Month: March 2020

Career Webinar Recap: “Work Life Balance” with Suzi Brown

Suzanne Brown is a consultant, speaker, strategist, author, and avid international traveler. She’s an advocate for and enabler of professional working moms creating their own version of work-life balance.  Watch her career webinar here!

Suzi worked in the demanding marketing agency industry at large companies with no work-life balance and ones that enabled a more balance-focused approach to life. She eventually found her way to entrepreneurship, where she created a lifestyle centered around being the mom she wants to be and staying engaged in exciting and interesting projects for her clients. Suzanne shares her own experience and research, combined with knowledge from more than 110 conversations with working moms to enable other working moms to create the balance they crave.

Suzanne and her husband live in Austin, Texas. You can often find them during non-work time trying to keep up with their two active young boys, whether on a local hike or a far-off adventure.

Class Note: Brandon Smith, MBA ’01

Brandon Smith, MBA ’01, has been appointed chief business officer of Prothena. Prothena Corporation is a clinical-stage neuroscience company with expertise in protein misfolding. Brandon will be responsible for leading the company’s business development initiatives, portfolio strategic planning, and alliance management activities.

Read more about Brandon and Prothena here.

Class Note: Walker Drewett, BBA ’17

BBA alumnus, Walker Drewett, is the chief executive officer for NuBrakes, a local startup that provides on-demand mobile brake repair services onsite at your office or home in Austin, Dallas-Fort Worth, and Houston. NuBrakes’ is continuing to provide at-home aid for those in need of repairs, especially right now in this difficult time.

To learn more about NuBrakes and their services being offered, visit their website.

Webinar Recap: “50 Shades of Green: Sustainability and Sustainable Finance” with Meeta Kothare

On Feb. 25, Meeta Kothare hosted the KTG Webinar “50 Shades of Green: Sustainability and Sustainable Finance.” The webinar covered sustainability and the impact syndrome, 21st century trends, and how to manage, measure, and report sustainability. Watch it here!

Meeta Kothare is adjunct professor in the McCombs School of Business, where she is the inaugural Managing Director of the Social Innovation Initiative. Kothare also holds a faculty appointment at the LBJ School of Public Affairs. She teaches popular classes in Financial Innovation for Social Impact, Impact Investing, and Social Entrepreneurship and Innovation. Previously she founded Neeva Solutions, a management consulting firm assisting nonprofits and for-profit organizations dedicated to social impact.

Kothare has over 25 years of academic, business, and social sector experience. She began her career in sales and marketing before pursuing graduate studies in business. After completing her doctorate, she joined the finance faculty at the McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin, where she has taught in the MBA, Business Honors and Executive Education programs. Her research on corporate finance, corporate governance, and securities markets has appeared in leading academic finance journals.

Kothare’s current interests include social innovation and the use of financial tools for social impact and sustainability. Her areas of expertise include: impact and sustainable investing, impact measurement, social entrepreneurship and innovation. She is also actively engaged in community service, philanthropy and impact investing, and mentoring social changemakers on campus and beyond.

Kothare holds a Ph.D. in Finance and an M.S. in Applied Economics from the University of Rochester, and an MBA from the University of Georgia, where she was the class valedictorian.

Alumni Q&A: Arthur Mills IV, BBA ’96, MBA ’04

Arthur Mills IV, BBA ’96 and MBA ’04, shares his career journey to becoming the chief operating officer for New Teacher Center and reflects on his memories as a student at UT. Arthur lives in Atlanta and currently serves as Chair of the MBA Advisory Board. We are very thankful for his impact and dedicated involvement with the McCombs School of Business!  

Please talk about your experience as a student here at McCombs. Why you came here, groups you were involved with, favorite class/teacher, etc. 

I came back to McCombs (BBA ’96) because I was thrilled to join an amazing group of people that made up our 2004 class, in an academically challenging environment that had served me well previously, and be part of the culture that makes McCombs unique across the MBA landscape. I was about as active as most in our class, serving on the Graduate Business Council (GBC), McCombs Admission Committee (MAC), President of the Black Graduate Business Association (BGBA) in my second year, and Net Impact. This guy Jay Hartzell taught one of my early Finance courses, and I still consider he, Sandy Leeds, Eugene Sepulveda, John Doggett, Dean Eric Hurst, and far too many others to name, as major contributors to my growth and success. 

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

I left the comfortable confines of Austin after graduating for Minnesota’s Twin Cities, signing on with General Mills in Minneapolis after a fabulous summer internship the prior year I joined Mills’ Meals Division where we revitalized its Progresso Soup brand, growing its profitability from $70MM to $150MM in three years. 

later moved to Miami, FL, to take on an incredible role as Regional Controller for General Mills’ small but rapidly growing Latin America and South Africa international region. While the travel and Miami life were amazing, leaning into building infrastructure and other foundations for future success cemented my passions for strategy development, setting a clear vision, and building strong teams as a leader 

In 2010, I made a major career pivot and accepted an initial two-year Broad Residency role to join the fourth largest school district in Georgia, ultimately spending my longest career stop to date (8 years) leveraging my business and people-centered expertise to help that district of 98,000 students across 100 schools and with 14,000 employees develop a new “Charter System” governance model and implement a new strategic plan to sustainably improve student achievement, and later transform its talent management practices and leadership pipelines. 

I am currently the Chief Operating Officer for New Teacher Center, a $30MM non-profit focused on disrupting the predictability of educational inequities for systemically underserved students, from preschool through high school, by accelerating educator effectiveness. It’s exciting to join a passionate and accomplished team that has clearly articulated very high expectations about our organization’s impact within the field of education. 

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

I can’t believe I’m at the point to say “looking back,” but I’m extremely proud of the leaders and true rock stars I have been able to work with, mentor, grow, and help achieve their own personal and professional goals. Each time I get a quick note of a promotion, new assignment, or award, I am reminded about the importance of relationships and how much they really matter – especially the teacher and school leaders I’ve worked with in my more recent times, because that impact is magnified in the kids and communities they serve, and the future we will all soon see. There’s enough wins out there for everyone; it’s much better to go farther together than faster alone.  

 Has your career played out the way you expected? 

Yes, and no. In my UT undergrad days my diverse interests led me to take several political science and public policy classes to augment my Finance BBA, and after graduation I really contemplated going to law school, so I always expected to find some way to leverage my business acumen in more mission-driven arenas at some point.  

McCombs’ program flexibility and responsiveness to student needs were extremely helpful in preparing me for later steps in my career. Our class was the Texas+ Program’s first cohort, I was accepted into Eugene Sepulveda’s Community Development Non-Profit Consulting Practicum and continued volunteering with our group’s partner organization the remainder of my two years, and was fortunate to add a few business, policy, and law courses in at LBJ during my MBA. Those experiences showed me that having a double bottom line impact was both possible and needed in the world.  

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

I loved reading those application essays and doing interviews while on the McCombs Admissions Committee with some great people during my time in the program, and continue to do alumni interviews in Atlanta, which is a great way to be an ambassador for McCombs in an area that has a surprisingly deep pool of McCombs alum. It’s also very humbling as the students continue to amaze me with their ideas and experiences. I remain passionate about increasing multiple dimensions of diversity within the McCombs program, and I’ve taken great pleasure to speak at several Explore McCombs and McCombs Diversity Weekends to share my experiences and recruit extremely talented potential students from underrepresented groups to the program.  

I was honored to share my personal leadership story as 2018’s Commencement Speaker last spring, and I have served on the Alumni Advisory Board since 2015, becoming chair of the Alumni Programs Committee the past two years where we have tried to improve our alumni database, rethink our events…including this year’s McCombs Homecoming event, and submitted MBA Rising Star nominations to Dean Hartzell. This month, I became Chair of the Alumni Advisory Board, where I’m excited to continue our focus on inclusion, increasing alumni engagement, and ensuring the voices of all our McCombs alumni across each of our award-winning programs are in the room and at the table. 

How have you personally benefitted from being a part of the network? 

I’ll go back to the relationships I’ve formed since starting my MBA. Our class’ fifteenth reunion coincided with this year’s new McCombs Homecoming events. It was deeply rewarding to celebrate our class’ collective successes and shared memories, realizing our impact on each other and the world has been tremendous. I’ve also gained many new friends and mentors along the way due to our common ties to the McCombs network. Far too many to name but I’ve been blessed to have a robust personal board of directors to help guide my steps. 

Any other community involvement, hobbies or tidbits you’d like to share? 

My wife Carla and I absolutely love living in Atlanta where we are both active in the community with shared passions for young people, diversity, and the cultural arts. I am a member and Board Financial Secretary with the mentorship organization 100 Black Men of Atlantawas recently selected as chair of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra’s Advisory Council, a newly formed group focusing on broadening the ASO’s inclusiveness and reach across Atlanta’s diverse communitieslead as Assistant Scoutmaster of Troop 2600 where I’ve used my own Eagle journey to mentor our troop’s first four Eagle Scouts, and serve as a Deacon at our church, the House of Hope Atlanta.  

Follow my culture and leadership topics on Twitter at @amills4 and my hashtags for the year #CultureVsEverything#LeadWithIntent, and #LoveMyASO. 

Class Note: Paul Knopp, BBA ’82, MBA ’83

KPMG recently named Paul Knopp future Chair and CEO, effective July 1. Paul has been with the firm for 36 years and has extensive experience serving large multinational clients and leading some of the firm’s most complex global audit engagements across a variety of industries.

“I am honored by this opportunity to serve KPMG at this pivotal time in our firm’s history. We have tremendous opportunity to bring value to our various stakeholders through our one-firm approach during these transformative times,” said Paul.

Learn more about Paul and KPMG here.

Class Note: Rebecca Whitehead Munn, BBA ’85

Rebecca Whitehead Munn, BBA alumna, has been named chief operating officer of 180 Health Partners. Rebecca has been a recognized member of the healthcare leadership community for over 20 years. Most recently, she was responsible for overall strategy and execution for UnitedHealthcare’s innovated community-based clinical care teams. Additionally, Rebecca led the clinical and operational teams, leveraged data-driven patient selection and segmentation tools, and nurtured a trauma-informed care philosophy all while improving patient engagement and increasing positive outcomes.

Read more here.

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