Thursday, March 27, 2008

BYU Students Win Second Place at FedEx Supply Chain Competition

PROVO, Utah – Mar 24, 2008 – Six students from Brigham Young University’s Marriott School of Management won second place and $2,000 at the 11th annual FedEx Freight International Graduate Logistics Case Competition in Fayetteville, Ark.

It was BYU’s first time at the invitational event, sponsored by FedEx Freight in alliance with the Supply Chain Management Research Center at the University of Arkansas’s Sam M. Walton College of Business.

From l to r: Artie Gulden, Bradlee Watson, Harsh Dhawan Grover, Dave Minaker, Brian Fischer and Alvaro Brisolla.

“On a global stage, the supply-chain world is a close-knit community,” says Stan Fawcett, professor of global supply chain management at BYU and the team’s faculty adviser. “Being able to get the invitation to compete and then to perform well opens the door to this tight community. The team’s performance in Arkansas will significantly improve the visibility and recruiting opportunities for our students.”

The Feb. 28-March 1 event pitted 12 of the best supply chain programs in the world against each other, with each team playing the role of a consulting firm for a fictional start up company in the growing wind turbine industry. Contestants had 24 hours to review the case and prepare recommendations for a supply chain plan, which they presented before a panel of judges. The judges then challenged each team’s findings in a question-and-answer session.

Fawcett interviewed potential team members and selected students with a variety of backgrounds who exhibited the right combination of talent, decisiveness and humility. The BYU team consisted of first-year supply chain students: Bradlee Watson, from Provo, Utah; Brian Fischer, from Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif.; and Dave Minaker, from Pincher Creek, Alberta. Second-year supply chain students on the team were Alvaro Brisolla, from Sao Paulo, Brazil and Artie Gulden, from Lewisburg, Penn.; as well as second-year finance student Harsh Dhawan Grover, from Himachal Pradesh, India.

To prepare, the team spent four weeks analyzing case studies and delivering presentations to a panel of BYU professors, which helped the students improve their analytical skills, teamwork and confidence.

“My first practice presentation was terrible,” says Alvaro Brisolla. “But by the time I presented at the competition, I was not the same person. Not that my English improved that much, but our preparation gave me more confidence to speak English in front of people. Presentation skills are so important in business, so I think the competition was fantastic for me.”

The University of Maryland placed first and won $3,000, and Pennsylvania State University was awarded $1,000 for finishing third. The other participating universities included the University of Arkansas, the University of Minnesota, the University of Wisconsin—Madison, Michigan State University, Ohio State University, Iowa State University, Texas Christian University, Darmstadt University of Technology from Darmstadt, Germany, and Chalmers University of Technology from Gothenburg, Sweden.

The Marriott School is located at Brigham Young University, the largest privately owned, church-sponsored university in the United States. The school has nationally recognized programs in accounting, business management, entrepreneurship, public management and information systems. The school’s mission is to prepare men and women of faith, character and professional ability for positions of leadership throughout the world. Approximately 3,000 students are enrolled in the Marriott School’s graduate and undergraduate programs.

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Marriott School Rankings - Have a look

Here is a consolidated view on the rankings of Marriott School published by various independent agencies:

Undergraduate


R A N K
P R O G R A M
S O U R C E


2nd
Accounting
Public Accounting Report, 2007
3rd
Accounting
U.S. News & World Report, 2007

7th
Undergraduate Programs
BusinessWeek, 2008

38th
Business Management
U.S.News & World Report, 2007

19th
International Business
U.S. News & World Report, 2007

12th
Entrepreneurship Emphasis
Entrepreneur, 2006

Graduate


R A N K
P R O G R A M
S O U R C E


1st
MBA (regional schools)
The Wall Street Journal, 2007

1st
MBA (time to payback)
BusinessWeek, 2006

2nd
MBA (emphasis on ethics)
The Wall Street Journal, 2007

4th
MBA (accounting emphasis)
The Wall Street Journal, 2007

9th
MBA (corporate social responsibility)
The Wall Street Journal, 2007

18th
MBA
Forbes, 2007

41st
MBA
U.S.News & World Report, 2007
World 82nd
MBA
Financial Times, 2008
2nd
MBA (Most Family-Friendly)
The Princeton Review, 2008
2nd
MAcc
Public Accounting Report, 2007
65th
MPA
U.S.News & World Report, 2004

Source: Marriott School Website http://marriottschool.byu.edu/news/rankings.cfm

WSJ Ranks BYU MBA # 1

School Also Listed as Second Best Place to Find Ethical Graduates

The Wall Street Journal ranked Brigham Young University’s Master of Business Administration Program first in the nation among regional schools in the paper’s 2007 report of top business programs, up from third in 2006 and sixth in 2005. The Marriott School was also ranked No. 2 among the best schools for hiring graduates with strong ethical standards behind Dartmouth College.

“This is a tremendous honor to be at the top of such a distinguished list of schools,” says Ned C. Hill dean of BYU’s Marriott School of Management. “We are grateful to the companies that return again and again to recruit our students. We’re very proud of our graduates and the high professional and ethical standards they have become known for throughout the world.”

The journal categorized national and regional schools based on the type of recruiters they attract —regional school’s tended to attract more recruiters from a particular region whereas national schools attracted recruiters from a broader geographic area.

This year’s top regional schools are 1) BYU, 2) Wake Forest University, 3) Ohio State University, 4) University of Rochester and 5) Indiana University. The top national schools are 1) Dartmouth College, 2) University of California — Berkeley, 3) Columbia University, 4) Massachusetts Institute of Technology and 5) Carnegie Mellon University.

In addition to the top regional honor and strong showing in ethics, BYU placed fourth in the paper’s “accounting” honor roll and ranked ninth in “corporate social responsibility.”

“Year in and year out, recruiters rave about graduates’ maturity, competitive drive, integrity and international experience, especially from their missionary work for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,” the paper reported about BYU. “Academically, the Marriott School receives high marks in the Journal survey for its accounting program. Some recruiters are also finding that more Brigham Young MBAs make a good fit for investment banking.”

BYU MBA Program Director James Engebretsen says, “Our focus on investment banking is fairly new and still relatively small. But, we’re finding it to be a good fit for an increasing number of our students. It’s rewarding to see Wall Street valuing our students in this area as well as recognizing their strong work ethic, integrity and the great professional training provided by our faculty.”

This is the seventh year The Wall Street Journal has evaluated MBA programs around the world. More than 4,400 recruiters who hire full-time business school graduates participated in the 2007 survey. Recruiters evaluated schools on three components. Equal weight was given to perceptions of the school and its students, the likelihood of recruiting and hiring at the school in the future, and mass appeal — the total number of participating recruiters who recruit at the school. Perceptions of the school and its students were based on 21 attributes such as analytical and problem solving skills, communication and interpersonal skills, faculty expertise, curriculum content, leadership potential, and career services at the school.

The list of schools eligible for the rankings came from the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business and discussions with experts in the field of MBA recruiting. Only 265 schools met the Journal’s rating requirements. Of those, 86 schools were ranked.

The Marriott School is located at Brigham Young University, the largest privately owned, church-sponsored university in the United States. The school has nationally recognized programs in accounting, business management, public management, information systems and entrepreneurship. The school’s mission is to prepare men and women of faith, character and professional ability for positions of leadership throughout the world. Approximately 3,000 students are enrolled in the Marriott School’s graduate and undergraduate programs.