Maryland Undergrads Compete in Finals of
General Motors Marketing Challenge
A team of undergraduates at the Robert H. Smith School of Business, University
of Maryland, has made it to the final round in General Motors “GM&U” Marketing
Challenge. Drexel University and Syracuse University are the other two finalists
in the case competition. The challenge: create an integrated marketing communications
plan for GM’s new College Discount Program.
The College Discount Program is designed to “attract younger drivers to the GM
portfolio of cars,” according the challenge posted on
GM&U’s Web site.
Teams were required to develop an integrated marketing communications plan using
their own research and ideas. “Ultimately, GM is looking to students for a plan
that resonates with the target, creates a buzz for the College Discount Program
and gets college students excited about GM cars,” the challenge reads.
The students in the group – Tiffany Lin, Brianne Macy, Ashlee Sasscer, and Cassie
Stuper – worked on this case challenge in their capstone class for the Smith School’s
Design and Innovation in Marketing Fellows Program.
Macy, a senior marketing major and commercial Spanish minor, said, “We all definitely
put a lot of time and effort into this. We were constantly discussing and revising
our ideas inside and out of class - to the point where we changed our marketing
campaign's tag line not too long before the contest deadline. I think we became
slightly notorious in class for our extensive discussions.”
Lin, a senior studio art major with a concentration in design, agreed with Macy.
“We wanted a plan that would meet every goal outlined by the GM&U Challenge, yet
we wanted every single element within the plan to come together as one cohesive
idea. I think we were the last group to come up with our final tagline and that
was a week or two before the project was due.”
With the help of art professor Ruth Lozner, who taught the course, and Smith
School marketing professor Mary Harms, they submitted their integrated marketing
communications plan to GM and were selected as finalists on Nov. 25, 2009.
“I was very surprised – shocked almost. First when our IMC plan was chosen from
the class to be submitted to GM and then again when I saw the email saying we were
chosen as one of the three finalists in the overall competition,” Lin said. “I got
the e-mail from Professor Lozner the Wednesday before Thanksgiving and I sat there
for a good 10 minutes reading the e-mail over and over again to make sure I wasn’t
reading it wrong. I couldn't believe it!”
The teammates said they worked hard all semester long to get to the finals of
the competition.
“I gave my all in this competition,” Sasscer, a senior Studio Art Major, said.
“Designing the ads and coming up with ideas for promotions and events was a lot
of fun for me.”
On Dec. 10, the group will present their final plan in Detroit, MI. Afterward,
the GM&U board will choose a winner to receive a $3,000 prize. The other remaining
finalists will receive a $2,000 or $1,000 prize for second or third place, respectively.
The prize money goes to the fellows program.
“I am most excited to see GM's head quarters and to present to top GM executives.
It is such a great opportunity to even be asked to come and present to them,” Stuper,
a senior marketing major and Spanish minor, said. “It is exciting that they are
taking our ideas seriously and looking at something that I helped to create.”
Macy shared the same sentiments. “I'm really excited to hear the judges' feedback.
Hearing what professionals, especially those from Campbell-Ewald, the ad agency
GM uses, have to say about our ideas will not only be interesting but incredibly
useful to me as a future marketing professional.”
Both Lozner and Harms are proud of the group’s efforts.
“The students participating are part of the inaugural cohort group to go through
the program, which is a collaboration between the marketing department of the Robert
H. Smith School of Business and the design department in the College of Arts and
Sciences,” Harms said.
Lozner said she is excited to join her group of students in Detroit to watch
them and the other two schools present to the GM officials.
“I think it’s great for everybody concerned. It reflects well on the fellowship.
It reflects well on everything,” she said, adding that the case the students worked
on was complicated, involving social media, print ads, broadcast ads, and much more.
“It was a very clever approach … After 10 weeks of really hard work it came as a
big surprise. It’s very exciting.”
Jessica Bauer, Intern, Office of Marketing Communications