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1100 Business Leaders Enter Workforce
Under Armour Founder Kevin Plank Delivers Commencement Address
The Smith School offers congratulations to the 770
undergraduate, 300 MBA/MS, 25 Executive MBA, and
10 PhD new degree holders who graduated
on May 22, 2005.
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(l to
r) Dean Howard Frank
with keynote speaker Kevin
Plank. |
Kevin Plank '96, founder and CEO of
Under Armour Performance Apparel,
delivered an inspiring keynote address
to a packed Comcast Center. "I'm
appreciative of the life and business
skills that UM taught me," he began.
Drawing on his experience as a football
player at Maryland and his keen
entrepreneurial instinct, Plank
recounted his vision and roadmap to
"creating the world's greatest football
undershirt."
While still in school pursuing his
bachelor's degree in marketing and
playing football, Plank came up
with the idea for a new kind of t-shirt
-- a unique microfber sports shirt --
in a market that no one had addressed and launched Under Armour.
Not thwarted by negative feedback from
"95 percent" of the business people who
didn't think he could compete against
the big footwear companies, he took his
seven t-shirt prototypes right to the
athletes and received positive feedback.
Within the
year 12 college teams and 10 NFL teams
were wearing Under Armour. In 1996 Under
Armour had about $17,000 in sales, said
Plank. The company has grown
dramatically since then and in
2004 sales soared to $206
million. The company is an official
supplier to Major League Soccer, Major
League Baseball, the National Hockey
League, USA Baseball, the U.S. Ski Team
and numerous NFL teams and division I-A
college football teams.
Plank encouraged students to keep in
touch with the University of Maryland
after graduation, stressing how he
relied on his friends from UM and family
as Under Armour got off the ground. For
the first two years, he ran his business
out of his grandmother's house in
Georgetown with one business partner he
met in school. Now, Under Armour's
international headquarters are in
Baltimore and they have 500 employees.
He offered three key points for creating
a good business plan, and said he runs
his business like a sports team. First,
he said, define your roadmap.
"Good opportunities won't come to you,
you must build a roadmap." Second,
make a decision. The ability to make
decisions is what matters, he stressed.
And third, execution.
"All the good ideas have not been
taken," said Plank. Find what you are
good at and have a passion and
conviction for, and create a team that
has strengths where your weaknesses lie.
"Don't be afraid to right the course,"
he said if you aren't happy where you
are going.
Building on the Under Armour motto, he
asked students to give back to UM. "Protect
this house," he concluded. "This is
our school, our house."
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(l to
r) MBA student speaker
Andrew Schneider with
Associate Dean for Masters
Programs and Career
Management Cherie Scricca. |
Andrew Schneider delivered the
graduate student address, giving the
audience a better understanding of the
Smith School's tag line "Leaders for the
Digital Economy."
[Transcript]
"As graduates, we stand not only at
the starting gate of a new era in our
own lives, nor just at the dawn of a new
century, but also upon the beginning of
a new age," said Schneider. "An age in
which the rigid and hierarchical systems
of the last century -- whether
political, cultural, scientific or
economic -- are quickly being replaced
by an integration of systems across
disciplines and borders in which
information, people, and movements are
traveling at speeds and rates of
adoption unimaginable even a generation
ago. This will be, if you will, a
digital age."
He encouraged students to "pick
something. A field, an interest. Let it
drive you. If it feels meaningful,
fulfilling and significant, dig deeper.
If it feels wrong or shallow, stop and
try something else. Trying and failing
is surely the noble path in comparison
to sticking to the safe harbors. The
opportunities that we have created for
ourselves should not, indeed, can not be
squandered."
Schneider came to the Smith School with
an impressive background in the public
sector, having served as assistant to
the chief domestic policy advisor to the
Vice President of the United States in
the White House. He went on to positions
in the United States Embassy in
Macedonia and the American Chamber of
Commerce in Macedonia.
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(l to
r) Undergraduate student
speaker Brian Bartlett with
Assistant Dean for
Undergraduate Studies Pat
Cleveland. |
Brian Bartlett delivered the
undergraduate student address. He said
that he has seen Smith and UM grow
during his years here - sports and
academics. Smith graduates are the
leaders of the UM class of 2005. "It is
our job to live up to the hype," he
said. "We are even better prepared than
they think."
Brian Bartlett graduated Summa
Cum Laude with a perfect grade point
average of 4.0 received a
Bachelor’s degree in finance and
international business from the Smith
School, and a Bachelor’s degree in
economics from the School of Behavioral
and Social Sciences. He became very
involved in the UM community, serving as
president of the Phi Alpha Delta Pre-Law
Fraternity, president and player on the
Maryland Men’s Ice Hockey team, and a
member of Omicron Delta Kappa, the
Finance, Banking and Investment Society,
and the Economics Association of
Maryland. He also spent a semester in
Australia studying at the Royal
Melbourne Institute of Technology.
►Watch
Video Highlights, including Kevin
Plank, Dean Howard Frank, national
anthem, and student speakers
Download the
Free RealPlayer to view the video.
Send questions/problems to
aleyl@rhsmith.umd.edu.
►Photo
Highlights
►Order the DVD
from the Smith Commencement Ceremony
(by Kitay Productions) For more information about Kevin Plank,
see the
Fall 2003 issue of Smith Business
magazine, "Entrepreneur's Cool Product
is Hot, Hot, Hot" (PDF)
▓ Photos and story by
Alissa Arford-Leyl, Office of Marketing
Communications |