Bryant 360 - Mar 2012

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360 0 NEWS AND VIEWS

BRYANT

MARCH 2012

7

DAY WITH SWAY Entrepreneurship major attends White House event

FAMILIES

3

AFTER BRYANT Former campus leader thrives at PwC in D.C.

FOR STUDENTS AND

2

BEHIND THE BIO Professor knows satire

Job security – before winter break

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hen seniors David Rogers and Brittany Palmer returned to campus in September, they immediately started their job searches. Before final exams, both had accepted offers with companies they are truly excited about. They are not alone – joining a cadre of Bryant students who secured jobs early in the fall semester.

Forty job interviews

Seniors David Rogers and Brittany Palmer have reason to smile after landing jobs in 2011.

On July 9, Rogers, a double major in actuarial mathematics and finance, will report to EMC Corporation headquarters in Hopkinton, MA. As an operations analyst for the global service team, he’ll begin a rotational program working with multiple departments to learn the business of helping companies accelerate

their journey to “cloud computing” and storing, managing, protecting, and analyzing information in a more agile, trusted, and cost-efficient way. He is thrilled at the prospect of joining such a highly regarded company. Rogers made sure he had choices, having secured more than 40 interviews in the fall semester. “I feel that having Bryant on my résumé and being able to discuss the experience I gained through the university is the reason I received so many interviews,” he says. When the Coventry, RI, student was first looking at colleges, he applied to five schools but only cared about being accepted to Bryant. “I felt it was the best continued on page 8

Shadow program sheds light on careers

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he Alumni/Student Shadow Program, held during Bryant’s summer and winter breaks each year, is a short observational experience that enables students to visit with successful alumni in professional work environments and gain insider perspectives on career fields of interest. Participants learn a lot about the companies they choose, but they often come away from the experience with so much more.

Enterprise software and Nerf darts In January, Marketing major Jim Rubino ’14 and International Business major Kimberly Elloian ’15 shadowed Tim Bertrand ’00, vice president of worldwide field sales for Acquia in Burlington, MA. The company provides expertise and tools to support organizations that use Drupal – a free, open-source platform that has been utilized to build more than one million websites including dev.twitter.com and levistrauss.com, to name a few.

“I chose Acquia out of a long list of possibilities because the person I would shadow, Tim Bertrand, was a marketing major at Bryant just like me,” says Rubino, “and I wanted to see how marketing can be applied to the real world. It also gave me the opportunity to compare a startup company to a corporation.” “I was interested in Acquia because I could interact with a Bryant grad who had the title of vice president, a position in marketing, and a role in the company’s international sector,” adds Elloian. Rubino says he learned a lot about open-source software but also saw firsthand the importance of teamwork and work environment. “I realized that although the sales and marketing people may not know how to program and write code like the IT people do, the two departments work together seamlessly,” he says. “The environment in the office is light and laid back, with ping pong tables and Nerf

Acquia’s Vice President of Worldwide Field Sales Tim Bertrand ’00 shares his business knowledge with Kimberly Elloian ’15 and Jim Rubino ’14.

dart guns being shot around throughout the day. Everyone was friendly and interacted with each other.” Rubino learned about the shadow program after taking a Career Planning 101 class. “I signed up to help me decide my major, but I consequently discovered that it is an additional way to explore

different occupations and career paths. Even if the company you shadow isn’t in a field you think you would be interested in, the experience can still help you gain information on other aspects of what the real world offers.” continued on page 8

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