Smith MBAs Place
Third in the 2004 International
Graduate Logistics Case Competition
 |
|
(l to r)
Muthu Venkatachalam, Jeremy
Gove, Silvana Muguerza ,
Larry Legates, Bruce Chiang,
and Professor Angelisa
Gillyard |
A team of Smith MBAs placed third
this past weekend in the 2004
International Graduate Logistics Case
Competition in Chicago, Illinois. The
team, comprised of Jeremy Gove, Muthu
Venkatachalam, Bruce Chiang, Larry
Legates, and Silvana Muguerza, won in
the first round before falling short in
a hard-fought final round.
The competition ran from Feb. 19 to
Feb. 21, with the final round and award
presentation on Feb. 21. The students
received the case at 7:30 a.m. on
Friday, Feb. 20 and had 24 hours to
compile their solutions and
presentation. The first round of
presentations began on Saturday morning
with the final round in the afternoon.
The winners were announced at the
closing dinner.
This year's case asked teams to
analyze the performance of Tricon
Logistics China's distribution center.
Tricon Logistics China is the logistics
department of Tricon Restaurants
International (China).
"Our strategy was to invest the time
early to really analyze and understand
the problem at hand before we dove into
our problem solving exercise," said
Gove. "From there, we developed
alternative recommendations, picked our
top five (three final recommendations,
and two alternatives considered), split
up the work, and then spent the rest of
our time developing those alternatives
and the associated benefit from pursing
those option."
A critical part of the team's
strategy was to designate one person as
the owner of the presentation from the
start in an attempt to keep team members
on schedule and make sure that the
outcome was one cohesive, persuasive
solution, said Gove. "It was a great
time and the team really came together
to deliver a great set of
recommendations," he added.
Smith was highly competitive,
producing a presentation that was
capable of winning the entire
competition, said Angelisa Gillyard,
faculty advisor and assistant professor
of logistics, business and public
policy. "They performed extremely well,
finishing ahead of a number of schools
known historically for their excellent
logistics programs," said Gillyard.
First and second places were awarded
to the University of Wisconsin and the
University of Minnesota, respectively.
The Smith team received $750 for third
place. Last year the Smith team tied for
third place in the competition. In 1998,
the first year the competition was held
(at the University of Tennessee), Smith
won the event. The following year, the
Smith team came in second.