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by
Heather Hayes
For Virginia Business
January,
2004
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Three
years ago the leaders of the Darden Graduate School
of Business Administration showed an independent streak
that even Thomas Jefferson might have admired. They
decided that the school would cut its financial ties
to the University of Virginia and go it alone. Bluntly
put, the business school’s ambitions were higher
than what the state was willing to fund. And Darden’s
stellar reputation — it is frequently ranked among
the top business schools in the country — was
threatened.
The past decade has seen a surge in the number of graduate
business programs around the country and overseas and
the competition for the best faculty, students and corporate
support was getting intense. Yet Darden couldn’t
raise faculty salaries or tuition rates to market levels
without the university’s permission. “That
was all fine when the state subsidized us adequately,”
says Darden’s dean, Robert S. Harris. “But
then the state began to be less able to do so, and we
started to have a shortfall of resources that we didn’t
think the state could — or would — make
up.”
Now in its 49th year, the school has a new financial
model that more resembles a private school. It’s
still part of U.Va., but takes no state funds, which
used to make up a quarter of its annual budget. It has
raised its annual tuition a whopping 70 percent to $34,000
(Virginia residents pay $5,000 less) and expanded its
enrollment by 25 percent, from 240 students in each
class to 300 students. A round of faculty raises are
planned.
Harris wants the school in the top 10 in major surveys.
It recently ranked 11th in the latest U.S. News &
World Report and 20th by The Wall Street Journal. “What
this model does is give us the freedom to really compete
with any business school in the world,” says Harris.
“But it also leaves us with a responsibility to
go out and generate those resources. I’m confident,
though, that if we have outstanding programs, we’ll
be able to find the resources we need.”
Having enough outstanding programs has not been a problem
for this school, which has always been able to compete
and succeed on its own terms. Founded in 1954 with the
aid of several Harvard Business School defectors and
named for former U.Va. president and Virginia governor
Colgate W. Darden Jr., it quickly climbed into the top
tier of business schools through a unique emphasis on
“case study” instruction and a strong ethics
curriculum. It has a solid reputation among companies
for being more attuned to real-world business needs
than most schools.
The case study approach is unusual among business schools.
Faculty members in conjunction with the business community
come up with real-world scenarios that students will
likely face once they graduate. Darden’s inventory
of case studies number in the thousands and covers almost
every possible private-sector scenario, such as when
to conduct a global product launch, whether or not to
make an acquisition, or what mix of advertising should
be used.
“The case discussion really forces you to be prepared
and think on your feet,” says Shantel Moses, a
second-year MBA student who previously had worked in
brand management for the Heinz Corp. in Pittsburgh.
“And it’s highly interactive. The teacher
may ask some questions and guide the class through the
discussion, but at some point they almost step out of
the conversation entirely and let us talk it through
and figure out an answer. In this way, you learn not
only how to analyze problems but how to communicate
ideas and solutions.”
Harris says companies that hire Darden students typically
rave about their ability to hit the ground running.
Quite a few have run all the way to the top of the corporate
ladder. Although the school has just 7,500 alumni, a
relatively small number compared to many other MBA programs,
Darden’s graduates include, among others, the
CEOs of PepsiCo, United Technologies Corp., Citrix Systems,
Landmark Communications, C.B. Fleet Company, Thompson
Hospitality and Owens and Minor.
The school’s academic and financial models also
depend heavily on its highly regarded Executive Education
program, which was incorporated into the school’s
mission from the beginning and, uniquely, receives just
as much support from the administration as the graduate
programs. Darden faculty teach both MBA students and
executives and later integrate materials developed for
custom corporate programs into the MBA curriculum. “The
great feature there is that our faculty are constantly
interacting with business executives on whatever the
issues of the day are, so when they show up in an MBA
class, they bring that with them,” says Harris.
This program, not surprisingly, is a major source of
revenue for Darden. Nearly 5,000 executives and senior
managers enroll in more than 100 programs each year.
Under the new arrangement, the school keeps all of the
money generated by its executive education courses and
other profitable activities.
And
Darden has continued to build on its deftness for fundraising.
Its new $85 million Darden Grounds campus — a
340,000-square-foot, H-shaped complex of buildings completed
this year — was paid for with privately raised
funds. Overall, private donations and endowments account
for 30 percent of the school’s $50 million annual
operating budget.
Darden’s move to financial independence was its
best option, says David L. Kirp, professor of public
policy at the University of California-Berkeley and
author of “Shakespeare, Einstein, and the Bottom
Line,” a look at marketing and higher education.
Both U.Va. and Darden had seen state contributions to
the operating budgets essentially cut in half over the
past decade, he says. “It’s very hard to
see what Darden might have done differently, given that
the commonwealth of Virginia talks a wonderful game
about Mr. Jefferson’s university but has been
less and less willing to fund it.”
Kirp believes that Darden’s decision to embrace
financial self-sufficiency will help it attract more
prestigious faculty members and a better pool of prospective
students and achieve its competitive goals. But if Darden
wants to be a top-10 school that is respected by other
business schools, “it’s going to be hard,”
Kirp says, “because Darden is known for its focus
on case development and for its Executive Education
program, not for its scholarship in the field.”
For all of the fanfare around this new strategy, Darden
and its officials have found themselves the subject
of criticism. Some observers worry that Darden has become
truly privatized, with all of the privileges of a private
college and none of the responsibilities of a public
one. Harris is quick to point out, however, that Darden
remains affiliated with U.Va. Darden pays the university
a 10 percent “franchise fee” for the rights
to U.Va. branding and still has partnerships with other
U.Va. schools, and Harris reports directly to the university
provost. “And I still get basketball tickets,”
he jokes.
Other critics, though, express concern that as Darden
pushes to become a leading business school with an international
reputation, Virginia students will be frozen out. In
the 1990s, Virginia residents made up nearly 25 percent
of the student body; today, that number has dropped
to just 18 percent. C. Ray Smith, a former dean of the
school and current member of the board of trustees,
blames the difference on the recent enrollment hikes.
“We’ve added 120 students over the past
two years, but we didn’t get any additional Virginia
applicants,” he says. “Our stance has always
been that we will take every qualified Virginia student
that wants to be here.”
The school is applying that same sensitivity to its
responsibility to the local business community. Recently,
Darden opened a placement office in Northern Virginia
to raise awareness and opportunity among Virginia businesses.
W. Herbert Crowder III, director of Alumni Career Services,
notes that more than 700 alumni are now working for
Virginia companies, the second largest concentration
of Darden graduates behind New York.
“We feel that we’re on the right course,”
says Harris. “We feel that we now have the freedom
and the ability to continue to raise the quality of
our MBA and Executive Education courses and make them
among the best in the world and to attract faculty who
are superb in the classroom and students that bring
a diversity of experiences and perspectives. Ultimately,
success will be about turning out effective, ethical
leaders, and we think that we’ll only get better
at getting that done as we move forward.” No doubt,
Jefferson would be proud.
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