Smith Fellows in QUEST Offer
Creative Solutions
to Solve Real-World Business
Dilemmas
How
might Anheuser-Busch cut the disposal
cost of wet grain left over from its
beer production? Just ask undergraduates
Adam Gabai, Alison Horner, Andrew Narod,
Ari Rasekh, and Katya Tomarev, who
developed solutions to the beer
production dilemma as part of the senior
practicum portion of the (Quality
Enhancement and Teams) QUEST
program. QUEST, one of the Smith Schools
specialized
Undergraduate Fellows tracks, is
operated jointly with the A. James Clark
School of Engineering and admits
students from the Smith School, the
Clark School and the College of
Mathematical, Computer and Physical
Sciences.
Seniors in the QUEST
program spend the better part of the
fall semester working with a faculty
advisor on consulting projects for
corporations, all of which have
real-life importance and implications.
These are all real-life
projects for Black & Decker, said Mike
Weber, corporate champion for the QUEST
consulting project, to the team of
students working on Black & Decker's
projects. We will definitely use this
data. I just wish I had the budget to
hire all of you.
Black
& Decker sponsored two consulting
projects with QUEST this year: one which
considered the parts distribution
process, and one which evaluated a
hub-and-spoke model for tool repair.
Both projects involved
complex mathematical models for
analyzing information provided to the
students by Black & Decker. Daimler
Chrysler set students to thinking about
design innovations that would make their
cars more user-friendly, which involved
field trips to places like IKEA and
Brookstone stores so students could
research publicly available technology
that could be turned into the latest,
greatest new gadget for your car. Ten
companies sponsored 13 consulting
projects this year, which involved
almost 60 students.
During the
presentations, students described their
methodology, how they evaluated their
ideas, and how they conducted
benchmarking exercises. Their background
work is often highly quantitative as
they produce models and databases to
process information. Like the case
competitions that are part of the
coursework for Smith MBA students, the
QUEST presentations are timed, adding an
extra dimension of pressure for
already-nervous students.
Members
of the Anheuser-Busch team considered
ways to deal with the wet grain that
would meet their clients needs:
something that would remove the grain
from the brewery in an environmentally
friendly and inexpensive way. QUEST
students are encouraged to think out of
the box, so their solutions ranged from
turning the grain into pet food to using
it as mulch for mushrooms. One of their
more unique solutions was Beer Bread,
samples of which were passed around to
the audience. (It was edible. Or at least
not inedible. They're working on it.)
So don't look for Beer
Bread to appear in your grocery store
anytime soon. Still, another
recommendation of the Anheuser-Busch
team is under serious consideration and
may save the company more than $100,000
a year demonstrating the value of the
QUEST program and the remarkable talent
of QUEST students.
For more information
about QUEST, visit
http://www.rhsmith.umd.edu/quest.
▓
Rebecca Winner, Office of Marketing
Communications