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School of Business

PLU Business Venture News-Spring 2007

PLU Business Venture News

Spring 2007

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Students Gain Hands-On Experience Through Field Trip to Pyramid Breweries

pyramid breweries
This spring Professors Eli Berniker and Carol Ptak took two vans of students down to
Portland Pyramid Breweries in Portland, Oregon to do a major operations research project for the company. Sean Roach, a junior business student in Professor Ptak’s Creating Value in Goods and Services Operations class, said that this trip “was definitely one of the coolest experiences I've had while in the School of Business.”

The Creating Value in Goods and Services Operations classes have been learning strategies to eliminate non-value by adding steps in processes in order to boost effectiveness and profitability. This trip gave students the opportunity to see production processes in person and talk with both the leadership at the brewery as well as the head of sales at their distributor, Columbia Distributing. The students will use the information gained from this experience to act as consultants in their final presentations. They will use the process model to demonstrate how their recommendations will benefit the company's operations and bottom-line. 

Roach found this trip to be very beneficial, “Besides the educational aspect of the trip, it was a blast to hang out with Professors Ptak and Berniker outside of the classroom! I learned just as much from our informal conversations about their experiences as I did at the Brewery. This is the type of professor-student relationship that PLU and the School of Business should take pride in."

NEWS


School of Business Joins MSDN Academic Alliance


The School of Business recently became a member of the Microsoft Developer Network (MSDN) Academic Alliance, an annual membership program for departments that teach and utilize technology, such as Computer Science and Engineering departments. The membership provides a complete, inexpensive solution to keep academic labs, faculty and students on the leading edge of technology. Josh Page, IT Support Specialist for the School of Business, made this membership possible for the School of Business. “I researched the possibility of the School of Business becoming a member and it turned out that having access to this software was very cost effective for us and a huge benefit for our business students and faculty.”

For only $864 a year, School of Business faculty and students have access to the latest versions of Microsoft Access, Microsoft Vision, Microsoft Visio Studio, Microsoft Project and several other Microsoft titles on the School of Business computers. This program will save the School of Business thousands of dollars by providing permission to copy the programs onto multiple computers.

Page realizes the impact of technology on education. “It is important that the School of Business provides its students and faculty with the most up-to-date technologies and resources. This membership will only add to the quality education our students receive.”

Marketing Management Class Reaches Out To Local Community


Professor Merl Simpson’s Marketing Management class is developing marketing plans for various Garfield Street businesses, the Spanaway-Parkland Chamber of Commerce, and the Garfield District. There are nine ongoing projects that are intended to deliver a marketing plan to the respective companies/organizations at the end of he semester.

This effort is akin to the projects that students completed in the fall semester Marketing Research course, most recently with Professor Susan Harmon.

Professor Simpson hopes that this project will help the marketing students gain real-life experience. “Together we are interested in having our students learn about marketing from an experiential standpoint, as opposed to a more lecture-case based format. We believe that they will learn far more about the marketing content involved in the respective courses by this community-based service learning approach – and contribute significantly to community outreach efforts.”

Mark Mulder, Director of Auxiliary Services at PLU, has played a large role in these projects as well. Simpson and Mulder worked together to engage these projects in the community before the semester started.  “Mulder has a wealth of background and understanding about the various initiatives underway to "build" the community of which PLU is a major part.”

Marketing students Collin Long, Jennifer Tompkins, and Cortney Krawiecki are working with Northern Pacific Coffee Company (NPCC), located on the corner of Garfield and C Streets. Being a popular hang out for PLU students, Long was eager to help form a marketing plan for the coffee shop. “It seems that almost every student or faculty member you speak to has heard of or has been to NPCC.  Also, knowing NPCC as a customer first gave me a chance to think back about how I felt about the coffee shop before I knew I would be working on a marketing plan for them.”

Long, Tompkins and Kraweicki are directing their focus on NPCC’s visibility. They hope to increase the promotional activities of the coffee shop as well as their amount of signage.  Long enjoys the hands-on aspect of this project. “Service learning gives real world experience, which is a learning dynamic that cannot be obtained easily in a classroom.”

Reception Honors School of Business Students


Congratulations to the following business students who were honored at the 2007 Honors Reception for the School of Business held on April 13th!

Beta Gamma Sigma Inductees honors reception (mba students) 07
Juniors: Rachel Hatlen, Benjamin Perry
Seniors: Claudia Davila, Anthony Gomez, Quinton Kakaley, Tara Klarr, Sun Joo Lee, Michelle Middleton
(MBA students pictured from left to right): Christian Wong, William Whitmore, Yoav Sibony
Not pictured: Sundra Samavedi


honors reception (mkt student) 07Academic Excellence in Finance:
Gwen Ha
Wall Street Journal Award: Claudia Davila
Marketing Student of the Year: Emma Coulson (pictured left)
Outstanding MBA Student of the Year: Christian Wong
Faculty Merit Award: Joe Attinello


Graduate Fellowship Participants

MinRak Choi, Karah Feneis, Rune Hejrskov, Natasha Jarmaillo, Byung Ryou, Fating Yuan, Ke Yuan

For a complete list of scholarship recipients, click here.

Call For Washington Business Week Volunteers


PLU serves as a host-site for the Washington Business Week camp for high school students. This year the program runs Sunday, June 24th through Saturday, June 30th. Organizers are now actively looking for PLU alumni, staff and MBA students to serve as judges and company advisors for this summer.

For more information about the program, visit the WBW website at www.wbw.org, or contact Megan Rubie at (253) 815-6900, (800) 686-6442 toll free.

School of Business Faculty Publications


Chung-Shing Lee has been notified that his manuscript, "Analysis of Competitive and Cooperative Technology Strategies of Electronics Firms In the Greater China Region", is scheduled for publication in a forthcoming issue of Journal of International Technology and Information Management.

Thad Barnowe and Dave McNabb received notification that their co-authored paper, "E-Government in China: Does It Facilitate or Hinder Citizen-Government Interaction?", has been accepted and will be included in the program of the Pan-Pacific Conference XXIV to be held in Dunedin-Queenstown, New Zealand June 2-4, 2007.

Chris Lee co-authored a paper with Dr. Joe Bradely, assistant professor of accounting at the University of Missouri at Rolla, entitled "ERP Training and User Satisfaction." The paper was accepted for publication in the forthcoming issue of the International Journal of Enterprise Information Systems (Volume 3, Issue 4, 2007).  This research was supported by the 2006 PLU School of Business Summer Research Grant.

Last December, the Korean Scientist and Engineer Association invited ePLU/E-Commerce Technology Management Center for a presentation on IT Application at its northwest regional conference.  Dr. Chung-Shing Lee and Dr. Chris Lee together prepared for the presentation titled "Strategic Information Systems for Value Creation in a Global Competitive Environment," which was published in the Proceedings of the 2007 Korean Scientist and Engineer Association Northwest Regional Conference. 

Fred Wolfe, Bruce Finnie and Linda Gibson received notification that their paper, "Cornish Miners in California:One Hundred and Fifty Years of a Unique Socio-Technical System," has been accepted for presentation at the 2007 Academy of Management Annual Meeting, August 3-8, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Dave McNabb and Dean Emeritus Gundar King were notified that their paper, "Policy, Responsibility, and the Crisis of Trust: Implementing CSR Policies and Procedures in Latvia" has been accepted for presentation at the Academic Business World International Conference to be held May 28-30 in Nashville, Tennessee.

Chris Lee presented a paper entitled, "A Comparative Study of Data Mining Models in Marketing" at the Spring 2007 Allied Academies International Conference in Jacksonville on April 12, 2007. The paper received a distinguished research award from the Academy of Information and Management Sciences.



BBA accepted into Dartmouth

Congratulations to Jake Dixon BBA '03!  He was recently admitted into the Tuck School of Business MBA program at Dartmouth and will begin his studies Fall 2007.

BBA Hymes awarded WSCPA Scholarship for 2007!

Congratulations to Kalia Hymes for winning the Washington Society of Certified Public Accountants (WSCPA) scholarship! This scholarship is awarded to accounting majors who attend a University in Lewis, Thurston, Grays Harbor, or Pierce Counties. The Pierce County Chapter Accounting Scholarship is a $1,000 scholarship as well as a one-year membership to the Washington Society of Certified Public Accountants.

MBA Executive Leadership Series featured wide array of topics

Don Gaines, MBA '84, VP of Finance/Treasurer of Puget Sound Energy, offered insight into the roles of a VP of Finance/Treasurer by speaking about his personal experience at Puget Sound Energy.

Neil Crist, BBA '99, co-founder of Jobster.com, spoke about the challenges of getting a startup company off the ground and restructuring a company.

ray heacoxRay Heacox (pictured left), BA '76, president of King 5 Television, spoke about the importance of leadership and how companies need to be able to respond to new technologies.

Lorette Koellner, president of Boeing International, presented about ethics and ethical standards in large international business.

Lynn Brewer, Enron Whistleblower, speaks to PLU students

Lynn Brewer, EnronFormer Enron executive Lynn Brewer visited PLU and spoke about her experience at Enron and about leading an ethical life. To read the Campus Voice article about her presentation, click here.

DeLange joins faculty

The School of Business welcomes Professor Marlo DeLange, J.D., to the faculty.  DeLange began her legal career as a securities enforcement attorney with the Washington Department of Financial Institutions.  In 2000, she went into private practice as an associate with Gordon, Thomas, Honeywell, Malanca, Peterson & Daheim LLP. DeLange joined Vandeberg Johnson & Gandara LLP in August 2004.

DeLange served as an adjunct business professor at PLU during the Fall 2006 and Spring 2007 semesters. She teaches Business Law & Ethics courses.

"Accounting 4 Life" team raises money and awareness at Relay for Life

School of Business professors Carol Ptak and Fern Zabriskie headed up a Relay For Life team named "Accounting 4 Life" for PLU’s Relay For Life cancer walk on April 20th.

Ptak and Zabriskie’s team was made up of 22 faculty and students and raised a total of $615. PLU raised over $46,000 for the American Cancer Society.

“Most of us know several people who have survived or lost the battle to cancer, and it may be in our individual futures.  Supporting the research and care provided by the American Cancer Society is a worthwhile use of our time and money, but reaching out to touch and support family, friends, colleagues and strangers who have been impacted by the disease is one of the best things we can do!” Zabriskie said.