
Top Female
Executives, MBAs and Corporate
Recruiters to Gather at Smith for
National Conference for Women in
Business
 |
|
Keynote
speaker, Irene Chang Britt,
vice president and general
manager of Campbell Soup
Co.s sauces and beverages
division, addressed
attendees on Friday. |
 |
|
Lehman
Bros., Google, Home Depot,
eBay, Bank of America, were
just a few of the companies
that came to recruit top
women MBA talent from around
the country. |
 |
|
This
year, the conference
featured a case competition,
sponsored by Thunderbird
School of Global Management
and Hilti Corp. |
 |
|
The Smith
School was one of six teams
making it to the final round
of competition! |
A year of planning and hard work
culminated in a hugely successful
national conference Nov. 2-3, attracting
more than 1,400 women MBA students,
executives and corporate recruiters to
the University of Maryland's Robert H.
Smith School of Business. The 25th
Annual National Association of Women
MBAs Conference and Career Fair featured
panel discussions, workshops, a career
fair and networking events all designed
to advance women in their professional
lives.
Smith second-year MBA students Rita
Mullane and Loretta Goodridge co-chaired
the event. They worked with the Smith
School team and the National Association
of Women MBAs to line up speakers, plan
panel discussions and workshops, and
coordinate logistics for the schools
largest event, which followed the theme
of Take the Lead: Globalization,
Entrepreneurship and Technology.
The event drew in more people then
we ever expected, Goodridge said. It
is great for the organization to see
such a growth in this years conference.
Everyone commented on how well the
conference was put together.
Participants were very happy with the
information they were able to take away
from the event and the new contacts they
had made throughout the weekend. And
employers were thrilled with the high
caliber of women they met.
Recruiters from more than 70 top
companies representing an array of
industries including financial services,
consulting and consumer packaged goods,
were present at the career fair. Lehman
Bros., Google, Home Depot, eBay, Bank of
America, were just a few of the
companies that came to recruit top women
MBA talent from around the country. The
booths filled the ballroom at the
Marriott Inn and Conference Center on
the university's campus.
Conference attendees spent much of
the day Friday at the career fair. They
took a lunch break to hear keynote
speaker, Irene Chang Britt, vice
president and general manager of
Campbell Soup Co.'s sauces and beverages
division. Britt spoke about her career
as an entrepreneur and business leader,
her exuberance and candor often drawing
laughter from the captivated audience.
She encouraged women to be innovators
and entrepreneurs, even when working
within an organization. And she pushed
them to be spectacular and let the
things they were most passionate about
shape their careers.
Friday afternoon six team
representing five schools Georgetown
University, Georgia Tech, Rice
University, University of Texas- Dallas
and the University of Maryland
gathered in Van Munching Halls Frank
Auditorium to compete in the final round
of conferences inaugural case
competition, sponsored by Thunderbird
School of Global Management and Hilti
Corp. Each team had 30 minutes to
present a PowerPoint presentation and
answer questions from a panel of judges.
Participants and conference attendees
gathered at Van Munching for a cocktail
reception after the case competition
before heading back to the Marriott for
dinner and the evenings keynote
speaker, Deanne de Vries, senior manager
of Global HR at Agility. De Vries told
stories of her past experiences working
abroad and encouraged women to take
chances in their lives and careers. Case
competition winners were also announced:
Georgetown took the top prize, $5,000.
University of Texas-Dallas placed second
and won $3,000, and Georgia Tech, third,
took home $2,000.
Saturday, Nov. 3 was packed with
conference workshops and panel
discussions. Keynote speaker Lisa
Tondreau, a partner in Healthcare
Industry Leader, U.S. Public Sector
for IBM Global Services, tied her speech
back to the three main themes of the
conference, Globalization,
Entrepreneurship and Technology. She
tied all three together with a video on
the potential spread of a disease like
bird flu, could impact the world.
Afternoon sessions to wrap up the
conference covered topics including
branding, leadership development,
entrepreneurship, and pitching business
ideas to investors, technology,
international careers, and corporate
social responsibility.
More information about the conference
and career fair is available at
www.mbawomen.org.
▓ Carrie
Handwerker, Office of Marketing
Communications,
& Lettie Goodridge, MBA
Candidate 2008, Smith Media Group