Scott McDermott teaching DNA of Business
鈥淗ere we are, on January 2, 2018,鈥 Scott McDermott tells his part-time M.B.A. students on October 3, 2016. The Carroll School professor is not confused about the calendar. He is leading a class, The DNA of Business, which simulates听the competition of six fictional companies over an imaginary eight years. And he's unveiling the results of the first 鈥測ear鈥 of competition among student teams acting as top executives of those companies.
鈥淣o team has messed up,鈥 McDermott says during the Monday night lecture in Devlin Hall, citing measures of performance such as sales, profits, and market share. 鈥淣o one has burst out into an enormous lead. Nobody has cratered, which is good.鈥 Afterward, each team goes into executive session in Fulton Hall to plot its next moves.
Long a staple of military education, simulations have been growing in popularity among business schools and corporate training programs. The idea is to give students a more holistic understanding of how businesses operate and compete, and to do so in an experiential and hands-on way not possible in a pure lecture format. 鈥淐ross-functional鈥 and 鈥渕ulti-disciplinary鈥 are how McDermott describes the approach. His听class uses an interactive software program called Global DNA, developed by Illinois-based Capsim Management Simulations, a creator of simulation games for schools and employers.
鈥淭he environment is as real as can be without using someone else鈥檚 money,鈥 said Christopher Wild, M.B.A. 鈥18, who took the class during its first iteration last summer. A global sourcing specialist with a Massachusetts-based supplier of electrical connectors, Wild added: 鈥淎 big part of it is team dynamics. You鈥檙e not trying to write a paper or put a PowerPoint presentation together. You鈥檙e trying to manage a business. It鈥檚 a different kind of academic learning.鈥
In the simulation, firms compete in the medical technology industry, specializing in genetic testing devices. They start out on a level playing field with identical balance sheets and a single product sold only in the United States. Immediately, the teams begin making decisions in four basic areas鈥攔esearch and development, operations and production, sales and marketing, and financing鈥攁s they explore global markets.
“ A big part of it is team dynamics. You鈥檙e not trying to write a paper or put a PowerPoint presentation together. You鈥檙e trying to manage a business. It鈥檚 a different kind of academic learning. ”
It鈥檚 a zero-sum game: every sale a company makes is one its competitors lose. One decision affects another鈥攆or instance, waiting longer to pay suppliers brings higher costs for materials. And the business environment听keeps changing.
鈥淭he markets are maturing, growing,鈥 said McDermott, a lecturer of management practice and program director at the Carroll School. 鈥淪o the question is, are people getting there at the right time with the right product at the right cost with the right marketing, with sufficient production capacity in order to get their products sold on the market when the markets demand those products?鈥 He added, 鈥淭hey have to be very agile, like real business.鈥
During the October 3 class in Devlin Hall, McDermott underscored the point by relating what the hockey legend Wayne Gretzky once said when asked, 鈥淗ow do you know where the puck is?鈥 Gretzky鈥檚 reply: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 go where the puck is. I go where the puck is going.鈥 Scenario planning and forecasting are keys to success in both simulation and the real business world, he explained.
As he prepared to send nearly two dozen students into their executive sessions, McDermott also turned their attention to an inescapable part of teamwork. 鈥淐onflict is not by its nature bad,鈥 he told them. 鈥淚t鈥檚 how you exit the conflict.鈥 His point: teams need to create a process that allows everyone to participate in the decision-making and then 鈥渦se the creative friction鈥 to get to an exit. The resolution could be as straightforward as an up-or-down vote.
"Team Digby" in conference, as part of a breakout session from Professor Scott McDermott's DNA of Business class
鈥淲e鈥檝e Maxed Out on Debt鈥
Right after McDermott鈥檚 lecture, the six teams settled into small, windowless meeting rooms on the ground floor of Fulton Hall, where they discussed strategies for another hour and 15 minutes. (They also meet at least once a week outside of the one-night-a-week class, often by conference call.) Most of the groups are composed of two men and two women, and their simulated companies have names: Andrews, Baldwin, Chester, Digby, Erie, and Ferris.
The executive team members of Ferris were debating what their 鈥渟uccess measures鈥 should be. Part of the game involves assigning percentage values to measures such as stock price, cumulative profits, and market cap; the teams are graded according to their performance on these and other chosen measures. 鈥淚 just get scared of stock price,鈥 one young man said, arguing against giving primary weight to that particular definition of success. 鈥淭he market cap is the true worth of the company. We could have a financially healthy company and still have a low stock price.鈥
Nearby, Baldwin was sticking with a plan to compete for the most part on performance (quality) rather than price. That鈥檚 a key component of decision-making in the simulation. 鈥淲e鈥檙e a kind of Tiffany鈥檚 company with lower market share and higher profits,鈥 said a male member of that executive team. The team members agreed but also were mindful of pricing trends in the market. 鈥淥ur competition is racing to the bottom on price,鈥 said a young woman, adding that for now, 鈥渨e鈥檙e not ready to do that.鈥
Around the corner, a team member of Erie pointed out, 鈥淲e鈥檝e maxed out on debt. That鈥檚 going to affect our stock price.鈥 Another team member broached the subject of foreign markets鈥斺淎re we saying no to Asia for now?鈥
In tackling these and other issues, teams have to draw on practically everything they鈥檝e learned in the M.B.A. program.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been a really great way of wrapping everything together,鈥 said Jill Cochran, M.B.A. 鈥18, a member of the Digby team this fall. She was referring to her past courses in areas such as marketing, operations, finance, and accounting. 鈥淭his course really forces you to understand how they all relate. You have to take all the pieces of a business and make sure they鈥檙e aligned with your strategy. And you have to think long term.鈥 Cochran is an assistant vice president at State Street Corporation, where she works on improving the transparency of performance metrics.
This semester, the eight simulated years began in late September and will run until just before Thanksgiving. At that time, the teams will go before a panel of outside judges鈥攕tyled as a board of directors鈥攁nd summarize their performance as well as plans for the coming years. Before the two-month period, there are practice rounds and, afterward, so-called 鈥渂litz rounds鈥 in which team memberships are scrambled and years of competition are simulated in one week.
“ This course really forces you to understand how they all relate. You have to take all the pieces of a business and make sure they鈥檙e aligned with your strategy. And you have to think long term. ”
Bringing the Lessons to Work
Wild said one of his takeaways from the summer class was that the winners are not necessarily the firms with the most revenue. 鈥淵ou could succeed at business by being better at other things,鈥 he said, citing measures such as market cap and profit margins.
He said the simulation also gave him new insight into decisions by C-Suite executives at his firm, Smiths Connectors. 鈥淚 never quite understood what they did and why they were doing it,鈥 he said, referring to strategic decisions related to financing, research and development, payment terms for suppliers, and other matters. 鈥淔or me it was a carry-over insight鈥攃arried over from the simulated world into the real world.鈥
McDermott will be taking the simulation concept to the full-time M.B.A. program with a DNA of Business class in the spring. The class is subtitled A Simulated Experience.
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Well into his lecture on Monday night, October 24, he pointed out, 鈥淭oday is January 2, 2021. Here鈥檚 the moment you鈥檝e been waiting for.鈥 He handed out a 16-page summary report of company and industry performance during the previous year. 鈥淥bviously, Digby is very strong,鈥 he said as the students flipped through the pages, 鈥渂ut鈥︹
McDermott did not need to elaborate. There were many more business decisions to make and four more rounds to go.
William Bole is senior writer and editor at the Carroll School.
Photography by Caitlin Cunningham.
