Seven interns, many projects

June 15th, 2010 by Larry Pulley

Today I am going to give you a brief glimpse into an exciting summer-long initiative.  I have hired seven of our rising second-year MBA students as summer interns.  We had a great group of students apply and, while we originally thought we might hire two to four, we ended up hiring seven. We have eight important projects for them, including examining best practices in career services, the use of the internet and social networking sites in marketing, and our relationship with our alumni.

It is our plan to have many of our alumni engaged in this initiative.

The first half of the summer will focus on gathering information; the second half will focus on analyzing information and coming up with detailed, implementable action plans for each project.

In our career services initiative, students will not only look at best practices—seeking golden nuggets from other schools, they will also research, talk about, and think about how we can align our career services program with the experience of our MBA, Master of Accounting and undergraduate students.

I am deeply involved in the alumni engagement initiative.  We are not only looking at best practices, we are bringing a blank piece of paper to the effort, incorporating your thoughts, and starting anew.

Another project focuses on our marketing efforts, including web and social networking site messaging and presence.  We have great stories to tell and we are looking for uniquely effective ways to tell them.

“Merchandising Mason” is a project suggested by our students.  It will focus on providing more than the standard clothing and accessory fodder you can find at bookstores and campus shops. We are aiming for something that is uniquely us and that captures our revolutionary approach to business education.

We are also looking at all of the databases and software we have available in the business school and examining how we can use them to help students gain access to both job opportunities and alumni.  I will be updating you over the course of the summer.  It suffices to say that I have high expectations for these efforts and am delighted with the enthusiastic engagement of the interns.

The interns are engaging team members across the Mason School and Tom Rideout will help with the day-to-day operations of the project.  Many of you will be hearing from these teams as they gather information over the first part of the summer.   We look forward to sharing the rollout of these plans and following up with you on our successful implementation activities over the coming academic year.

Please stay tuned or, better yet,  join the conversation!

A wonderful event, a wonderful day

October 12th, 2009 by Larry Pulley

I am delighted to report that our Miller Hall Dedication on Friday, October 2nd was attended by approximately 600 folks.

It was a wonderful event on a wonderful fall day and we counted among our honored guests President Taylor Reveley, Chancellor Sandra Day O’Connor, Architect Robert A. M. Stern, Alan Miller, and Chip Mason.

It was for us the celebration of the end of one important chapter in the life of the Mason School of Business and the beginning of another, which sentiment I tried to capture in my closing remarks:

“Eleven years ago when we first began thinking about a new home for the Mason School of Business, many people thought we were nuts.

And yet, here we are today.  Miller Hall rises majestically around us as the home to the Mason Community for decades to come—and an enduring symbol that dreams still come true.  We are here because a few modern-day revolutionaries stood up and took up our cause, determined that through generosity and hard work they would overcome any obstacle.

On behalf of our students, faculty, and staff – past, present, and future – it is my personal honor to accept this remarkable facility as well as the responsibilities that come with it.  To whom much is given, much is expected.

To those who teach and mentor here, the responsibility is nothing less than this:  to revolutionize business education so that Mason graduates leave here with the skills, surely, but also with the judgment, courage, integrity, and purpose to reshape the way the world does business.

To our students, your responsibility is to put everything you are now on the line and become transformed.  To think and act ethically, responsibly, and boldly.  To go from here with the conviction that you can—and will—make a sustainable difference in the world.  To be a revolutionary in the cause of the common good.  And, like so many here today, to return to this place to share your experience and success with those who would follow.

At Mason, with all our diversity of interests and ideas and strengths, we are nonetheless like-minded and laser-focused when it comes to this:

We intend to do great things…to count…to make a difference.  That is our cause.

We follow in the footsteps of revolutionaries who came before and built a great nation.  They are no different from us.  Revolutionaries are still welcome here.”