Smith Students Participate in
Social Venture Consulting Program
The Dingman Center for Entrepreneurship's Social Venture Consulting Program
wrapped up a semester’s worth of consulting projects as eight teams of Smith
School students presented their consulting work to an audience of students and
faculty on Dec. 3, 2008. Projects ranged from product development work, to
outreach and social networking strategy. Each team presented a background on
their client, their project findings, as well as the lessons they learned going
forward.
One such client was Aumazo, a nonprofit organization that is planning to
build a girl’s school in Bankondji, Cameroon. The client wanted to increase
outreach, and the student team built a Web strategy, including social networking
and multimedia. Another team worked with a small nonprofit organization called
The Woman’s Heart, a women’s center that is based out of Casper, Wyoming. The
team worked on strategic marketing, enhancing resource utilization and
sustaining revenues.
Other clients were closer to home. A student team worked with the University of
Maryland’s Office of Sustainability’s Climate Action Plan, building a plan to
decrease energy usage.
Each team was tasked with communicating lessons learned. Many teams noted a
lack of knowledge in a specific background, for example, a marketing background
for a marketing case. This prompted a steeper learning curve. To move quickly
along the curve, team-members drew knowledge from first-year core courses, for
example, the “4 Ps of marketing” in the first year marketing course, as well as
other data analysis techniques learned in core courses. Coaching provided by
second-year MBAs who had previously completed the consulting program also helped
navigate student teams through their projects.
With a solid foundation of core courses and coaching, client projects were
successful. Many teams were able to point to new skills and perspectives
developed, a greater sense of teamwork, and perhaps most importantly, a deeper
appreciation for the role that business skills can play in solving the problems
and challenges facing non-profit and community organizations.