Tuesday, June 2, 2020
The Best Brightest Business Majors â⬠Class of 2018
The Best Brightest Business Majors ââ¬â Class of 2018 by: Jeff Schmitt on April 02, 2018 | 0 Comments Comments 40,050 Views April 2, 2018A generation ago, if you asked business majors what they wanted, they wouldââ¬â¢ve answered with the usual clichà ©s: money, status, and freedom. Back then, business was a path to a life of comfort and certainty. Fast forward to the Class of 2018 and such incentives have increasingly lost their luster. Instead, this generation is looking to business as a means to test their imaginations and foster social change.For this years graduating class, business comes down to one word: Impact. As the big day nears, these future business leaders are leaving their mark ââ¬â often in big ways that defy traditional business roles and methods.INTERN SAVES FORTUNE 50 COMPANY OVER $6 MILLION DOLLARSTake Georgia Techââ¬â¢s Evie Owens. For the past two summers, she has served as a merchandising intern at Home Depot. During that time, she has taken a deep dive into the companyââ¬â¢s operations in several units. The result? Owens has already saved the company $6.4 million dollars. Just imagine what sheââ¬â¢ll do when she joins the company full-time. Her bosses can ââ¬â and theyââ¬â¢re are already giddy over the prospects.Georgia Techs Evie Owensââ¬Å"She did absolutely incredible work,â⬠writes Heath Wolfe, a senior manager at Home Depot. ââ¬Å"We are still using the research that she put together over the summer to redesign operational processes with in the business today.â⬠Kelly Barrett, a senior vice president in home services, takes her praise a step further. ââ¬Å"I have high performing associates at the senior manager level that would be hard pressed to compete with the quality of the work that she produced,â⬠she gushes. ââ¬Å"I believe she will be an officer of this company one day.â⬠Then thereââ¬â¢s Villanovaââ¬â¢s Brady Scott Acton, the very personification of a Renaissance Man. As a sophomore, he launched a tech startup that employed seven people thanks to $127K in angel and VC investment. A year later, he designed an AI platform thatââ¬â¢s used at the Wharton School. In between, he opened a non-profit and created a popular app that was featured in the Philadelphia Inquirer. On top of that, he was a scholarship baseball player who was named a Forbes ââ¬Å"Under 30â⬠Scholar. If you thought time management was Actonââ¬â¢s toughest hurdle ââ¬â think again! ââ¬Å"I was surprised out how humbling it would be to major in business,â⬠he admits. ââ¬Å"The major is very rigorous because one has to be skilled at both the qualitative and quantitative sides of business.â⬠à A CELEBRATION OF THE TOP SENIORS FROM 50 TOP BUSINESS PROGRAMSImpact doesnââ¬â¢t just happen with long hours and good intentions. It also requires a sense of purpose and the courage to take action. Whartonââ¬â¢s Laura Gao lives by an axiom: ââ¬Å"If what y ou want doesnââ¬â¢t exist, create it yourself.â⬠She followed her own advice to make her own impact. As a freshman, Gao weighed transferring, feeling out of step as a creative in a world devoted to financial models and job hunts. Rather than taking the easy way out, she became the solution who filled a gap. Notably, she took on the role of a professor, teaching 75 students during a six week ââ¬Å"Design Prototypingâ⬠seminarââ¬â the first of its kind at Wharton.These are just a handful of graduating seniors from PoetsQuantsââ¬â¢ 3rd annual ââ¬Å"Best Brightest Business Majors.â⬠In December, PQ reached out to 55 undergraduate business schools ââ¬â including the Top 50 programs in its annual ranking ââ¬â to ask them to nominate two seniors for inclusion. Each school chose their representatives using their own criteria, though PQ encouraged them to factor in ââ¬Å"academic excellence, extracurricular leadership, personal character, innate potential , a striking personal narrative, and overall impact on the program.â⬠Overall, 101 students were included from 50 programs, including representatives from each of PQââ¬â¢s 40 highest-ranked business schools.Whartons Kayvon Asemani (à ©2016 Mark Stehle Photography)Business is known as a catch-all major, so itââ¬â¢s no surprise that this yearââ¬â¢s Best Brightest are as diverse, well-rounded, and passionate as they come. Faculty and employers alike describe them using terms like role model, natural leader, ambassador, and standout ââ¬â the dreamers who personify ââ¬Å"the top 1% of the top 1%.â⬠They are students defined by their curiosity and conviction, a take-charge and tenacious bunch with a vision that no task is too big or no role is too small. Globally conscious and fearless, they spent their four years exploring Asia and opening up new ventures. In the process, their infectious courage and enthusiasm inspired their peers to step out of their comfort z ones too.KENAN-FLAGLER FIDDLER OPENS UP FOR A-LIST MUSICAL ACTSThe Best Brightest defy easy labels. BYUââ¬â¢s Braeden Santiago is truly an All-American, a typhoon survivor who claims ââ¬Å"Hawaiian, Filipino, Chinese, Korean, and Germanâ⬠among his ancestries. Others possess a gift for producing stirring imagery. The University of Virginiaââ¬â¢s Evelyn Wang, for one, calls herself a ââ¬Å"5-foot, 1-inch girl with an 11-foot personality,â⬠while Bowling Greenââ¬â¢s Collin Newton gives a disturbing new twist to being a mutt: ââ¬Å"I am a mix between Chandler Bing, Jason Bourne, and Dug from the movie UP.â⬠If Kayvon Asemaniââ¬â¢s careers as a Facebook product manager and hip hop recording artist go south, the Wharton grad can always fall back on writing epigrams. How does he view himself? ââ¬Å"The best at making mistakes, the worst at being perfect, and average at being average.â⬠Just donââ¬â¢t expect Michigan Stateââ¬â¢s Colleena Peng to fa ll short. She has a huge incentive to make it big. ââ¬Å"I work hard now so my future dog can have the backyard he deserves,â⬠she jokes.Looking for talent? The Class of 2018 has you covered. They certainly arenââ¬â¢t afraid of the big stage ââ¬â literally. Lehigh Universityââ¬â¢s Brianna Riggs has performed with her clarinet in front of Carnegie Hall. Not to be outdone, the University of North Carolinaââ¬â¢s Caroline Ririe has played the violin and fiddle for Josh Kelley and Frankie Gavin ââ¬â not to mention opening for acts like Better Than Ezra, The Gin Blossoms and Edwin McCain. Perhaps she could form a band with U.C.-Berkeleyââ¬â¢s Joshua Ahazie, who plays 10 instruments, or even Oscar Gomez, a Lehigh senior who taught himself to play the drums, piano, guitar, and bass before becoming his churchââ¬â¢s musical director when he was a high school freshman.TURNING DOWN AN INVITEâ⬠¦FROM THE DALAI LAMAIt isnââ¬â¢t just stage where the Best Brighte st have made an impact outside the business world. Meet the University of Minnesotaââ¬â¢s Emerald Egwim. Four years ago, she walked onto the University of Minnesotaââ¬â¢s track team. Fast forward to now, and she has shattered school indoor and outdoor records and become a Big Ten champion. Oh, and she represented her native Nigeria in the 2017 Track Field World Championship too. One of Gaoââ¬â¢s biggest achievement couldnââ¬â¢t even be confined to the planet. ââ¬Å"I 3D-printed a biomedical device on the International Space Station for astronaut health diagnosis,â⬠she notes. How exclusive is the company that Penn Stateââ¬â¢s Colin Patrick Wood rolls in? He had to decline an invitation to the Dalai Lamaââ¬â¢s birthday party!The class is also defined by its thirst for adventure. You can start with Elon Universityââ¬â¢s Nicole Resetar. She lived out of a van for 16 days on the wild South Island of New Zealand. Think thatââ¬â¢s scary? Imagine being the Un iversity of Georgiaââ¬â¢s Earwin Tape, who found himself trapped in African quick sand, or Northeastern Universityââ¬â¢s Kate Murdock, who helped a lemur give birth. Of course, sometimes going overseas can be outright exhilarating. Just ask Emoryââ¬â¢s Grace Cleland, who has taken a slide down the Great Wall of China.Carnegie Mellons Sam BengerIn fact, global travel is a staple of undergraduate business education. Texas Christian Universityââ¬â¢s Olivia Hartjen, for example, has visited 16 countries in the past year alone. This exposure to travel has manifested itself in what the Best Brightest include in their long-term bucket lists. Cornellââ¬â¢s Madeleine Roglich dreams of climbing to Mount Everestââ¬â¢s base camp. In contrast, Santa Clara Universityââ¬â¢s Katherine Uhl plans to keep her feet on the ground, attending a Vatican mass and experiencing the Northern Lights. Rutgersà Monica Sungââ¬â¢s dream comes down to a family affair: ââ¬Å"Going on (and winning!) The Amazing Race with my sister.â⬠FOOTBALL STAR LAUNCHES COMPETITION TO FIX LOCAL SOCIAL ILLSIndeed, youââ¬â¢ll find a ââ¬ËWeââ¬â¢re all in this togetherââ¬â¢ spirit across this yearââ¬â¢s Best Brightest class. For them, business is a force for a good, a tool to give back and make a difference. Carnegie Mellonââ¬â¢s Sam Benger is one example of this servant leader ethos brought to life. On campus, Benger is best known as the football team captain, a record-breaking running back and All American who was a finalist for the William Campbell Trophy, given to footballââ¬â¢s top scholar-athlete. Behind the scenes, he is far more. Using his football notoriety as a ââ¬Å"platform,â⬠he has organized student cleanup crews around Pittsburgh; mentored young people suffering from chronic illnesses; and led the campus Special Olympics for two years running. Last year, he put his business pedigree to work, starting a ââ¬ËShark Tankââ¬â¢ style socia l entrepreneurship competition to address issues like ââ¬Å"poverty, homelessness, and food shortageâ⬠in the Steel City.ââ¬Å"This event started as an idea I had when I was riding the bus home after class one day,â⬠he notes. ââ¬Å"Six weeks later I had put together a diverse panel of expert judges, secured funding and guarantees from firms in the incubator space to help the winning team form a real product or service. The goal was to create tangible impact by adjusting the standard business case competition structure and applying it to community issues in Pittsburgh. It was a wonderful learning experience for me and validated that acting on a vision with initiative can be not only gratifying, but impactful on a larger scale.â⬠To read in-depth profiles of 100 of the Best Brightest business majors, go to pages 3-4. Page 1 of 41234à »
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