Supply chain management students in the UT College of Business and Innovation claimed first place in the 2013 Supply Chain Case Competition, sponsored by General Motors and Wayne State University and held in Detroit Sept. 19-21.
They bested teams from 19 other universities, including BGSU, Ohio State, Michigan State, Pennsylvania State, Rutgers and the University of Maryland.“All credit goes to the team,” said Dr. P. S. Sundararaghavan, professor in the Information Operations and Technology Management Department and faculty adviser to the team. “The case analysis is entirely the responsibility of students, with zero input from faculty. Faculty responsibility ends with team selection. The students performed magnificently, and our UT team won big, very big, beating out teams from 19 other high-caliber business schools from around the country.
“I want to thank the college for its generous support and Senior Associate Dean Terribeth Gordon-Moore for all the encouragement.”
Team members were Justin Michael Blake, Emily Burghardt, Athreya Rajan and Sasha VonSacken.
“Congratulations to the team for their outstanding performance in this national competition, and thanks to Dr. Sundararaghavan for motivating the team,” Gordon-Moore said. “This success shines a wonderful light on our college and is additional evidence as to why UT College of Business and Innovation is increasingly nationally ranked and recognized.”
“My favorite part of the competition was competing with people from all over the nation,” Blake said. “I also enjoyed talking to people that are high up in GM. Getting first place was just icing on the cake to a great weekend. I learned so much about supply chain management within the automotive industry. It was already a great experience; winning just made it that much better.”
During the competition, students also had the opportunity to participate in two employment-oriented panel discussions, several sessions on the state of automotive industry supply chain by leading experts in the field, a factory visit to the Detroit-Hamtramck plant of GM that makes the Volt, and several interviews for full-time employment and internships. They also attended a Detroit Tigers game.