Dear Members of the Babson Community:
I want to welcome back everyone returning to campus. I also want to extend greetings to all new students, faculty, and staff, as well as to members of our community off campus—alumni, parents, and Fast Track students.
As our spring semester gets
underway, our hearts and prayers continue to be with the people of Haiti, and
members of our community with family or friends who have been directly
affected by last week’s earthquake. Betsy Newman, Dean of Student
Affairs, has led the staff and faculty outreach to impacted students, staff,
faculty, alumni and parents. Some students and employees have
lost family members or have relatives with serious injuries; others have
experienced the total destruction of personal property and businesses.
We will continue to reach out and support these members of our extended
Babson family.
The Bernon Center is the
locus of relief efforts on campus—and our students have
been driving plans for related events throughout the coming weeks and
months. Candlelight vigils for the Babson community were held
yesterday in the Glavin Chapel; a clothing and bedding drive on campus is
being coordinated by students and led by Resident Assistants (RAs); the
Bernon Center is providing information on the best way to send donations for
relief, and arranged for a donation box for the Red Cross at the front
desk in the Office of Campus Life; and students are organizing a red ribbon
fundraiser around Valentine’s Day as a way of continuing support for
Haiti.
If you'd like to help, you can contact Marie Pierre, a Haitian American and
Bernon Scholar who is planning educational and fundraising activities,
or you can reach out to Lisa Thomas,
Director of the Bernon Center.

Babson students also
continue to make a difference elsewhere in the world. Earlier this
month Babson Undergraduate Dean Dennis Hanno and 45 students, faculty, and
staff, spent winter break in Ghana, teaching entrepreneurship and business to
high school students and adults, as well as teaching basic microfinance to
elementary school students. Corporate sponsors supported the trip and
the purchase of computers for schools in Ghana. The photo below shows
members of the local high school team who won second place in the Babson Cup
business plan competition, their school’s headmistress, Babson seniors
John Norton and Samantha Wolfson, and Dean Hanno. More than 2,000
people attended the event.
On the graduate school
front, in January we have seen a high level of applications and deposits for
our San Francisco-based Fast Track program, which will be launched in
March. As many of you know, Fast Track combines face-to-face and online
learning in a 24 month “blended” program for working
professionals. Our other two MBA Fast Track programs are based on the
Babson campus and in Portland, Oregon.
On
these, as well as on many other fronts, Babson has a unique competitive
position that keeps getting better. In 2010 and beyond, we will be
using the assets of the College and its reputational capital to continue to
advance our mission that was spelled out last May in our Babson Strategy 2.1
document—“educating a generation of leaders who
create great economic and social value everywhere.”
Here are some of the latest ways we are making progress toward achieving
Babson’s strategic goals:
We want to be the preeminent institution for entrepreneurial thought and action (ET&A)—and known for it.
In
November, Goldman Sachs announced 10,000 Small Businesses—a $500
million, five-year initiative to provide small businesses across the U.S.
with greater access to business education, mentors, networks, and financial
capital. Babson was selected as one of the initial partners, along with the
Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, the Tuck School of Business
at Dartmouth College, and the UCLA Anderson School of Management.
Babson brings its expertise and experience as a leader in
practically-oriented management education, and will be engaged in curriculum
development, faculty training, and other activities for the
initiative. Patti Greene, Professor of Entrepreneurship, who
holds the President’s Chair in Entrepreneurship, has agreed to serve as
my partner and the coordinator of Babson’s efforts. Patti,
formerly Provost and Dean of the Undergraduate School at Babson, has a
distinguished record of research in this area, with a particular focus on
women and minority entrepreneurs.
I am pleased to serve as
one of the founding Advisory Council members and next week will be attending
a meeting, chaired by Warren Buffett, CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, to discuss
the next steps. When Babson’s role in this initiative was
announced, I had no idea that I would receive so many emails from
undergraduate and graduate students, faculty, staff, alumni, parents, and
friends of the College. Over and over again, they tell me how proud
they are of Babson and to be a part of “the Babson family.”
I will keep you posted on new developments.
Leaders for the long-term
do not rest on their laurels—and neither are we. In the fall, the Faculty Senate approved key recommendations of
the curriculum renewal faculty task force that spelled out areas in which we
can improve the way we educate “entrepreneurial thinkers.”
The faculty is now moving forward with ways to implement these
recommendations.
At
the same time, we remain in the forefront in research as well as
teaching. The Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM), with 54
participating countries, continues to be the authoritative source on
entrepreneurial activity globally and locally. Earlier this
month we released the results of the 11th annual (GEM) 2009
report. The survey found that the number of people starting businesses
with the potential to boost the economy and create new jobs declined 10
percent in the wealthiest nations during the recent global slowdown.
However, a quarter of new entrepreneurs believe the prospects for their
businesses are rosier than a year earlier. Read the report’s
major findings: GEM 2009 Global Report
We want to embrace social,
environmental, economic responsibility, and sustainability simultaneously,
not sequentially.
The faculty task force
engaged in curriculum renewal also recommended that social, environmental,
economic responsibility, and sustainability (SEERS), be incorporated into the
curriculum. We want Babson students not only to ask whether a
sustainable solution to a particular challenge is possible, but also to know
how to creatively develop, implement, and measure the effects of these
solutions. The faculty is working on the best ways to integrate SEERS
into the curriculum.
A key means of implementing
SEERS for co-curricular activities is the Lewis Initiative. In November
we took an important step forward on our sustainability agenda with the
appointment of Cheryl Kiser as the Managing Director of the Lewis
Initiative. Cheryl came from Boston College where, for the past twelve
years, she has served as Managing Director of its Center for Corporate
Citizenship. The Lewis Initiative is integrating our work in both
globally responsible leadership and social entrepreneurship into the Babson
educational experience.
One of its projects is our
partnership with Ashoka, the world’s largest network of social
entrepreneurs. Babson was selected by Ashoka as one of five
universities and colleges in the U.S. for its second Changemaker Campus
Consortium. Students, faculty, and staff across campus will
work together to set a new standard for social entrepreneurship education and
to transform the campus into a hub for social change. It’s a
great way to combine curricular and co-curricular activities for the
betterment of our students and society.
We have had terrific
feedback from the marketplace for our work in sustainability. For
example, the Aspen Institute ranked our MBA program #26 on a list of the top
100 business schools in the world for integrating social and environmental
issues into its curriculum. While there are many MBA rankings, this
survey is the only one that looks beyond reputation and test scores to
measure how well schools are preparing their students for the environmental,
social, and ethical complexities of modern-day business.
Looking ahead,
Babson, the Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering, and Wellesley College are
organizing the Boston Grand Challenge Summit on April 21.
The National Academy of Engineering (NAE) has asked colleges and universities
across the country to take the lead in their regions in focusing on 14 NAE
Grand Engineering Challenges. These are a critical grouping of societal
problems in areas such as energy, the environment, security, and health that
engineering will be instrumental in solving, but cannot solve without other
disciplines. While each other regional group of schools is examining
one of the 14 grand engineering challenges, the Summit organized by our
three-college collaboration will look at what kinds of educational approaches
can best prepare the next generation to address all of these
challenges. Mark Rice, Professor of Entrepreneurship, and Anirudh
Dhebar, Professor of Marketing, are Babson’s representatives on the
Summit organizing committee.
We want to extend our global reach to have an impact on the world.
Today
Babson finds itself at “the center of the universe” in terms of
stimulating entrepreneurial activity. Companies are coming to us for
advice on company-led initiatives; colleges and universities around the world
are coming to us for our help in establishing entrepreneurially-oriented
programs; and governments are coming to us for assistance in advancing
entrepreneurial activity:
We are moving closer to establishing
strategic global partnerships in several countries, including China, Saudi
Arabia, Singapore, India, Sweden, and Chile. As an example, I
was in China in November for activities that included a celebratory event of
the newly-formed Babson College Alumni Club of Greater China. I met
with leaders from a number of academic institutions. Our conversations
centered on how we might partner to bring our entrepreneurial thought and
action expertise to Greater China. I am convinced that among these
universities we will identify a strong partner for our Global
Entrepreneurship Education Network (GEEN), a central part of our strategy
that I have described in earlier community messages.
This is happening because of alumni from China who
are making it happen—both by leveraging their connections
for Babson and making it financially possible to build GEEN. Stay tuned
for more updates as our global partnerships begin to take shape.
As a follow-up to President
Obama’s speech in Cairo last June, Babson is actively advising the
White House on its upcoming Global Entrepreneurship Summit. We
have been asked by his Administration to work with USAID and the State
Department to lay the groundwork for the Summit. Cheryl Kiser,
Executive Director of the Lewis Institute, Jan Shubert, Director of the
Center for Women’s Leadership, and Lisa Di Carlo, Assistant Professor
of Entrepreneurship, are designing and will be facilitating a
“listening” session in Cairo in early February, as one of
Babson’s ongoing roles in planning for the Summit. The
session will bring together government leaders, bankers, and entrepreneurs
from Muslim communities around the world, focused on access to financing and
other key issues.
A new Babson Global Advisory Board (GAB)
has been created, with the mission of extending Babson’s global reach.
GAB members will be composed of alumni and parents from around the world, and
some U.S. constituencies with significant global experience and impact.
The Board will advise me and senior management regarding global issues, bring
new resources to the school, serve as ambassadors for Babson globally, and
represent Babson within their communities.
Our newest overseas programs are making
an extraordinary cross-cultural entrepreneurial education available to our
students. In the BRIC program, (Brazil,
Russia, India, and China) students traveled to Russia and China this fall,
where they combined onsite course work and meetings with business leaders,
government officials, and academic leaders to hear and see firsthand how and
why the global business landscape is changing. Our Global
Entrepreneurship Program (the three-partner MS program delivered with
EM Lyon in France and Zhejiang University in China—and
the only one of its kind) kicked off this fall at EM Lyon, began its second
semester in Hangzhou, China, and will come to Babson for the final semester
beginning in May.
Pramodita Sharma has joined Babson as a
Visiting Professor and Director of the STEP Global Project for Family
Enterprising. She is a leading scholar in the field of
family business, editor of Family Business Review, and a professor at
the John Molson School of Business at Concordia University in Canada.
STEP explores the entrepreneurial process within business families and
generates solutions that have immediate application for family leaders.
In November STEP Summits were held with academics from leading universities
and entrepreneurial business families in Korea, with participants from
throughout the Asia Pacific region, and in Colombia, with participants from
across Latin America.
We want to create a diverse,
multi-cultural and inclusive community of highly talented students, faculty,
and staff.
Babson’s
35-member Council for Inclusiveness and Community, consisting of
students, faculty, and staff, has been leading campus efforts to move
from words to action with steps that include the
following: (1) Babson College has been selected by Managing
Leaders for Tomorrow (MLT), a minority graduate student organization, to
launch an “entrepreneurial thought and action” webinar
series beginning in February, which will help us attract a more diverse
student body; (2) The Council voted unanimously to have the
College sign a transgender equality statement indicating our commitment
to the LGBT community, and will host a signing event in the early
spring; and (3) A pilot multicultural alumni mentoring program is
underway and is linking multicultural students with alumni to provide
support in networking, internships, and jobs. The pilot includes
30 multicultural students and alumni.
Faculty members continue to be
recognized on many fronts for their accomplishments.
- Elaine Allen, Faculty
Scholarship Award from Babson for outstanding research.
- Nestor Azcona, 2009 ALdE’s
Young Researchers Award for his paper, “Non-Traded Goods and Real
Exchange Rate Volatility.”
- Candida Brush, nominated for the
U.S. Association for Small Business and Entrepreneurship Educator of the Year
Award.
- William Casey, The
President’s Senior Term Chair at Babson was renamed the William L.
Casey, Jr. Senior Term Chair; “Best Paper” Award at
the Annual Conference of the National Business and Economics Society.
- Tom Davenport’s Harvard
Business Review (HBR) article, “Competing
on Analytics” was named to HBR’s list of must read articles, and
he also was listed as one of the “100 Best Professors Who Blog”
by Online College.
- Ryan Davies, faculty advisor for
award-winning student teams in international competitions: first place
among undergraduate and MBA teams representing 38 colleges and universities
from around the world in the Rotman International Trading Competition; and
the bronze prize in the IIBD Case Competition, competing against 30 teams
from 11 countries.
- Marjorie Feld, the Saul Viener
Book Award of the American Jewish Historical Society for her book, Lillian
Wald: A Biography.
- Brad George, Stevens Institute
of Technology Wesley J. Howe Award for Excellence in Research on the topic of
Corporate Entrepreneurship for his paper, “Is IPO the Death of
Innovation?”
- Elizabeth Goldberg Professor of
the Year, Babson.
- Dhruv Grewal, Distinguished
Service Award, Journal of Retailing 2009; Multi-Channel Marketing Thought
Leader, Texas A&M, 2009; Best Paper Award, Consumer Behavior Track,
Winter American Marketing Association Conference, 2009.
- Mary O’Donoghue, Faculty
Scholarship Award, Babson.
- Anne Roggeveen and Dhruv
Grewal from Babson, and Dip Biswas (Bentley University) received the
Winter 2009 American Management Association Best Paper on Consumer
Behavior: “How the Order of Sampled Experiential Goods Affects
Choice.”
- Michael Goldstein, named
Associate Editor of the Financial Review, and also Honorary Professor,
The Queen’s University of Belfast (UK).
- Ted Grossman, Dick Mandel, and Stephen
Schiffman, the Leavey Award for Excellence in Private Enterprise
Education for their project “Foundations for Management
Education,” which evolved into Babson’s award-winning signature
FME course for freshmen.
- Michael Levy, the Retail
Leadership Award from the Asia Retail Congress, which represents 50 countries
from across Asia and the world.
- John Marthinsen, Professor of
the Year (the Kennedy Award) from the Babson Graduate Student Association.
- Kevin Mulvaney, faculty advisor
to the winning team in the Association for Corporate Growth (ACG) Cup, the
major MBA level M&A competition.
- Heidi Neck and Dennis Ceru, Best
Pedagogy Workshop, U.S. Association for Small Business & Entrepreneurship
National Conference, 2009.
- Mary Pinard, Martin Luther King
Jr. Leadership Award, Babson.
- Keith Wilcox, Best Conference
Paper at the 2009 Marketing and Public Conference, for his paper entitled
“Vicarious Goal Fulfillment: When the Mere Presence of a Healthy
Option Leads to an Ironically Indulgent Decision.”
- Ron Waite, Dean’s Adjunct
Teaching Award, Babson.
Sam Dunn is joining the Babson community
as our new Chief Information Officer (CIO). Higher education is
becoming increasingly technology-dependent. Moreover, our strategic
initiatives, especially those around curriculum renewal and the expansion of
the Fast Track Program, require the College to strengthen its capacity in
information technology (IT). Sam has the experience to lead Babson into
the next generation technology platforms—serving over 15 years as CIO
in different industries and as CIO for the states of Tennessee and Kentucky,
where he led critical IT initiatives.
We want to be prosperous and sustainable,
with ample resources for our work.
In a difficult economic
environment, we continue to attract philanthropy. As of December 31,
2009 our campaign commitment gifts reached $109 million and we are
aggressively looking to close our campaign by reaching the $200 million
mark. Scholarships are a vitally important part of our strategy
as well as the campaign priority because, more than anything else, we need to
make new investments in human capital. Babson can have the impact we want
it to have in the U.S. and globally only if we are able to
attract, retain, and develop the most talented population of future
entrepreneurial leaders.
For the first time, a signature Babson event will be
held this year as a fundraiser. The next Academy for Distinguished
Entrepreneurs (ADE) ceremony will be on April 7, 2010 at the John F. Kennedy
Presidential Library and Museum in Boston. Henri Termeer, President and
CEO of Genzyme Corporation, one of the world’s leading biotechnology
companies, will be inducted into the ADE, as part of an exciting program
entitled “World Stage.” Termeer is an inspiration to entrepreneurs, but Genzyme inspires filmmakers as well—see the January 16 Boston Globe article “Hollywood treatment: A true story that unfolded at Genzyme inspired film Extraordinary Measures.” »
As for our ADE event, we
are broadening the reach of Babson’s message, inviting organizations
and individuals not previously connected with the College to recognize Babson
as the driver of a cause—creating economic and social
value everywhere. We will be ramping up publicity and outreach
intensely over the next few months, and hope we can count on you to attend
and involve your companies and organizations.
2010 Promises to be the Best Year Ever
for Babson College.
With
so many exciting developments on and off campus, we are gearing up for a
banner year for the College. Please join me in making sure that
everyone knows that you are connected to this great institution—as
a student, faculty member, staff, alumnus/a, parent, or friend of the
College. So make one more New Year’s resolution for 2010: Wherever
you go, talk up Babson!
Sincerely,
Len Schlesinger