Favorite Professors Of Best & Brightest MBAs

Cornell’s Risa Mish

LEARNING EQUALS CHANGE

Maybe it is strategy class that stirs the inner Rockne in faculty. At Cornell, Lucie Coates credits her Critical and Strategic Thinking professor, Risa Mish, for doing far more than bringing discipline to her thinking.

ā€œPerhaps it is the former lawyer in her,ā€ Coates suggests, ā€œbut whether you are in her class or consulting with her about a challenge you are facing outside the classroom, she has a way of pushing you to develop an action plan and then find the language and courage to actually execute it.ā€

GonƧalo Pacheco de Almeida, HEC Paris

If you asked top faculty what constitutes true learning, you wonā€™t hear them fawning over high test scores. Instead, learning involves change, both in terms of how students think and (more importantly) how they act over time. By that definition, HEC Parisā€™ GonƧalo Pacheco de Almeida is a resounding success. Just ask Priya Darshinee Ramkissoon, whose entire perspective on negotiation was changed by his class.

ā€œBefore his class, I had always viewed a negotiation as being intrinsically about conflict (i.e. getting one over the other party),ā€ she confesses. ā€œHowever, after this class, I learned, more often than not, that an effective compromise can be found for all if the right questions are asked. Also, Professor de Almeida always encouraged us to ā€˜be hard on the problem but not on the personā€™ ā€“ a takeaway that will stick with me forever.ā€

TELLING A GOOD STORYā€¦THROUGH A FINANCIAL STATEMENT

Negotiation wasnā€™t the only subject where a gifted professor made all the difference. At Emory, Alex McNair credits Kathryn Kadous with turning accounting into something he ā€œdidnā€™t dreadā€ ā€“ not to mention ā€œunderstandable, practical, and relevant.ā€ You can bet that NYU Sternā€™s Mahum Yunus would apply similar terms to what he learned in Dan Godeā€™s Business Drivers class ā€“ a course that revealed how numbers can tell stories too.

ā€œI had no experience working with financial statements and ratios prior to his class,ā€ he admits, ā€œbut the class forced us to work with them for different industries. Professor Gode connected the companyā€™s strategy to how it shows up in the numbers, and the financial statements to industry strategy. It truly helped me see how you can better understand a company and an industry by weaving the numbers with a narrative.ā€

Dartmouth Tuck’s Ron Adner

In other words, Godeā€™s teaching targets the bigger picture, to help students visualize cause-and-effect as much as debits-and-credits. While Gode uses finance as the window into the real world, Tuckā€™s Ron Adner prefers a ā€œwide lens,ā€ says Alen Amini. His method, in Aminiā€™s words, is to ā€œdistill complex problems into sizable issues that can be solved by understanding different interactions between stakeholders in an ecosystem.ā€ At IESE, Victor MartĆ­nez de AlbĆ©niz takes this micro approach to the extreme ā€“ to great effect.

ā€œHe always challenges me to think down to the earth,ā€ say Jieqiong Xu. ā€œIn class, he pushes me to put myself into othersā€™ shoes, to act like I am the one who needs to make those tough decisions, and thus to rethink how my suggestions would be actionable.ā€

KELLOGG PROF GOES ABOVE-AND-BEYOND

Then again, MartĆ­nez de AlbĆ©niz is flexible enough to know that the best approach can be to simply step back and answer one overarching question. ā€œWhen I was so overwhelmed by the amount of work I undertook,ā€ Xu recalls, ā€œhe calmed me down by asking me, point-black, about my long-term goal, which in the rush of things I had not been able to think about. ā€œWho do I want to be in 5 years?ā€ This is the homework he gave me, and I believe I have my answer now.ā€

Perhaps the most valuable gift that faculty offered to the 2018 Class was simply support. More than lessons in five forces, four Ps, and 360-degree analysis, the top faculty left their mark by investing heavily in the students themselves. That was the case for Kathryn Bernell, who bonded with Professor Carter Cast long before she took a class from him at Kellogg. From startup advice to career strategy, Cast has been a go-to counselor and confidante for Bernell ā€“ and many of her peers as well.

ā€œOver the course of the past two years, I have spent countless hours gleaning feedback and insight from a professor that views his role to be far more than just teaching.ā€ Bernell shares. ā€œIn the classroom, Professor Cast invests more time than any other professor Iā€™ve had to ensure he is prepared and extending meaningful feedback on all assignments. After each assignment, Professor Cast personally evaluated and shared his thoughts to make sure we were getting the most from the course that we possibly could.ā€

BRINGING EVERYONE INTO THE DISCUSSION

University of Michigan’s Yesim Orhun

Other faculty members, such as Yale SOMā€™s Amy Wrzesniewski, give back by taking their students into their own lives, offering inspiration and expertise in the process. ā€œEvery semester, she partners with Women in Management and takes a handful of women out to a boot camp class at a local gym called Tuff Girl Fitness,ā€ says Christine Chen. ā€œAfter the workout, she hosts us for dessert at her house to talk about anything from gender in the workplace to stories about her family. She is such a strong example of teachers who invest in their students and make a difference in the lives of others.ā€

That difference can come in acts large and small. At the Ross School of Business, Professor Yesim Orhun earned Ariana Almasā€™ respect for her willingness to experiment and tackle controversial issues in her marketing class. However, she won Almasā€™ heart by bringing her non-traditional background into the discussion. In one fell swoop, Orhun had instilled confidence in Almas, validating her background and making the class more inclusive.

ā€œI was having trouble navigating the first few months of business school,ā€ Almas remembers. ā€œIn my classes, I found that I couldnā€™t connect well with the for-profit context because all of my prior professional experience was in the nonprofit sector. I remember there was one assignment in marketing, where instead of trying to explain my thoughts in a for-profit context, I just shared what I would do from a non-profit perspective. The next day in class, Professor Orhun led with an example of marketing in nonprofits. I donā€™t know if it was intentional, but I couldā€™ve sworn I saw her look my way when she spoke!ā€

To read about other stellar professors from programs like Stanford, Chicago Booth, INSEAD, and MIT Sloan, go to the next pages.

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