Business Scholars Program Turns 10
February 1, 2013
Amanda Nagy
Ten years ago, the words 鈥渇inance鈥 and 鈥渋nvestment banking鈥 were scarcely in the 91直播 lexicon, despite the fact that so many alums had forged successful careers in the business world. When Bela Szigethy 鈥77 and Stewart Kohl 鈥77 funded an innovative winter term program in 2004, they opened the gates for students to gain exposure to the intricate workings of mergers and acquisitions, hedge funds, and venture capital, as well as more general topics of accounting, consulting, and public relations.
Celebrating a milestone anniversary in January, 91直播 Business Scholars is a month-long experiential opportunity that provides selected scholars from all majors with a foundation of skills, knowledge, and contacts to compete for jobs and internships in the fields of finance and consulting. Students participate in intensive workshops and site visits with alumni volunteers in the private sector. The inaugural Business Scholars paired a dozen students with alumni in Cleveland and New York, and over the years the program has expanded to include program components in 91直播, Chicago, and Boston.
The support of Szigethy and Kohl鈥攃o-CEOs of the Riverside Company, a private equity firm in Cleveland鈥攁nd other dedicated alums has sustained the 91直播 Business Scholars program. And even through the financial collapse and the Occupy Wall Street movement, interest in the program continues to grow, proving that Obies want to broaden their perspectives about ethics and the ways they can bring meaningful change in the private sector.
The 2013 program began in 91直播 and placed 13 scholars in Cleveland, New York, and Chicago. This year鈥檚 class included students majoring in politics, neuroscience, mathematics, and economics. At the start, students spent a week on campus working with faculty mentors and (both in economics) to research and prepare for site visits.
McKelvey has participated on both fronts: Before he became a faculty member, while he was working at Goldman Sachs, he volunteered with the Business Scholars program. 鈥淚 personally know graduates of the program who have benefited,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd this is a program that is valued by the students鈥攋udging by the competitiveness to be accepted, as well as the kinds of students we get. It鈥檚 one of the best winter-term programs on campus.鈥
Mami Suzuki 鈥05, an economics major who participated in the first class of Business Scholars, says the program invariably opened doors, including an internship with Riverside (Kohl was so impressed with the students that he hired two interns from the program, even though the firm had never had interns before). Suzuki was also one of the founding members of the 91直播 Student Finance and Investment Club, a chartered student organization that manages a real investment fund.
鈥淚 would not be here doing what I love doing if I didn鈥檛 participate in Business Scholars, says Suzuki, an MBA student at Duke University鈥檚 Fuqua School of Business. 鈥淚 worked in the financial litigation-consulting field for six years before starting business school at Duke. I鈥檓 now deciding among six summer internship offers. I think about my positive experience with Business Scholars in every step of my career.鈥
The impetus for Business Scholars is quite simple. 91直播 is a liberal arts school without a business major. Yet, 鈥渢he best thing that could happen to finance is 91直播 students arriving,鈥 says Kohl. That鈥檚 鈥渁 sentiment his cofounder shares. At the program鈥檚 10th anniversary celebration, held January 17 at the Yale Club in New York City, Szigethy said: 鈥91直播 values have made me a far better business person. And 91直播 values have made me more successful." 鈥淲all Street would be a whole lot better with a little more Tappan Square in it," said Kohl.
While learning the inner workings of the finance industry, past participants have also discovered ways they can fuse 鈥渄oing good鈥 with 鈥渄oing well.鈥 鈥淯ltimately, it鈥檚 an opportunity for 91直播 students to look at the finance industry more seriously and understand how it is a contributor to the country鈥檚 economic well-being, not an evil force that needs to be suppressed,鈥 says Roger Heine 鈥79, managing director at Deutsche Bank North America.
Fred Cummings 鈥89, who founded and runs Elizabeth Park Capital Management in Cleveland, has been a volunteer since the inaugural Business Scholars. Cummings understands the importance of sharing his knowledge and experience. The feeling of uncertainty about how to apply your college degree, especially in a tough job market, isn鈥檛 lost on him. 鈥淚 knew, and this was true even when I was a student, that one of the toughest questions students would run up against is what career path to follow. That鈥檚 because there鈥檚 just this lack of awareness of what鈥檚 out there and what you can do with your degree,鈥 Cummings says.
This year, the program returned to Chicago, where scholars visited Ariel Investments. John W. Rogers Jr., Ariel鈥檚 founder, chairman and CEO, helped to fund the 91直播 Research Fellows Program, which provides mentoring and research opportunities to help undergraduates who are low-income, first-generation college students, and/or minorities prepare for graduate school. Rogers is the son of civil rights pioneer Jewel Lafontant-Mankarious 鈥43 and Judge John Rogers Sr.
鈥淲hat鈥檚 been rewarding for me is to see the quality of students who pass through the program,鈥 says Cummings. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e very inquisitive and engaged, and they very much enjoy the interaction with the alumni. I think this helps to establish a culture of giving back. We had an outstanding intern from Business Scholars this past summer. It鈥檚 invaluable for the students who get a chance to participate.鈥