New curriculum year one
The school completed the first year of its new MBA
curriculum in May, and it has been deemed a success by faculty, students, and
recruiters alike. After the Orientation to Management and Organizational
Perspectives segments, the year culminated with the Integrated Leadership
Perspective course, which involved 23 professors from varying disciplines and
focused on tying together all of the learning that had come before. "People
weren't sure quite how it was going to work out, either on the faculty or the
student side," said Matt Miller ’08MBA, "but in many ways I could give it a 10
out of 10 and call it seamless."
A new way to study business
In April, the school debuted a first-of-its-kind
multimedia case study. Built on the theory that the traditional print format
for business case studies could be augmented to reflect the multidimensional
business problems executives face today, the new form uses Internet, database,
and media technology to reflect the real-time nature of business; it also
supports the integration of traditional business disciplines that is at the
heart of the school's new MBA curriculum model.
SOM faculty found an extraordinary teaching moment in
the November 2006 acquisition of Equity Office Properties Trust by the
Blackstone Group, which was the largest real estate deal in U.S. history. After
three months of work by faculty and case writers, including extensive
interviews with the CEOs of both companies, students got their first crack at
the Blackstone/EOP case. The multimedia case forced them to evaluate federal
filings, analysts' reports, dozens of news reports, and studies of the real
estate and private equity industries. "I believe it's the case of the future,"
said Will Goetzmann ’78, ’86MPPM, ’90PhD, the Edwin J. Beinecke Professor of
Finance and Management Studies, who helped design it.
Record year for fund-raising
SOM enjoyed the best fund-raising year in its history
in 2006-2007, with more than $110 million raised. This more than triples
the previous year's fund-raising figure, and dwarfs the 2004-2005 total
of $9 million. The amount is counted towards the school's Management Tomorrow
drive to raise $300 million in seven years. With four years to go, the school
is close to the halfway mark for its overall campaign goal. Nearly $50 million
of the funding raised to date is targeted to the new SOM campus, the architect
for which should be revealed shortly. The SOM Alumni Fund is also on track for
record participation this year. Among major business schools, historically only
Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business has a higher rate of alumni giving than
Yale SOM.