Saturday, February 25, 2012

Some more undergrad on steroids

The main part of our marketing course this semester was doing the “markstrat” simulation. If any of you guys took upper-year marketing classes in undergrad you probably know what it is and can skip the below paragraph.

For those who don’t: the class was divided into 6 teams. All of the teams operate in a fictional wold competing against each other and each team represents a company in that fictional world (well the marketing dept of that company to be precise). Markstrat is essentially a brand management simulation game. So if you love brand management like me, you will enjoy this! You compete against the other teams on all of the marketing 4Ps (products, pricing, promotion and place). On day x all teams input their marketing mix into the simulation for your 1st “year” of business (i.e. what products you will include, at what prices, how much to produce, etc). After you input that info, the simulation runs against everyone else’s inputs and spits out your results for your 1st “year” of business. Based on those results, you plan for yr 2 and so on.

Whoever has the highest share price by the end of the game, (sort of) wins. I’ll get to why I say “sort of” in a minute.

Anyways, so in undergrad I did the exact same simulation. However because you are playing a game against other people, a lot depends not on experience playing the game but on how the other players play too. The big difference between now and undergrad was I think in undergrad the decision-making timeline was something like this:

-On Monday we’d get the results from “year 1”

-On Friday we would have to input our plan for “year 2”

-On the following Monday, our results were made available for “year 2” and the cycle continued for the whole semester

In MBA school the timeline is this:

-At 11:15am on Tuesday you get the results from “year 1”

-At 1:15pm (that same day) you have to input your results for year 2

-On the following Tuesday 11:15am you get your year 2 results and continue

So the decision making timeline has gone from 5 days to 2 hours!! So this was another of the many learning experiences we’ve had about:

-Time management

-Analyzing and interpreting market trends

-Making $$ ;-)

Also while in undergrad we were evaluated based entirely on our outcome by the end of the game, in this case we were evaluated not just in the context of the game, but long-term as well, even after we finished playing “officially”. What was really interesting about this was as we played, a certain team was absolutely murdering every other team in the market. So one might figure they were set for the long term given how well they are doing now. Well after we finished playing, our prof showed us the results if we played 1 more “year” and this team was on a nosedive.

This demonstrated a few good lessons:

-Why it is important not to rest for too long on your laurels..there is always someone else (or in this case 6 others) ready to take you down

-You need to think long-term for business success!! (even if shareholders don’t always think that way…haha)

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Evaluating the U of T Athletic Facilities

Not too much exciting going on in school as of late (same spiel every day- class, job search, class, job search, etc) so I figured I’d take some time to write about another aspect of the Rotman experience that people might be wondering about (I know I was before arriving!): athletic facilities.

As a Rotman student you are basically a U of T student meaning full access to all U of T athletic facilities. There are 2 gyms on campus: one at hart house, one at the athletic centre.

You guys can go to their websites:

Hart House
Athletic Centre

To see what classes and such that they offer. I want to tell you about the stuff you won’t learn from the websites.

Hart House
This building is OLD. Like really old (built in 1919). As such, the ventilation sucks and the layout of the building sucks. It feels like each room in the building used to be used for some other purposes and one year they decided to put exercise equipment into a bunch of random rooms in the building and leave it at that.

If you are only going to exercise for 1 specific purpose (i.e. JUST going for a run, JUST doing free weight exercises, JUST doing a dance class) it is fine. Besides the fact that the building is super old, you’ll get what you need. But as soon as you want to mix things up (i.e. for me in 1 session I like to do some free weights, some exercise on machines, some matwork, etc) things get super annoying. From having to do matwork in the tiny hallway outside the freeweight room to having exercise machines in a completely different part of the building from the free weights, one’s exercise session becomes way longer than it needs to be. The hart house exercise facilities are basically always open to students though so there are never scheduling conflicts which is good!

Athletic Centre (the AC)
This I would say is more like the Goodlife fitnesses of the world and such. The gym (weight room) is huge with tons of varied equipment (free weights, machines, mats etc). Although there are only like 3 exercise bikes here so if you want to mix cardio machines exercise with weights, forget about it here. You’ll have to go to one of the studios in the AC or back to Hart House. There is also a huge pool in the building though, which is cool for swimmers.

This building also has some quirks- It has a “field house” which is the top floor of the building and should just be a track with the various track & field pieces of equipment. However, the field house also has a super random set of exercise machines (different from those in the weight room in some cases) placed in seemingly random spots that should probably be in the weight room instead.

While this building is more of an athletic centre than hart house is, ironically, hart house has newer weights and machines. It is not to say that the AC’s machines suck- because they don't- I just thought it was kind of ironic. Put your best equipment in your best gym, no?

The HUGE bummer about the AC is that the gym closes itself off at random hours of the day for:
-“Programming Hours” – which I guess is when kinesiology students need to use the gym for their studies or something
-Women-only hours- which you girls will probably love but is an inconvenience for us guys!
-Being at capacity- A few times upon leaving the weight room, I noticed a few people weren’t being allowed in as there was a sign saying something like “we are at capacity…please wait.” I’ve NEVER seen that in a fitness facility EVER. That being said, I only noticed it like 4 times ever (and I am in the gym at least 3 times a week every week) so the odds of you running into this problem are super low but it was something I thought would be worth to note anyways.

In summary, I’d say if you are only doing one specific exercise activity, AC and Hart House are about the same in what they offer. If you want to mix things up at all, the AC wins hands down. (although remember to check the schedule so you don’t arrive only to find out it is “programming hours”!).

Sunday, February 12, 2012

To those looking to do exchange here at Rotman…

Prior to the start of our 1st semester we of course had orientation camp which everyone was invited to- including all of the exchange students. So this was a great way for everyone to get to know each other and our school. However this semester with no camp, I was wondering, “how do the international exchange students here know us non-exchange students and all the fun and exciting stuff we have going on?” Turns out they didn’t.

To my surprise, we have no one in the student body who helps integrate the exchange students into Rotman and Toronto. Nor were there any events to this end either. I love helping out newbies to Canada and making sure they have an awesome time here so I figured I’d just take this responsibility on myself!

This semester we have apprx 8 students here from all over the world. I met one of them the other day and here are some things she told me:
-“Besides the people in our classes and the other people on exchange we haven’t met any of the other Rotman students”
-“It seems like all you guys ever do is study”
-“You have a club for Asian students and another club for sports fans?”
I was shocked….SHOCKED! For those who have read my blog, you can probably appreciate the above perceptions couldn’t be farther from the truth.

So the big lesson here is our school has a loooooooooooooooooong way to go in integrating exchange students into the Rotman community. Apparently other schools do an even worse job than us too. That is bad. If students go back to their home institution feeling like Rotman sucks, how could we ever hope to improve our relationship with those other institutions? So, I am trying to fix this, getting our exchange students connected to our facebook community, events eblasts, etc so they know more about what’s going on and can get involved and have some fun. When they get back home, I want them to tell their friends: “ROTMAN AND TORONTO ARE AWESOME!!!!” I know the 1st semester exchange people thought so and sincerely hope the above is a 1st step to getting our current and future exchange students feeling the same way.

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Inside info beyond what you might have heard at the Rotman Open House

Sorry for no post last week. It’s been a pretty standard routine as of late so not much new to add as of late. Today was the Rotman Open House where prospective students come to the school and learn about Rotman. So I wanted to share with you some of the things I’ve learned about Rotman since I started:
- I was told all corporate recruiting for us MBAs is completely separate from the undergrads. However in several corporate info sessions, there have been several undergrads present. From the recruiter’s standpoint, I understand why they prefer this since they only need to come to campus once. However admissions people, get your facts straight, please.
-I was told if Rotman doesn’t have a relationship with a specific company that you are interested in, the Corporate Connections Centre (CCC) will go and create that relationship to help you get a job. No chance. I’m not really sure how the CCC builds its corporate network but if you want to work at Nike for example (which the CCC has no relationship with), you have to do all of the networking work yourself.
-Expect very variable service from the CCC. Each student is assigned a CCC staff member to act as basically their career coach to help with everything from figuring out what you want to do with your life to writing cover letters. Depending on who your coach is, you might have the best experience in the world or the worst.
-There is a good reason why if you did an undergrad in commerce you don’t get credit for any of the classes you took. I have a B.Comm and maybe 90% (or more) of what I have learned thus far at Rotman is all-new. So you are definitely getting your money’s worth academically speaking.

If I can think of anything else, I’ll add it to this post. Or you can always feel free to post any questions on comments below in the comment box.