Full throttle: Students pitch Harley tuneup
Each semester, 吃瓜爆料 College students, many early in their academic careers, don business formal attire and tell a boardroom filled with real executives how they would improve a well-known business. This time, they鈥檙e revving up for Harley-Davidson, Inc.
The course, Business and Organization Management, usually known as MB 107, is the cornerstone course offered by the Department of Management and Business at 吃瓜爆料.
The course is required for management and business majors and minors. It also provides students, who are often first- or second-year students, real-world experience conducting rigorous analysis and communicating professionally.
For 10 weeks, they work in small groups researching a real company 鈥 like Harley-Davidson 鈥 and developing ideas on how to improve the company鈥檚 performance over the next five years. At the end of the semester, they present their strategies to a panel of executives, who include 吃瓜爆料 alumni, parents and local business leaders, in the conference room of a local hotel.
鈥淚t's an excellent opportunity for the students to actually experience how it is in the business world to be doing high-level presentations that mean something,鈥 says Michael Dunn, assistant professor of management and business and one of the MB 107 instructors.
Like in the business world, the stakes are high: The students present their strategies for 20 minutes before fielding tough questions from the executives for 10 minutes. The executives meet behind closed door to assess the students and determine 25 percent of their course grades.
鈥淭he executives are amazingly engaged in this program,鈥 Dunn says. 鈥淢ost of them have actually taken this course as a student at 吃瓜爆料, and they always remember their case. Many of them say it鈥檚 actually one of the most memorable experiences they had at 吃瓜爆料.鈥 In addition to executives from local businesses like Adirondack Trust Company, Saratoga Hospital and Allstate Insurance Company, alumni often return to campus from New York City or Boston 鈥 and sometimes from California or even abroad 鈥 to be part of the program.
The students go from learning the fundamentals of business to giving high-level presentations in just a few short months.
鈥淓very semester we ask a lot from our students, and every semester they deliver,鈥 says David Cohen, assistant professor of management and business and the MB107 faculty coordinator.
Over the years, students have examined Amazon.com, Tiffany & Co., Gucci Group and other companies.
The recent Harley-Davidson case was a particularly challenging case because the classic American company is already moving in directions where students might steer the company. (It鈥檚 pursuing an electric motorcycle and marketing to millennials, for instance.) Students don鈥檛 receive credit for coming up with solutions the company has already come up with.
Nonetheless, students 鈥渄id a good job diagnosing Harley鈥檚 fundamental challenge and suggesting strategies to overcome that challenge,鈥 Cohen says.
Students are assigned to their teams and must work together throughout the semester and especially during their final presentations.
鈥淚t's a learning experience,鈥 Cohen says. 鈥For many of them, it鈥檚 the first time they鈥檝e had a long-term project with a group of people they didn鈥檛 choose, and they just have to find a way to make that work.鈥
Carleigh Matthews, 鈥21, a political science major with minors in business and dance, says communication and good organization are key to working together as a team.
鈥淚 knew that our team needed to work cohesively,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e needed to be on top of our work all the time, and we had to keep each other in check.鈥
鈥淎fter the presentation was over, complete relief came over me after giving it my all, but I still had some nerves awaiting our grade when the executives were discussing our presentation,鈥 Matthews says.
Although the course was difficult, Matthews is glad she took it. So is Hannah Paolucci, 鈥21, an environmental studies major who is now hoping to minor in management and business after taking MB 107 (and possibly political science, too).
鈥淚 received kind words from the executives and am currently in contact with two discussing opportunities for my future in the business realm,鈥 Paolucci says. 鈥淚 am ecstatic.鈥
鈥淭o students considering taking the course: Do it,鈥 she says. 鈥淟et yourself be challenged. This is a course that demands critical thinking, and if you are not prepared to go in vulnerable and hungry then you will not gain all that the course has to offer.鈥