciplined entrepreneurial books and resources to teach entrepreneurship.
Now, with AI-powered tools like Orbit and JetPack, the Trust Center is changing the way in which professors and practice entrepreneurship. Its mission is to produce the next generation of innovation-driven entrepreneurs while advancing the field more widely to make it both strict and practical. This approach that utilizes validation evidence-based approaches, emerging technologies, the creativity of MIT students, and responds to industry shifts is similar to how MIT established the field of chemical engineering in the 1890s. In both cases, the desired result is to create a comprehensive, comprehensive, scalable, rigorous and practical course to create a new workforce to meet the biggest challenges of the country and the world.