Business Student Ambassadors are student volunteers who serve our School by giving tours to prospective students and their families and other guests of the School. They also assist with open houses, information sessions, luncheons, graduation and other special events around the School. Business Student Ambassadors are able to relate their experiences in the School of Business with prospective students and answer their questions.

The deadline for students to apply and have their recommendations submitted is Tuesday, December 1st, 2009.

Visit the Ambassador website for the application form.

http://www.business.vcu.edu/undergrad/current/1478.html

Thank you in advance for your help and support of the Business Student Ambassador program! If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me at avwagg@vcu.edu or by phone at (804)828-1742. You can also stop by the Undergraduate Studies Office where my office is located.

Thanks again!

Ginny

I am pleased to report that Dr. Ken Daniels, Professor of Finance, has been named the next chairman of the Virginia Community Development Corporation (VCDC), a position that will take effect in January of next year. VCDC is the largest economic development corporation in the state of Virginia. It is an economic engine for Central Virginia and has just been awarded a $35 million tax credit grant by the Department of Treasury under its $5 billion dollar stimulus program.

Ken has been on the board of VCDC for about three years and has developed a strong relationship with the executive team. This relationship has allowed him to place one student already. VCDC is expanding and Ken will be involving more students and the School of Business with the mission of VCDC.


Please join me in congratulating Ken on this high visibility appointment that reflects great credit upon him and the School of Business. --David U.

da Vinci Center Kudos

By lkoliver on November 17, 2009 4:24 PM | No Comments
You have probably heard about one of last year's daVinci Center projects-- the $500 surgical table (Operation Simple). It was entered into in a competition in Boston earlier this month.  There were 600 attendees and 60 entrants in the competition, including 13 entrants from Harvard and 8 from MIT.

The VCU Operation Simple project was awarded first prize.  The judges noted that this project, among all entrants, had the highest potential to impact patient care.

This was a great day for VCU and for the student team from Engineering, Business, and the Arts.  Business students on the project included two Marketing students--Ana Cuison, who graduated last May, and Jennifer Koch, who is scheduled to graduate next month.

The last stage of the project is the production of five tables to be provided as a gift to hospitals in Bangladesh and Honduras for field testing in spring 2010.

 

Projects like this are conducted each semester in the VCU da Vinci Center.  If you have an interest in getting involved, I encourage you to contact Professor Ken Kahn, the da Vinci Center Director.  --David U.

David J. Urban, Ph.D., P.C.M.
Interim Dean and Professor of Marketing
Virginia Commonwealth University
School of Business
 

Pre-merger performance and the nature of merger negotiations are among the key indicators of long-term leadership instability in target companies following mergers and acquisitions, according to a Virginia Commonwealth University study in the Journal of Business Strategy.

The study, "Brain Drain: Why Top Management Bolts After M&As," analyzes factors that can lead to abnormally high turnover rates among target company executives - turnover that may continue for 10 or more years after the acquisition. The new research examines a range of factors that can promote long-term leadership instability such as merger characteristics, the nature of merger negotiations, growth and profitability of the target company, headquarters location of the acquirer - whether foreign or domestic - and the foreign investment experience of the acquirer.

"Most firms involved in merger integration understand the importance of reestablishing an effective top management team after an acquisition," said
Jeffrey A. Krug, Ph.D., associate professor of strategic management in the VCU School of Business and author of the study, which appears in Vol. 30, issue 6, November/December issue of the journal. "However, few firms understand the causes of long-term executive turnover after a deal and how to manage it."

Among Krug's findings:

  • The nature of merger negotiations is especially critical. Unfriendly negotiations, for instance, "create ill feelings among incumbent executives that often spill over to executives who join the firm years later."
  • Poor performance in target companies before an acquisition foreshadows higher-than-normal executive turnover rates that can last 10 or more years after a deal. This suggests that poor performance and leadership instability can become embedded in a firm's culture. Improving performance in the firm becomes a difficult task for an acquirer when such leadership instability exists.
  • Cross-border transactions slow the integration process. Foreign acquirers tend to take the first two years following the deal to observe the target's operations before initiating major strategic changes; domestic acquirers move more quickly.

"Brain Drain" follows Krug's 2008 study, "The Big Exit: Executive Churn in the Wake of M&As," also published in the Journal of Business Strategy (Vol. 29, Issue 4, July/August 2008). This study analyzed patterns of target company executive turnover in more than 1,000 firms and demonstrated that many mergers and acquisitions destroy leadership continuity in target companies' top management teams for at least a decade following the deal.

Complete copies of both "The Big Exit" and "Brain Drain" are available at
http://www.emeraldinsight.com/jbs.htm, the web site of the Journal of Business Strategy, published by Emerald Group Publishing Limited.

VCU Business faculty Michael W. Pitts, Ph.D. and Charles M. Byles, Ph.D. will lead a 14-day Spanish language, culture and business program in Guadalajara, Mexico in conjunction with the Centro de Estudios Para Extranjeros and the University of Guadalajara. The program will run May 29-June 12. Applications are now being accepted. Students can earn 3 credits for MGMT 318.

http://www.international.vcu.edu/abroad/programs/vcu/programdetail/p43.aspx

Colleagues,

Monday, November 16, from 10:45 a.m. to noon in room 3201 of Snead Hall, Dan Levin of Ohio-State University will present a paper entitled: "Efficiency and Synergy in a Multi‐Unit Auction with and without Package Bidding: an Experimental Study."

Professor Levin is a world-renowned scholar (just in 2009 his articles appear in American Economic Review, Games and Economic Behavior, Journal of Industrial Economics, American Economic Journal, Microeconomics) and we are very happy to host his seminar.  


All interested faculty and students are cordially invited to attend.

This is our last seminar in Fall, our Spring schedule will be online at http://www.econlab.vcu.edu/seminars.html.

Sincerely,

Oleg Korenok
Assistant Professor
VCU School of Business

Econ Research Seminar Series

By tajolley on November 13, 2009 9:47 AM | No Comments
Two seminars were hosted by the Department of Economics and the Experimental Laboratory for Economics and Business Research in early November. Olivier Coibion from the College of William and Mary spoke on the topic "What Can Survey Forecasts Tell Us about Information Rigidities" on November 2nd and Maria Canon of the University of Rochester spoke about "The Role of Schools in Production of Achievement" on November 9th. Dan Levin of Ohio State University will be giving the next lecture on November 16th at 10:45 pm in B3201

Dr. Leslie Stratton's article accepted for publication

By tajolley on November 13, 2009 9:38 AM | No Comments
Dr.Stratton's paper titled "Examining the Impact of Alternative Power Measures on Individual Time Use in American and Danish Couple Households" has been accepted for publication in Review of Economics of the Household.

Fall 2009 Fed Challenge Team

By tajolley on November 13, 2009 9:29 AM | No Comments
The Fall 2009 Fed Challenge Team made the final round of the competition.  Congratulations go out to the district winners James Madison University. 

IDEAS ranks Economics Department third in the Commonwealth

By tajolley on November 13, 2009 9:26 AM | No Comments
http://ideas.repec.org/top/top.usa-va.html ranks the School of Business as having the third most productive research program in economics of all educational institutions in VA. Since the ranking is based on a sum of the scores for individuals, such a high ranking is especially impressive for a Department as small as ours. (UVA has 35 faculty members in their Department of economics.) RePAC is the acronym for Research Papers in Economics. IDEAS is a the bibliographic database created by RePAC.