Lab named in honor of alumnus, retired
State Farm agent Mel Adams
MURFREESBORO,
Tenn. — Students in MTSU’s Jones College of Business now have access to an
innovative sales laboratory that will allow them to hone their selling skills
in their efforts to become ready-to-hire graduates.
The
university cut the ribbon Tuesday (Aug. 7) on the Mel Adams State Farm Agent
Sales Lab on the first floor of its Business and Aerospace Building. It is
named in honor of the alumnus (’61) and retired longtime State Farm agent who
continues to support the university and its new Professional Selling
concentration.
“It feels really good,”
said a humbled Adams, recalling the days when he started in the business
equipped with just a pen and a piece of paper in his hand. The Rutherford
County native, who was affiliated with State Farm for 56 years after starting
his career as a filing clerk, encourages students to “enjoy what you’re doing
... and put people at ease” when making a sale.
The multi-functional lab will
train students to do so, providing real-world sales scenarios to help them
practice. The two-room space is equipped with high definition cameras,
computers, software and workplace furnishings that are similar to a
professional office setting. Students and faculty can record mock
interviews and sales calls and will be able to review and analyze their
performance to improve interview skills.
“Jones College specializes
in hands-on, experiential learning in its business programs,” said Dean David
Urban. “We use the sales lab as a key part of our new concentration in
Professional Selling. In the lab, students make real sales presentations, and
can review the video recording of the presentations to learn the most
successful sales practices.”
Before Tuesday’s
ribbon-cutting, MTSU hosted a luncheon for Adams and other State Farm agents
who funded a $50,000 endowment to support the lab, with a majority of those
agents being MTSU alumni and some of whom will serve as mentors to Jones
College students.
“Mel not only was my
mentor, but mentored other new agents as well,” said Adams’ friend, fellow MTSU
alumnus and longtime local State Farm agent Andy Womack. “He set a standard for
sales, business management, and professionalism that was a model for agents at
all career levels.”
Part of Tuesday’s event
included lab demonstrations by Laura Buckner, an instructor in the Department
of Marketing who pointed out that “someone can tell you what sales is all
about, but until you actually practice it, it’s just not the same … that’s why
this lab is so valuable.”
Added Urban: “We find that
employers are not just interested in what our graduates know; they are even
more interested in what our graduates can do. The learning by doing that our
students receive in the sales lab gives them a real competitive advantage over
students from other universities who do not receive that type of training.”
For more information about
MTSU’s Professional Selling concentration in the Department of Marketing, go to
http://www.mtsu.edu/marketing/ or
call 615-898-2902.
No comments:
Post a Comment