Businesses Look To Students For Consulting Help
02 September 2010 - 6:59AM
Dow Jones News
Businesses are looking to students to help themselves learn.
Some of the top U.S. business schools have been teaming up with
companies, including Urban Outfitters Inc. (URBN) and Green
Mountain Coffee Roasters Inc. (GMCR), to run programs in which
students play the role of consultant--for little or no cost to the
company.
Students may work on identifying acquisition targets, assessing
a market segment's viability, or creating a business plan, among
other topics, program directors said. At Dartmouth College's Tuck
School of Business and Indiana University's Kelley School of
Business, the programs are free; others charge the company anywhere
from $50,000 to $80,000.
"We're bringing together several faculty and a larger number of
M.B.A.s are put on a project than many private consulting firms,"
said Jonathan Frenzen, director of Management Laboratories at
University of Chicago's Booth School of Business. "The expense for
doing that at the school is pretty significant."
Green Mountain Coffee sent Tuck students to Nicaragua where they
developed business strategies to improve coffee quality and
production at the source.
"This will have impact on the quality, taste in cup and...the
amount of coffees that [the farmers] harvest," said Rick Peyser,
Green Mountain's director of Social Advocacy & Coffee Community
Outreach.
While some programs or labs, like Booth's, have been around for
decades, others are only a year old. Teams can be as large as 40
students at University of California, Berkeley's Haas School of
Business, to five at Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Sloan
School of Management, and typically run three to six months.
Some students on the projects say they've worked up to 60 hours
a week in crunch time, all for a grade or class credit.
David Slump, president of Harman Consumer Audio Division,
describes himself as a "repeat customer." He's teamed up with Booth
students to examine and research a forecast model, acquisition
possibility and potential brand repositioning while at General
Electric Co. and Harman International Industries Inc. (HAR).
Slump describes the program as an "accelerator" with a huge
return on investment. "You probably don't usually have the internal
resources to take a fresh look at everything every day," he said.
"Hard decisions tend to need more analytics."
While he's worked with consulting firms, Slump said those
projects differ greatly from students' work, which doesn't
typically have the "war room" mentality with management
changes.
Bill Griesser, a senior vice president at Wells Fargo & Co.
(WFC), said he found value in the diversity of Haas students'
experiences-many didn't have experience in financial services-that
differ from what the banking-services company might get from a
research or consulting firm. A number of top consulting firms'
spokespeople said they were unaware of these business school
partnerships and didn't comment further.
Ron Kruse, a supply chain manager at EnerNOC Inc. (ENOC), worked
with MIT's Sloan students to develop a supply-chain tool. He said
the value was in having students working on projects that otherwise
wouldn't be given the same attention.
"They come in with fresh eyes," Kruse said. They see things that
people who work on the project every day "aren't noticing anymore
or are too bashful to say."
The spreadsheet tool the students developed had "powerful
analytics," Kruse said. EnerNOC will be using it to evaluate and
set up third-party warehouses.
But sometimes projects don't pan out: The students' work isn't
implemented or is put on hold.
Wharton students worked with Urban Outfitters to examine
environmentally friendly initiatives, such as alternative energy
sources and packaging methods, said Amy Dorra, Urban Outfitters'
senior marketing manager. For now, the work rests in limbo.
"It will take us a little while to process that information and
have the right conversations to figure out how we can move
forward," she said.
-By Emily Glazer, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2913;
emily.glazer@dowjones.com
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