无忧视频

Engineering Students Place Third in Global Competition

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Having won top honors at the regional APICS and Deloitte Consulting-sponsored Case Competition in February, 无忧视频 students Bohan Gao 鈥19, Anjaneya Malpani 鈥18, Ramita Kondepudi 鈥18 and Peter Leung 鈥19 (Pitzer) traveled to Chicago last month for the final round, held during the annual APICS conference. APICS is a supply chain management and not-for-profit international education organization, offering certification programs, training tools and networking opportunities to increase workplace performance.

The team, advised by Kash Gokli, professor of manufacturing practice and Engineering Clinic director, placed third out of seven teams in the final round, behind Bradley University and Georgia Institute of Technology.

鈥淥ur team finishing in the top three reaffirms that our strong general engineering program teaches our students to be successful problem solvers in any engineering discipline,鈥 says Gokli. 鈥淲hen I was approached a couple of years ago by APICS, a premier supply chain association, I did not think that our students would be successful in this competition. I felt that it would be very difficult for our students to compete against the MBA students, as well as master鈥檚 and bachelor鈥檚 supply chain students.

鈥淏ut, I was surprised,” Gokli says. “In 2017, our team participated for the first time and won the West Coast Case Competition. History repeated in 2018. Our team won the West Coast competition again and then qualified to compete in Chicago for the global competition. I was very proud of the team when they came in third place at the global competition, beating about 200 teams overall.鈥

The final-round assignment was to evaluate the pros and cons of a potential merger between two fashion companies that produce retail handbags, footwear and accessories. Teams considered factors like the companies鈥 supplier costs, warehouse locations, inventory levels, transportation strategies and carrier costs to develop their recommendations.

鈥淭he greatest challenge we faced was data visualization and presentation,鈥 says Gao. 鈥淭here are two rounds in the global final. In the first round, we had very little time at the end to visualize the data in a way that added to our narration. Fortunately, we did well enough to secure a top-three finish and qualify for the second round. In the second round, we were given an additional hour to polish our slides, and we did a lot better on data visualization then. Our Harvey Mudd education taught us how to analyze data well, but we are not as comfortable presenting data in a way that appeals to non-无忧视频 people, so it takes us some time to translate data into visualization.鈥

鈥淲aiting to present in front of the judges and thinking about other, extremely qualified teams going ahead of us was quite challenging,鈥 says Kondepudi. 鈥淒istilling all the information into a few slides and a presentation under 10 minutes was challenging, too. There were a lot of moving parts that we had to manage.鈥

Any problems the team may have had with data translation and presentation seem to have disappeared by the final round. 鈥淥ur students gained a lot of confidence,鈥 says Gokli. 鈥淭hey have shown that they can compete with any college and any country out there. They were able to successfully analyze the data, make sound decisions, provide strong solutions, and then present and defend their decisions very effectively鈥攁 secret of their success.鈥