Month: September 2021

Full-Time MBA Program Reunion During McCombs Homecoming Weekend

After the official McCombs Alumni BBQ Tailgate, the Full-Time MBA Program gathered together for a reunion at Thrive Craft House to continue the Longhorn fun during Homecoming Weekend. The MBA Class of ’96 celebrated their 25-year reunion with drinks, catching up with old friends and new, and watching the  Longhorn football game vs. Rice together.

This special event was organized by the MBA planning committee: Kathleen Mabley, Lou Mabley, Arnold Seapan, Peter Unger, and Jason Watkins.

Cheers to 25 years!

Alumni Join Together for a BBQ Tailgate and Big Texas Win

More than 200 Longhorns turned out for the pre-game alumni BBQ tailgate before the UT win over Rice. Alumni and MBA students came together at this family-friendly event to celebrate their Longhorn pride. All attendees enjoyed the beautiful indoor/outdoor space at the AT&T Executive Education and Conference Center, a BBQ buffet, and McCombs alumni Tshirts. Also, special guest Dean Mills stopped by to chat with attendees.

McCombs reserved a ticket block for alumni at the football game so that the business school graduates could sit together and continue the fun! It was a vibrant event and we can’t wait for next year! You can see the full album of photos on the alumni Flickr page.

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Alumni Q&A: Solu Nwanze, MBA ’12

Solu Nwanze, MBA ’12, is a certified executive coach with her own practice, Expanded Impact, and is an organizational effectiveness executive in Tech/SaaS. In both capacities, she works with executives and their teams to create and implement strategies that expand leadership capabilities, promote team engagement, and drive organizational effectiveness. In addition, she recently served on the Board of Directors for HERA, a legal services non-profit in California, and has architected award-winning leadership development programs for women and people of color at work.

At McCombs, she served as co-chair of the MBA admission committee during her MBA studies, president of the Graduate Business Technology Group, and helped form Sigma Fellows, now known as Operations Fellows. She continues to serve the alumni network in multiple capacities, most recently with her summer series webinar, “Promote a Learning and Growth Culture in This Brave New Hybrid World.” We spoke with Solu about her experiences in the business realm of technology, about her time at McCombs, and about her continued aspirations to serve the McCombs community. 

Please talk about your experience as a student here at McCombs. 

During my search for the right graduate school, I wanted a top business school surrounded by a strong technology school. I was in Tech prior to business school and planned to return to the Tech industry after business school. What truly solidified McCombs as a top choice for me was my experience during Explore McCombs, a weekend program for prospective students to interact with current students, professors, and staff. During that weekend, I felt the McCombs culture come alive – deep collaboration, academic excellence, and community impact. The icing on the cake was seeing Tina Mabley, a McCombs alumna and then Director of Admissions, come to the weekend event with her two-week old baby (who is probably over 10 years old now) simply to help make an impact in our life decisions.

At McCombs I was involved in several professional development activities. I was the co-chair of the McCombs admission committee, and helped in bringing in two sets of MBA students along-side 80+ classmates on the Committee and the McCombs Admissions staff. I was also the president of the Graduate Business Technology Group (GBTG), leading a couple technology symposiums for our classmates with the IROM department and corporate sponsors. Through GBTG, I worked with the leaders of the Graduate Operations Group and we formed Sigma Fellows, now known as Operations Fellows, a selective program for students to deepen their experience and skills in Operations and Technology.

My favorite moment was at graduation, where Fernando Gonzalez, our classmate known for documenting many of our experiences through pictures, captured a shot of the entire class as he walked the graduation stage. It was truly amazing, and was another showcase of the McCombs culture.

I had many memorable professors whose lessons I still carry with me several years later. One lecture that stood out was the last class of our high-tech marketing course. In that class, Kevin Williams gave us a life lesson that has stayed with me. The gist of it was to focus on building enough savings first, so that you are always in control of your decisions and can live in alignment with your personal values. Integrity is a core value of mine, and this lesson resonates strongly, even to this day.

How did your educational experience change you?

My educational experience gave me a more rounded view of business and people. Prior to business school I was a software engineer building multimedia communication platforms. I chose to go to business school, instead of continuing in engineering, because I wanted to understand the interconnection among various systems across business functions. I have always been a systems thinker, and my engineering background certainly fed that systems thinking mindset. McCombs gave me rich knowledge of even more systems, and that has helped me succeed in highly cross-functional roles where I thrive at the center of various functions and contexts.

The study group teams we are placed in at McCombs, coupled with the leadership skills I gained through various professional development activities, gave me a deeper understanding of people’s motivations, which helped me hone my ability to lead through influence. I have continued on with my passion in developing myself and others since McCombs, so much so that my career is focused on Organizational effectiveness and Operational excellence.

Please provide a brief summary of your career path since graduating.

After business school, I led information management strategy at Adobe during the business model shift from perpetual to subscriptions. I was lucky to have been at the center of figuring out how to capture and report the right KPIs needed to run this new business model. I got to lead several SCRUM teams creating business analytics and intelligence solutions for various leaders in Product, Sales, and Services.

Next, I shifted to designing business processes and programs, and took a role in Business Operations for Creative Cloud. I designed Product and Marketing processes that allowed us to prioritize what was most important for the then $5B business, release products with the right customer experience and marketing support, and implement pricing strategies across various product offerings. I worked with several senior leaders as a chief of staff, and observed their leadership in action. This experience accelerated my learning of business and leadership.

The third shift I made was to Zendesk to build the Business Operations function, initially in Marketing, and then globally for the company, to help accelerate growth at a pivotal part of our journey from $500M to $1B. I am now in my third role at Zendesk, leading the Office of the President function, and helping us scale our Go-To-Market strategy and operations as we head towards $3B. My time at Zendesk has definitely scaled and optimized my approach to leading global teams and dynamic business functions.

Along the way, I continued my involvement in professional development activities, including co-leading the Adobe Women’s Executive Shadow Program, founding the Adobe Speed Coaching Program, and founding the Zendesk ERG Professional Development Program. Through these activities, I attended a conference where I experienced executive coaching; and I decided to train and become certified as an Executive Coach. Finding coaching helped me unleash the current phase of my career journey.

A few years ago, I launched Expanded Impact, an integrated organizational effectiveness solution provider for organizations and teams. Today, I operate at the intersection of strategy, people, and process; designing leadership experiences and implementing effective strategies that help executives and their teams thrive through change and complexity while accelerating better business outcomes.

What are you most proud of in your career so far?

What I am most proud of is that I am following the spark that makes me truly come alive! I get to work with C-Suite executives and teams across various industries as an executive coach. I learn from my coachees just as much as they learn from me. In addition, my coaching informs my leadership and my leadership informs my coaching. I am truly blessed.

I am proud of the difficult moments in my career when I chose Integrity, and followed that wise teaching from Kevin Williams. I am proud of the moments where I showed up to make an impact for others, like Tina Mabley. When I left the shores of home in Nigeria, two decades ago, I did not dream of all that I have now accomplished. I am immensely grateful to the Grace I have experienced, my family’s unflinching support, and the people along my journey that have lit the path for me, and I am honored to hold the torch out for others around me.

At every step of my journey, the seemingly insurmountable mountains that were before me turned to beautiful landscapes behind me reminding me that my capacity is bigger than I can imagine.

How have you stayed involved with the school as an alumnus?

I have been an alumni interviewer for prospective students interested in McCombs since graduation. I have worked with various MBA staff to help host Tech Trip visits to the San Francisco bay area. Those Jan Tech trips were the highlights of my year as I got to interact with current students and catch up with McCombs staff. I participate in our alumni career series, and recently hosted a webinar titled, “Promote a Learning and Growth Culture in This Brave New Hybrid World” (view the recording here).

I am excited to be back in Texas and closer to McCombs. I visited campus over the Labor Day weekend with a few friends from my class year, and it was a fun, nostalgic and refreshing trip.

What are your goals for the future, career wise, and in relation to McCombs?

My future has Organizational Effectiveness continuing to take the center stage in my career. I see myself leading global org effectiveness at scale – impacting leaders, teams, organizations, and systems.

I also hope to be engaged in faculty opportunities at McCombs, teaching executive development and organizational leadership classes, and I will continue to be engaged in leadership development conversations within the McCombs community.

Alumni Meet with McCombs Finance Faculty Member in Philadelphia

A group of alumni from the Philadelphia Chapter had an opportunity to meet with Distinguished Senior Lecturer Sandy Leeds. Sandy is a member of the finance faculty at McCombs. Philadelphia Chapter Leader Guilherme Junqueira coordinated the informal dinner event for alumni in the Philly area.

Pictured above (from left to right): Evan Brandoff, BBA ’13; Zubin Teherani, Evan’s Co-Founder; Distinguished Senior Lecturer Sandy Leeds; Guilherme Junqueira, MBA ’20; Josh Miller,  MBA ’17; and Bonnie Lopez, BBA ’10.

Class Note: Kathleen Mabley, MBA ’96

Kathleen Mabley, MBA ’96, has been promoted to the position of Chief Marketing and Communications Officer for the Moody College of Communication.

Congratulations to Kathleen! View Moody’s Leadership page here.

Student Projects Receive Funding from the MBA Alumni Endowed Excellence Fund

This past May, a committee of four MBA alumni, two MBA students, and two MBA staff representatives came together to review funding proposals for student projects set for the 2021-22 school year. The funds come from an endowment established by MBA alumni in 2005—the MBA Alumni Endowed Excellence Fund (MAEEF). This yearly awarding process is the most direct way that alumni invest in students and the legacy of the MBA program.

This year the committee awarded $35,000 to support a wide variety of projects:

MBA Africa Connect is a team of four McCombs MBAs on a mission to cultivate a sense of pride and belonging in the African American community. The group plans to accomplish this through business and culture-focused observation tours to Africa to help bridge the economic and professional divide between Africa and its diaspora. They have established partnerships with firms in Nigeria, Ethiopia, and Tanzania. The firms have identified business challenges and MAC has created cohorts of MBAs to ideate and collaboratively work to solve these business cases. The cohorts will present their final recommendations on these solutions to partner firms’ C-Suite executives. The objective of these multi-national working groups is to demystify doing business in Africa.

The Health Innovation Fellows and the MBA Healthcare Association will use the funds to continue the Texas MBA branded healthcare case competition in tandem with the Dell Medical School. Hosting this competition on for a third year will continue to elevate the prominence of the McCombs School of Business as a healthcare destination for students and companies alike as well as further enable our partnership with Dell Medical School. Furthermore, this case competition provides valuable experience to students who are looking for healthcare focused internships, while also allowing them greater access to networking opportunities. This case competition requires continued funding to get it off the ground and elevate its stature in the local healthcare community as we continue to grow the competition to eventually be self-sustaining with corporate sponsors in future years.

The Plug N Chug plan aims to host a happy hour for first years, second years, partners, faculty, and administration each Thursday in the lobby of Rowling Hall to increase engagement between cohorts and classes. This name was inspired by the group’s 1Y Intro to Finance professor, Dean Hahn, who often describe our homework solutions as “plug and chug.” Funding will help them to create a family-friendly event that is accessible to all and does not take place at a bar – currently, nothing like this exists on campus (even prior to COVID-19 restrictions).

The Graduate Entrepreneurship Society has been revived to become The Graduate Entrepreneurship and Innovation Club (‘The Club’) in 2019-20 and the leadership team for 2021-22 wants to expand and sharpen this vision by fostering a community for all types of entrepreneurs including those who have or intend to have their own company, those who want to share ideas and brainstorm with others, and those who want to join an early-stage start-up, a venture capital firm, and/or something in a related field. They strive to help build founders and innovators at Texas McCombs.

The First-Generation MBA Mentorship Program will match current MBA candidates with first-generation, undergraduate students at UT Austin who have an interest in pursuing an MBA in the future. The students will receive academic and career advice from their mentor, engage in team-building programming with other mentees, and be encouraged to observe MBA classes.

The McCombs Sports, Entertainment, Media Association (SEMA)experienced a decline in overall campus presence during the 2020-21 academic year, with a drop in active members and in-person events. Our goal is to reverse this trend by hosting the largest ever SEMA Symposium on Friday, September 24, 2021 at Rowling Hall. Hosting a marquee event like this will revitalize the organization and create networking opportunities for students interested in pursuing careers in sports and entertainment.

Class Note: Chuk Orakwue, MBA ’21, and Lou Ortiz, MBA ’21

Chuk Orakwue, MBA ’21, and Lou Ortiz, MBA ’21, were featured in The Consortium for their recently-launched investment app, Xantos Labs. The app allows users to invest, track their investments and communicate with an investment manager and allows Xantos Labs to educate clients along the way. It is said that the experience they gained as two of 16 students selected to manage the McCombs Business School’s $30 million MBA Investment Fund, was what prepared them to make their dreams for Xantos Labs a reality.

Excellent work, Chuk and Lou! Read more here.

Class Note: Mark Madrid, BBA ’95

Mark Madrid, BBA ’95, has joined the Biden-Harris Administration staff as an associate administrator. Previously, Mark served as CEO of Latino Business Action Network and Stanford Latino Entrepreneurship Initiative, CEO of the Greater Austin Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, COO of the Houston Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, and held senior executive banking roles, including at J.P. Morgan on Wall Street.

Read more here.

Class Note: Fran Harris, MSTC ’18

Fran Harris, MSTC ’18, recently brought her first stage production on tour and made a stop in Austin at Akins High School. Rapper’s Delight is a standout comedy which she wrote, produced, and will direct. It stars Dallas rap sensation, Quincy Bradley, and features a mostly all-Texas cast.

Read more here.

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