Business
Navy Veteran Sets Sail for Consulting Job
By Julie Riggott on January 25, 2012 2:21 PM
Chad Cisco MBA ’11 has had an exciting 20-year career in the U.S. Navy in various positions, including a nuclear power plant operator, tactics instructor and executive officer on a ballistic missile submarine. But he is looking forward this summer to navigating new waters and starting another phase of his career as a management consultant with McKinsey & Co.
Based in San Diego, Cisco was assisting Navy aircraft carriers and surface ships in antisubmarine warfare training while participating in the Executive MBA (EMBA) program at the USC Marshall School of Business.
Drawn to the submarine force because of his interest in travel, geopolitics and technology, Cisco was introduced to business by a supervising officer who turned him onto the books of W. Edwards Deming, Jim Collins and others.
“That really opened my eyes to business strategy and operations, and it became somewhat of a passion following that thought process of how to improve businesses and marketing,” he recalled. “I also became interested in deal flows, in who’s buying who and why. I’ve read a lot, and my MBA has added more rigor to the study.”
Cisco’s most memorable experiences in the Navy are ones most of us only can comprehend thanks to movies: exercises where he was “at the periscope out in front of a destroyer heading at me and shooting a torpedo at them” and tracking submarines, a challenge that is “more of an art than a science.”
Not one to shy away from challenges, Cisco eagerly is anticipating the transition from naval commander to consultant.
“I won’t be in management. [I’ll be] a contributor. I think it’s a perfect place to start because it will give me the opportunity to focus on building my own skills and knowledge level without having to manage a group or an organization. But people probably won’t call me sir there,” he said with a laugh.
Part of the reason Cisco feels confident is that he already found that the EMBA program has prepared him well.
“I think the integrated approach of this program was very helpful to me during the rigorous interview process with McKinsey & Co.,” he explained. “I could think of business holistically because we studied themes instead of individual courses. For example, I could understand how finance related to strategy. That was an advantage when I interviewed, and I’m sure the program will be a huge benefit when I begin this career.”
Cisco also credited his peers with useful insights that steered him toward his new career.
“I have learned almost as much from my fellow students as I have in the classroom,” he said. “My classmates are in a variety of industries and functions. Asking them about their businesses and hearing the challenges they’re facing day to day in their work was valuable. They helped me figure out where I’d fit, what I thought I’d find interesting and led me to consulting.”
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The New York Times highlighted the USC Libraries Scripter Awards, noting that “The Descendants” took the prize for the best adapted screenplay of the year. Screenwriters Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash accepted the award with novelists Kaui Hart Hemmings this past Saturday at USC’s Doheny Memorial Library. Variety reported that USC Libraries Dean Catherine Quinlan served as mistress of ceremonies, feigning dismay over the lack of library-centric films. “Where are all the library movies?” she said. The awards were also covered by United Press International, The Times-Picayune, two Deadline stories (second link here), The Hollywood Reporter, The Wrap, HitFix and World Entertainment News Network.
Los Angeles Business reported that the USC Rossier School’s Center for Higher Education Policy Analysis has been renamed the Earl and Pauline Pullias Center for Higher Education. The story stated that the re-naming comes after a generous undisclosed gift from the Pullias Family estate. “The Pullias Center can now expand its cutting edge research on postsecondary institutions, as well as its critical community outreach work helping underserved students get into college,” said Rossier Dean Karen Symms Gallagher. Earl Pullias was a founding faculty member of USC’s higher education department in 1957. William Tierney of the Rossier School directs the Pullias Center.
NPR’s “Talk of the Nation” interviewed David Treuer of the USC Dornsife College about his new book, “Rez Life: An Indian’s Journey Through Reservation Life.” The book centers around the reservation Treuer grew up on, and how the Native American experience is often depicted in ways that leave out the happy moments. “There’s this great disconnect between ... how we feel and how we seem,” Treuer said. Treuer’s book was also featured by Minnesota Public Radio, Star-Tribune, Appeal-Democrat, The Spectrum, Baltimore City Paper, The Bemidji Pioneer and Brainerd Dispatch.
KCET-TV featured “The Accidental Feminist” by M.G. Lord of the USC Dornsife College, a new book about the ways in which actress Elizabeth Taylor served as an early feminist icon. Lord said that she came to write the book after spending a weekend watching Taylor movies with friends; they found that in many of Taylor’s movies, she offered veiled feminist messages or embraced her own sexual desire while working within the constraints of the Motion Picture Production Code.
China Internet Information Center (China) featured a screening of the documentary “Assignment: China — The Week That Changed the World,” created by the USC U.S.-China Institute. The documentary follows the American journalists reporting on President Nixon’s historic visit to China in 1972. The institute’s Mike Chinoy narrates the documentary.
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