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100 Best & Brightest Business Majors Of 2020

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The Class of 2020 won’t enjoy their ‘moment’ this spring. Come May, these business majors won’t bask in the applause after collecting their degrees. There won’t be grand speeches or impromptu hugs. For them, this spring will be a lost semester with so much left undone.

Seems fitting. After all, the senior class was born into a world at war and grew up amid a financial collapse. Now, they watch as a pandemic sweeps away their opportunities. After every upheaval, some people step up to drive recovery and restoration. Make no mistake: this class will be the one who rise to these demands. After all, they have been wrestling with adversity from the beginning. They will be the catalysts who inspire action, the innovators who unleash talent, and the dreamers who scrap their vision into reality. They may miss the pomp and circumstance, but their best moments have yet to come.

PITT GRAD IS SEEMINGLY EVERYWHERE AT ONCE

That’s particularly true for this year’s Best & Brightest Business Majors, seniors who differentiated themselves through their academic excellence, extracurricular leadership, innate potential, and personal character. This year’s class features students from all walks of life: elite athletes, social activists, military veterans, and company founders. Despite insanely busy schedules, these forces of nature are always there for others, to lend help and lead by example. In the end, they are the students who’ll be remembered, the ones who left their schools better than they found them.

Sarah Braza, University of Pittsburgh

They include students like the University of Pittsburgh’s Sarah Braza, a Deloitte hire known for always saying “Yes” to opportunities presented to her. Why else would she take on a triple major? In the process, she has traveled to Vietnam and Spain as part of school projects – and held leadership posts in her sorority and student organizations. Not surprisingly, Braza has racked up an enviable stream of awards and scholarships at Pitt. Still, these aren’t the reason why she was nominated to be a Best & Brightest. Instead, her legacy involves a rare virtue she brought to her class. She is, in the words of her professors, an “elevator” and “includer” who brings out the best in those around her.

“A great student does not only improve his or her own knowledge base as part of the course but elevates the class as a whole,” explains Kaushik Mitra, a clinical assistant professor. “Through her interactions, she acts as the catalyst in the classroom that transforms it into a vibrant, powerful learning platform.”

“IF HE DID IT, WHY CAN’T I?”

You could say the same about Deven Rodriguez, a St. John’s University Management major who once ran a 105-mile ultramarathon. Inside class, Rodriguez boasts a perfect GPA and led a dozen classmates to Los Angeles for a week of service. Outside the Tobin College of Business, he is an ROTC Battalion Commander who’ll serve as a 2nd Lieutenant after graduation. In fact, he ranked among the top three Army ROTC cadets in its annual merit list, which is based on physical fitness, school performance, and leadership competencies. He also completed the U.S. Army Airborne School, a rigorous 21-day jump course. Not only did Rodriguez earn his airborne wings, but he was named “Honor Graduate” – or “essentially ranking #1 out of 361 soldiers/cadets at the course.”

Deven Rodriguez, St. John’s University

Rodriguez wasn’t pushing his limits to simply pad his resume, however. Instead, he views his achievements as a platform to inspire others to imagine themselves in roles that they see as beyond their capabilities. “All my life I have never been the smartest, fastest, or most naturally gifted,” he admits. “For a while, I used that as a crutch to explain why I couldn’t be like “them.” I’m referring to the people who did extraordinary things on a regular basis. It was only once I stopped limiting myself by putting titles on others that I started to see that I didn’t have to have any natural ability whatsoever to be like them…I  want [these honors] to be the beacon of light for other cadets and students. I want others to think, “Well if he did it, why can’t I?”

Braza and Rodriguez won’t be alone in leaving big shoes to fill after graduation. Take Miami University’s Laura Mena. She uplifts her peers – and the larger community – through entrepreneurship. Last spring, she co-founded one of the country’s first student-led undergraduate social impact funds. As chairman of the Red Dress Gala, which supports women’s heart health, she raised $30,000 – a 150% improvement over the previous year. In addition, Mena took on the role of co-managing director of the RedHawk Ventures – where she manages 20 people in the school’s $300K seed-stage VC fund. Her goal for her senior year? Raise $1.5 million dollars…and she is on track to do just that.

Sure enough, Mena has grabbed attention beyond the Farmer School of Business. Over the past two years, she has been named a Cincy Inno 25 Under 25, which honors innovators in the Cincinnati area’s tech and startup ecosystem. “Laura is full of energy and passion, a true leader in every sense of the word,” observes Tim Holcomb, who heads up the school’s John W. Altman Institute for Entrepreneurship. “Not only has she made the most of her educational experience in the classroom, but she also has actively engaged in a variety of practice-based, co-curricular programs to create a better educational experience for herself and her fellow classmates.”

STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES FROM THE TOP BUSINESS SCHOOLS

Since 2016, Poet&Quants has honored 100 of these students who majored in business-related fields. This year, P&Q invited business schools from the top 50 undergraduate business school ranking to submit two students who fit the Best & Brightest profile. Overall, this year’s students include 60 women and 40 men. In addition, 46 of the Top 50 programs submitted representatives for the Best & Brightest. Among the Top 25, just the University of Texas and the College of William & Mary declined to participate; they were replaced by the University of California-Berkeley and Ohio State University.

The Best & Brightest reflects far more than making the dean’s list or landing jobs with Google or Goldman Sachs. Some command a room and bind people together with the infectious energy they exude. Others operate in the shadows, never missing a detail on tasks that classmates take for granted. As relentless as they are fearless, the Best & Brightest are always pushing and never satisfied. Still, they’ll go out of their way to make time for others. From first-generation grinders to heartland homesteaders, they are the consciences of their classes. When the time comes, they will say, in the immortal words of Notre Dame’s Bruce Morris, “I will help out wherever I’m needed!”

That includes working as residence directors, teaching assistants, and research assistants – or leading orientations, panels, or task forces for that matter. Caitlyn Lubas, for one, has mentored over 150 students during her time at New York University. Her classmate, Aldo Gonzalez Aragon, rose to editor-in-chief of the school’s undergraduate newspaper, The Gould Standard. Think those are hectic schedules? Try being Liam Walsh. At Carnegie Mellon, he balances a full load with being a teaching assistant in five – five! – classes.

CREATING CAMPAIGNS THAT GET RESULTS

Georgia Tech’s Jason Quill

You’ll also find the Best & Brightest volunteering heavily in their fields…and their communities. Look no further than the University of Washington’s Jackie Yeh, a business major with an eye towards dental school. Three years ago, she spent over 50 hours shadowing two dentists to learn how to better serve fearful and developmentally disabled patients. She clocked a similar number of hours tutoring economically disadvantaged students in chemistry. At the same time, she helped dentists provide care to homeless residents in the Seattle area. Yeh even put her marketing skills to the test as an intern at Everyone for Veterans, a nonprofit where she connected over 50 dentists with combat veterans. Her work also impressed the American Dental Association, which featured Everyone for Veterans on the front page of its website and newsletter.

Sometimes, the Class of 2020 contributed directly from the classroom. In his capstone course at Georgia Tech, Jason Quill’s team partnered with Caterpillar for nine months. The result? “We were able to fully analyze Caterpillar’s value chain to deliver over $13 million in present value cost savings,” he explains. In her Marketing Management course at Babson College, Haley Pesce’s team produced a campaign for the school’s “Amnesty Policy” – a safe haven when a student calls Public Safety to help a classmate “incapacitated’ by drugs and alcohol.

“The campaign became called “I Call Because I Care” and re-framed the thinking of students from “amnesty” to “care,” thereby encouraging calls to Public Safety based on friendship and concern,” explains Sandy Bravo, a lecturer at Babson. “Haley and two other students presented the campaign to the clients…As the client, Ryan Travia, put it….Haley’s team “knocked it out of the park!”… She showed great compassion, creativity, marketing expertise, resiliency, and a drive for excellence. This policy will be part of her legacy to the Babson community.”

FROM “CRAZY IDEA” TO THRIVING VENTURE

Their legacies may also hinge on the companies they start. At Cornell University, Samay Bansal is operating Million Meals Mission, which has supplied meals to the underprivileged in India, Cambodia, and Madagascar. His classmate, Jessica Tao, co-founded PediCure, a patented toenail trimmer for people who cannot reach their toes. The experience, she says, has produced its share of highs and lows. For her, it has been the pursuit itself that has made the effort so worthwhile.

“We have grown from a crazy idea, just on PDFs and paper, to having a working prototype and gaining the support of the National Science Foundation, NY State Department of Health, and Cornell University,” she points out. “Our company has pitched at the NYC World Trade Center and we’ve interviewed with venture capitalists at the age of 21. I love to reflect on these milestones, but I also appreciate the messy middle; from being belittled by lawyers who didn’t take my female co-founder and I seriously, or stressful late nights to meet a patent deadline, entrepreneurship has taught me to embrace uncertainty and be fearless.”

Some Best & Brightest simply rise to the occasion. That was the case with Samantha Maryann Stevons. In 2019, she won the “Best Pitch” award in the Innovation Challenge Case Competition. It was a major step for the Michigan State student, who didn’t consider herself to be an “expert coder.” In fact, she would describe herself as an “incomplete puzzle” who didn’t know how to put her pieces together. Still, she made a leap of faith with a four-member team, absorbing their technical knowledge as she tutored them on effective presentations. The result? The team came away with first place – and a monetary award along with it.

“I felt accomplished,” she says. “I learned to never be afraid of an opportunity to grow even if it seems far-fetched because you will never know what you will benefit from it.”

U.C. Berkeley’s Jordyn Elliott

GOING AROUND THE WORLD

The same could be said about adversity. Just ask Jordyn Elliott. Recruited to play women’s soccer at U.C.-Berkeley, she started off being redshirted before tearing her ACL…twice. After that, many athletes would hang up their cleats. Not Elliott. She doubled down and worked even harder. The result? She made team captain and earned the team’s Leadership of a Champion as a senior. That same grit can be found in Notre Dame’s Bruce Leonard Morris. His dream was making it onto the school’s legendary Marching Band. Just one problem: he played the bass clarinet – for seven years, no less – an instrument that doesn’t even exist at the collegiate level. In response, Morris spent the summer before freshman year learning the trombone. Three years later, he had emerged as a CORE Band Leader.

“Learning a brass instrument at a proficient level in two months after years of woodwind conditioning parallels trying to train a monkey to win Jeopardy: possible, yes – but extremely challenging. After countless hours of practice, learning an entirely new language of notes, developing muscles in my face which I didn’t know existed, and one noise complaint…I still managed to botch my music audition. Combined with a positive attitude, reception to constructive criticism, and the marching audition, I earned my spot in a long line of trombones.”

As business students, many Best & Brightest sought out adventure. When she wasn’t studying at Villanova, Julia Snitzer was taking classes in London and Cape Town – even interning for an advertising agency, packaged goods manufacturer, and even an airline union. Outside the Wharton School, Katherine Ku spent over two months on an archaeological dig in Turkey. Then again, the University of Wisconsin’s Jenna Scheffert shipped out to Paris to study fashion management, Hong Kong to brush up on finance, and Brussels to practice her media skills in the U.S. Mission to the European Union.

To read in-depth profiles of 100 of the Best & Brightest business majors, go to pages 3-4.

Emory University’s Catherine Xu

THE CLASS DUCK

Of course, some students never needed to leave campus for diverse experiences. Exhibit A: John Wen. Here what he was doing as a Babson College undergrad: “Applying statistical models to predict future NBA All-Stars; designing an indoor navigation app to assist the visually impaired; starting a multi-purpose fitness bottle company; and building a neural network model to predict student absences based on alcohol consumption and giving actionable insights from our findings.”

When the Class of 2020 wasn’t busy shuttling off to Asia or re-writing business models, they were collecting honors. Arianne Evans was elected to be Bucknell University’s Class President, while the University of Arizona’s Hunter Lindgren was named Homecoming King.  At Ohio State’s Fisher College, Jaret Waters took home the Walter M. Rudin Outstanding Junior Award, which honors academic and leadership excellence. At the same time, Carolyn Kirshe was a founding member of the McDonough Global Case Team, taking 1st place in Canada’s Scotiabank International Case Competition and making it to the final round in competitions held in Norway and The Netherlands. And there must be something in the Atlanta air. Georgia Tech’s Darby Foster notched internships at Boston Scientific, Georgia-Pacific, Boeing, and Microsoft. Across town, Emory’s Catherine Xu did the same at Bank of America, Coca-Cola, and the U.S. House of Representatives.

That didn’t happen by accident, writes Allison Burdette, who teaches business law at Emory. “There is an adage: be a like a duck, smooth on the surface, but paddle like the devil underneath. BBA Council President Catherine Xu is this proverbial duck. She indeed is grace itself on the surface. But, with leadership roles spread across campus, she is truly paddling like crazy underneath. She is a leader that leads so effortlessly that you will probably just notice the progress that is occurring and not notice her role in making that progress happen. She leads with a smile that belies the steel in her character that is determined to ensure that students’ voices will be truly heard.”

Kaelyn Patel, Rutgers University

It wasn’t just faculty hailing this year’s Best & Brightest. Susan Sledge, who heads up the leadership program at Texas Christian University’s Neeley School, relayed an email from an alum about Rachel Haugh’s internship at Dell:

“Just wanted to reach out and give you an update on Rachel Haugh. She just finished her internship and CRUSHED it. She was a perfect culture fit for Dell and represented TCU and the BNSF Neely Leadership program extremely well. So well, that she was 1 of 9 (out of 54 eligible) interns to receive an offer for SCDP. Rachel was absolutely incredible. We feel as though she is the best Horned Frog intern to EVER work for Dell (including one of our all-star SCDP alums that’s currently Chief of Staff within the company).  She impressed not only me but many of our leaders, and I think she embodies passion, humility, genuine empathy, and a true growth mindset besides her billion other strengths.” 

A POET AND A QUANT

That’s how others see them. How do the Best & Brightest see themselves? Rutgers’ Kaelyn Patel calls herself “sunshine mixed with a little hurricane.” At the University of North Carolina, you’ll meet T.J. Tucker – DJ TJ for short – a JP Morgan recruit who personifies the “work hard, play hard” lifestyle. The University of Virginia’s Emily Copa lives by a simple motto: “Do now, sleep later.” Her superpower: she can talk to a brick wall. And then there’s Poet Larsen from the University of Wisconsin…

“My name is Poet and I do quantitative work. It’s as if this [Poets&Quants] nomination was made specifically for me,” he quips.

Alas, Larsen ranks among the very best Pokemon players in the world. That’s just one cool story from the 2020 Best & Brightest. The University of Arizona’s Daniela Cuevas, a boxer, once sold her car for Bruno Mars tickets. Layal Zalkout used to be terrified of flying. After graduating from Southern Methodist University, she’ll start work at (wait for it) American Airlines. Syracuse University’s Ryan Houck designs websites on the side…something he has done since middle school. That said, Alexandra Gallagher has pursued her passion even longer.

“I trained in classical ballet for 13 years pre-professionally before coming to Fordham,” she writes. “For several years I studied at the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School at American Ballet Theatre and was fortunate to perform with ABT at the Metropolitan Opera House at Lincoln Center on numerous occasions. I also traveled to Denmark and Panama through dance!”

University of San Diego’s Elizabeth Augusta Longacre

A CLASS OF EXPLORERS

Denmark and Panama? That’s child play to Kaelyn Patel. She once reached the top of Greece’s Mount Olympus, home of the Gods. Who could possibly top that? Well, Catherine Xu is one; she climbed 10,000 feet higher, scaling Mount Kilimanjaro one Christmas. Let’s not forget the University of San Diego’s Elizabeth Augusta Longacre? She once hopped into 28-degree water…in Antarctica! And that may be her most ho-hum adventure.

“I have been to 35 countries on 6 continents, and I’ve frequently had the opportunity to stay in local residencies for extended periods of time,” she writes. “I’ve spent over a month in London, Paris, Buenos Aires, and Morocco individually, three months in Guatemala, and four in Nepal. Within my travels, I am most proud of the fact that I completed an 18-day trek to Everest base camp as a solo female traveler.”

Longacre may have traveled to Everest alone, but the Class of 2020 credit their achievements to the time and sacrifices of their loved ones. Many Best & Brightest point to their parents for instilling their curiosity, character, and courage…not to mention a few business fundamentals. That was certainly true for Boston College’s Amy Ferreira and her father.

PRACTICING BUSINESS AT AN EARLY AGE

“He built a business from the ground up, has remained true to his values, and never forgets his roots,” she writes. “My dad nurtured my curiosity about business at a young age by teaching me about the financial markets. Growing up, we spent hours discussing supply and demand and stock exchanges. I was fascinated by the possibility of owning my very own share of The Walt Disney Company. Each day I continue to be inspired by my dad’s persistence, hard work, and humility.”

Growing up, Will Pemberton was struck by his mother’s “grace and perseverance.” Despite the demands of being a single mother, he says, she focused on being a role model who was always there during the ups-and-down that came before Lehigh University – and beyond.

“She has never allowed me to consume in excess the fruits of my labor, ensuring that while celebrating the accomplishments I maintain my hunger for more,” Pemberton explains. “She’s also more importantly, never allowed me to excessively internalize the pain and sorrow that accompanies facing failure and being in the midst of defeat, ensuring that I always remember to brush myself off and continue to fight the good fight.”

University of North Carolina’s TJ Tucker

Some profound influences come from outside the family. When DJ TJ was 12, he was hired by Bonnie Griffin, who gave him an MBA in service and leadership through his high school years. “She taught me accountability, time-management, and customer service,” he reminisces. “Above all, her management style and general persona made me eager to over-deliver. After 5+ years of working for her, the concept of “over-delivering” became a part of me. I love people to be happy with my work, but more so I aim to go far beyond their expectations. This mindset and level of work ethic are the core of my success in everything that I do or have done, and I owe that all to Bonnie Griffin.”

DREAM JOB: COLLEGE FACULTY

What’s next for this year’s Best & Brightest? Amid a world in flux, many wonder whether they’ll still have jobs come summer. Even if their dreams are delayed, they can take comfort in a truth that has inspired the worried and weary alike: This too shall pass. Over time, the gifted and gutsy will always find a place. For Notre Dame’s Kate Oh, that hopefully translates into earning a Harvard MBA and becoming the “go-to person” in her field. Downstate, Indiana University’s Alexa Austin plans to turn her travel points into trips to see the Seven Wonders of the World. After leaving the University of Michigan, Liz Hochberg hopes she is so renowned and rounded that she is interviewed by Anderson Cooper…and Howard Stern.

That’s not to say everyone can’t wait to leave business school. “I dream of someday becoming a professor,” adds Allison Ferreira. “I would like to teach and create a business course(s), perhaps in venture capital, private equity, or investment banking after gaining industry experience.”

NYU Stern’s Caitlyn Lubas

As graduation – whatever that means now – approaches, the Best & Brightest have plenty of advice to share with students following in their footsteps. Maia Julianne Kennedy harkens back to an insight from Bashar Masri, an entrepreneur and futurist. He told her: “Remember that nothing is below you and nothing is above you.” It has turned into a mantra that has guided her young career.

FOLLOW YOUR MUSE

“What had made Masri and so many of his other international peers so successful was that they realized that offering a helpful hand, mopping the floors and cleaning the bathrooms with their staff was the best for their relationships,” explains the Wake Forest senior. “To students interested in studying business, I urge you to remember this. There is no honest work that is below you and there is no job out of your limits if you are willing to work. Each day you have a choice. Regardless of where you are, you have the choice of whether to complain about your situation, your job, and work or you can dedicate your energy and time to completing the task in front of you with positivity, integrity, and precision.”

In contrast, Caitlyn Lubas urges future business majors to be true to themselves. By that, she means that students should focus less on following the herd and landing a job. Instead, they should become more versatile and find ways to integrate their passions into their career pathways.

“My internships, classes, and extracurriculars don’t quite align with any common path, but I was able to weave a story of things I’m passionate about. While some might be busy “checking all the boxes” and following a set path, your unique interests will set you apart and help make you more interesting, memorable, and exposed to rare opportunities.”

Those opportunities stem from the nature of business itself: dynamic and ambiguous, full of risk and bereft of straight answers. That’s exactly what makes majoring in business so electrifying and essential, says Arianne Evans

“Studying business is like playing a game, but the rules are always changing. There are rarely definitive right or wrong answers in the field of business, but it is all dependent on the contextualized goal at hand. Therefore, business is also like a puzzle; it is putting pieces together, sometimes many times before you get the right fit, but with a steadfast vision in mind. If you are driven by strategy, teamwork and execution then majoring in a business-related field is for you.”

To read in-depth profiles of 100 of the Best & Brightest business majors, go to pages 3-4.

DON’T MISS:

BEST & BRIGHTEST BUSINESS MAJORS: CLASS OF 2019

BEST & BRIGHTEST BUSINESS MAJORS: CLASS OF 2018

BEST & BRIGHTEST BUSINESS MAJORS: CLASS OF 2017

BEST & BRIGHTEST BUSINESS MAJORS: CLASS OF 2016

2020 Best & Brightest Undergraduate Business Majors

Student Business School Hometown Employer
Daniela Cuevas University of Arizona (Eller) Glendale, AZ J.P. Morgan
Hunter Lindgren University of Arizona (Eller) Carlsbad, CA Undecided
Haley Pesce Babson College Roxbury, CT Toast
John Wen Babson College Brooklyn, NY IBM
Allison Ferreira Boston College (Carroll) Marshfield, MA UBS Investment Bank
Amy Ferreira Boston College (Carroll) Marshfield, MA Citigroup
Brian Harrington Boston University (Questrom) Boston, MA Ernst & Young
Kristin John Boston University (Questrom) Hinsdale, IL Undecided
Arianne Evans Bucknell University (Freeman) Dana Point, CA Undecided
Jackson Spear McCune Bucknell University (Freeman) Seattle, WA Deloitte
Dominic J. Driscoll U.C.-Berkeley (Haas) Hinsdale, IL Audax Private Equity
Jordyn Elliott U.C.-Berkeley (Haas) Hollywood, FL Ingenio, LLC
Makayla Filiere Carnegie Mellon (Tepper) Chandler, AZ Converse
Liam Walsh Carnegie Mellon (Tepper) Burgettstown, PA McKinsey & Company
Tisha Lim Christopher Newport University (Luter) Broadlands, VA Bloomberg Industry Group
Jordan Verbeck Christopher Newport University (Luter) Newport News, VA Deloitte & Touche
Samay Bansal Cornell University (School of Hotel Administration) Singapore Undecided
Jessica Tao Cornell University (Dyson) Carmel, IN Google
Michael Battat Emory University (Goizueta) Woodbridge, CT Perella Weinberg Partners
Catherine Xu Emory University (Goizueta) Sugar Land, TX Bank of America
Alexandra Gallagher Fordham University (Gabelli) New York City, NY PwC
Sofia Remez Fordham University (Gabelli) North Palm Beach, FL Citigroup
Carolyn Kirshe Georgetown University (McDonough) Bucks County, PA Prophet Brand Strategy
Steven Mucyo Georgetown University (McDonough) Kigali, Rwanda Dalberg Advisors
Emily Bauer University of Georgia (Terry) Snellville, GA Willis Towers Watson
Godswill Nwankwo University of Georgia (Terry) Dallas, GA Undecided
Darby Foster Georgia Tech (Scheller) Northborough, MA Microsoft
Jason Quill Georgia Tech (Scheller) Grayson, GA Roark Capital Group
Rawia Abu Rabie Hult International Business School Nablus, Palestine Undecided
Roberto Pérez Segura Hult International Business School Bogotá, Colombia SAP
Sarah Jaeger University of Illinois (Gies) Carol Stream, IL 50 South Capital
Robert Mitchell University of Illinois (Gies) DeKalb, IL GTCR
Alexa Austin Indiana University (Kelley) Indianapolis, IN Bain & Company
Donnesha Robinson Indiana University (Kelley) Carmel, IN General Mills
Will Pemberton Lehigh University Chicago, IL Citigroup
Patrece Savino Lehigh University Warren, NJ Pratt & Whitney
Davonté Higginbottom University of Massachusetts-Amherst (Isenberg) Mattapan, MA Undecided
Cassandra Raffi University of Massachusetts-Amherst (Isenberg) Andover, MA PwC
Laura Mena Miami University (Farmer) Barrington, IL 84.51 (Kroger)
J’Quaan Waite Miami University (Farmer) Cincinnati, OH GE Aviation
Joseph Esposito University of Miami (FL) Morristown, NJ BlackRock
Emma Purcell University of Miami (FL) Indianapolis, IN BlackRock
Liza Hochberg University of Michigan (Ross) Newton, MA Bank of America
Sachit Grover University of Michigan (Ross) Novi, MI Undecided
Samantha Maryann Stevons Michigan State University (Broad) Rochester Hills, MI Microsoft
Jack Vaglia Michigan State University (Broad) Rochester Hills, MI Houlihan Lokey
Stephanie Avalos University of Minnesota (Carlson) Columbia Heights, MN Linkedin
Cameron Herbert University of Minnesota (Carlson) Bloomington, IL PwC
Kyle F. Rice College of New Jersey Wyckoff, NJ J.P. Morgan
Anandita Mehta College of New Jersey Edison, NJ Federal Reserve Bank of New York

2020 Best & Brightest Undergraduate Business Majors

Student Business School Hometown Employer
Aldo Gonzalez Aragon New York University (Stern) Temecula, CA Accenture
Caitlyn Lubas New York University (Stern) Oakland, NY Facebook
TJ Tucker University of North Carolina (Kenan-Flagler) Monroe, NC J.P. Morgan
Kaitlyn Yakaboski University of North Carolina (Kenan-Flagler) Apex, NC Bain & Company
Abhishek Balakrishnan Northeastern University (D’Amore McKim) Dubai, UAE Undecided
Julia McCarthy Northeastern University (D’Amore McKim) Glastonbury, CT Alvarez and Marsal
Bruce Leonard Morris University of Notre Dame (Mendoza) Scottsdale, AZ West Monroe Partners
Kate Oh University of Notre Dame (Mendoza) Northbrook, IL Ernst & Young
Jordan Sibley Ohio State University (Fisher) Akron, OH JP Morgan Chase
Jaret Waters Ohio State University (Fisher) Akron, OH Undecided
Tanusri Balla University of Pennsylvania (Wharton School) Stamford, CT Microsoft
Katherine Ku University of Pennsylvania (Wharton School) Cerritos, CA Oliver Wyman
Sarah Braza University of Pittsburgh Doylestown, PA Deloitte
Christopher Smith University of Pittsburgh West Orange, NJ Dick’s Sporting Goods
Nathan Perez Providence College Lowell, MA PwC
Jennifer Wilson Providence College Hawthorne, NJ Undecided
Claire Griffiths University of Richmond (Robins) Geneva, Switzerland Barclay’s
Hanna Lankler University of Richmond (Robins) Larchmont, NY Bloomingdale’s
Christina Kallinosis Rutgers Business School (New Brunswick) Rahway, NJ Bank of America
Kaelyn Patel Rutgers Business School (New Brunswick) South Brunswick, NJ Cisco
Ty-Lynn Johnson Rutgers Business School (Newark) Newark, NJ BlackRock
Neidelyn Pina Rutgers Business School (Newark) Weehawken, NJ Deloitte
Simon Finnie University of San Diego Vancouver, BC Deloitte
Elizabeth Augusta Longacre University of San Diego Stillwater, MN Undecided
Caitlin Colbert Santa Clara University (Leavey) Belmont, CA Deloitte
Sarah Tatley Santa Clara University (Leavey) Cupertino, CA Ernst & Young
Dillon Baxter Southern Methodist University (Cox) Austin, TX Houlihan Lokey
Layal Zalkout Southern Methodist University (Cox) Allen, TX American Airlines
Deven Rodriguez St. John’s University (Tobin) Queens, NY U.S. Army
Katherine Ross St. John’s University (Tobin) Thomaston, CT Swiss Re
Ryan Houck Syracuse University (Whitman) Easton, PA Ernst & Young
Kristen Wong Syracuse University (Whitman) Clifton, NJ Undecided
Sarah Goldberg Texas Christian University (Neeley) Milwaukee, WI Baird
Rachael Haugh Texas Christian University (Neeley) Portland, OR Dell
Olivia Johnson Tulane University (Freeman) Baton Rouge, LA UBS Investment Bank
Stephen Sepcich, Jr. Tulane University (Freeman) Mandeville, LA Undecided
Saachi Bedi Villanova University Princeton Junction, NJ Goldman Sachs
Julie Snitzer Villanova University Arlington Heights, IL Mercer
Emily Coppa University of Virginia (McIntire) Kinnelon, NJ KPMG
Marwan Elbattouty University of Virginia (McIntire) Alexandria, Egypt Goldman Sachs
Maia Julianne Kennedy Wake Forest University Winter Park, FL Deloitte
Skylar Liang Wake Forest University Austin, TX Ernst & Young
Alfred Mugho University of Washington (Foster) Mombasa, Kenya PwC
Jackie Yeh University of Washington (Foster) Tacoma, WA Undecided
Yaseen Ali Washington University (Olin) Wyckoff, NJ McKinsey & Company
Charlyn Moss Washington University (Olin) NA Redstone Strategy Group
Poet Larsen University of Wisconsin Austin, TX Undecided
Jenna Scheffert University of Wisconsin Northfield, MN Rothchild & Company
Waleria Duarte Worcester Polytechnic Institute (Foisie) Miami, FL General Electric
Emily Wilson Worcester Polytechnic Institute (Foisie) Downington, PA Crowne Consulting

The post 100 Best & Brightest Business Majors Of 2020 appeared first on Poets&Quants for Undergrads.


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