Meet the MBA Class of 2027: Dominique Nziffa, University of Michigan (Ross) by: Jeff Schmitt on June 01, 2026 | 2 minute read June 1, 2026 Copy Link Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email Share on LinkedIn Share on WhatsApp Share on Reddit Dominique Nziffa University of Michigan, Ross School of Business “A social butterfly who loves to plan, travel, devour a good book in two days, and has never said no to a sweet treat.” Hometown: Magnolia, Delaware Fun Fact About Yourself: Scrapbooking is my favorite way to capture fun memories Undergraduate School and Major: Temple University, Finance Most Recent Employer and Job Title: Senior FP&A Analyst, Spotify Michigan Ross is best known for experiential learning programming like MAP, Living Business Leadership Experience, and the Leadership Crisis Challenge. What experiential program interests you the most? I’m super excited to participate in the Golub Capital Nonprofit Board Fellows Program. I have a passion for helping people, and I am excited to learn from a non-profit organization that makes a real impact in communities around Michigan. I look forward to working on a strategic marketing project that will help the organization’s overall mission. Aside from your classmates, what was the key part of Michigan Ross’s MBA programming that led you to choose this business school and why was it so important to you? The Michigan network was a major draw in choosing Ross. During the school search process, I noticed that in any city I was in, I could find someone wearing the block M with pride. Every alum I contacted was willing to chat and spoke enthusiastically about their time at Ross. I knew that this was a community that I wanted to be a part. Describe your biggest accomplishment in your career so far: My biggest career accomplishment so far has been getting chosen for a company award, as a result of creating an Executive in a Day Program for high school students. © Copyright 2026 Poets & Quants. All rights reserved. This article may not be republished, rewritten or otherwise distributed without written permission. To reprint or license this article or any content from Poets & Quants, please submit your request HERE.