Tag: Denver

Pupusas are stuffed corn tortillas and celebrated as the national dish in El Salvador. Thanks to Jason (EMBA candidate) and Cindy English, the Central American treat is now available in the U.S. from coast to coast.

Jason English is a member of the Executive MBA Class 43 and the first cohort in Olin’s Denver-based program. He is also an executive with the tech consultant Blue Wolf. Click on video above to hear Jason’s story.

From a stand at the Boulder County Farmers’ Market, Jason and Cindy launched a startup Tres Latin Foods that has grown with the trend towards gluten-free, all natural products. Frozen pupusas in five vegetarian flavors are currently available in Whole Foods Markets in St. Louis and around the country.

 




As the new Director of the Denver Office of Strategic Partnerships, Miriam Peña works as the city’s liaison to the nonprofit sector. Peña began her nonprofit career as an intern 11 years ago at the Colorado Progressive Coalition (CPC), a public policy advocacy nonprofit. By the time she left the organization this spring, she had held every position in the organization including grass roots fundraising coordinator and development director before her promotion to Executive Director in 2010. Her current challenge is to quickly learn the inner workings of local government so that she can more effectively collaborate and elevate the 3,400 nonprofits that exist in Denver.

Peña says that her decision to enroll in the EMBA program as part of the first Denver cohort was the best decision she’s ever made.  She says it has helped her think of new ways to do nonprofit work and kept her completely engaged while planning her transition to her new position.

Miriam Pena

Miriam Pena

“It’s really true that you use what you learn that weekend on the following Monday. More and more I’m convinced that nonprofit executives need to have more business training, after all they are running businesses with very important missions. It’s definitely changed my perspective on things and the way I go about solving issues. I’ve loved every second of the EMBA program.”

Born in Juarez, Mexico, Peña moved to Colorado as a baby and was the first in her family to attend college earning a Bachelor’s degree in Public Policy and Communications at the University of Denver. In addition to her work at CPC, she has served on numerous nonprofit organizations’ boards including Metro Denver Partners, New Era Colorado, Rights for all People, Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition, Alliance for a Just Society, and El Centro Humanitario (Humanitarian Center for Day Laborers).

She co-hosts a weekly talk show, “Weekend Wisdom” in Denver and was appointed to the Denver Women’s Commission as chair of the Public Policy committee where she served for a year. In August of 2013, she became foster mother to three little girls.

Bill Bottom’s Team Development course has been one of the most useful applications of the curriculum for Peña. “We had a co-Executive Director model that we worked to restructure to a single Executive Director model. That type of restructure required a lot of trust, and the team assessments were very helpful in effective change management with my staff and board.”

She applied lessons learned in Microeconomics and cost accounting to CPC’s grant acceptance policies. “If someone offered us a grant to do a specific thing with specific outcomes that didn’t feel like the adequate price, I was able to create tools to calculate at what point it might cost us more to do it than it would to reject the money. Non-profits hardly ever reject money, but it helped us be more efficient, true to our mission and avoid killing my staff for a small amount of money.”

As one of 10 women in a class of 50, she would like to see more women in the EMBA program. “I think about how many opportunities for learning we are missing when there aren’t more women in the program. Different life experiences, perspectives and ability to take on different roles are what make women’s contributions unique. More and more women control the finances in the home and are the breadwinners. When we miss what they’re doing, we’re missing a lot.”

Peña’s last day at CPC was March 31st, and her first day with the city was April 1st. Since then she has also partnered on the formation of a nonprofit consulting LLC. She is excited for the new opportunity in local government, where she can bring nonprofit, for-profit and government together for effective cross-sector collaboration. Miriam Peña is just getting started.

Profile by Tanya Yatzeck (EMBA 43), a freelance writer and Senior Project Manager in Information Technology at Washington University.

Image:  Weekend Wisdom’s Facebook page




The 43rd Executive MBA class arrived at the Charles F. Knight Education Center this week for Go! Week orientation. The fall cohort includes 52 world-class executives, including 14 in Olin’s inaugural Denver cohort.

They gathered on Sunday, September 15, meeting for the first time as a collective cohort and sharing their “Why.” In an inspirational hour that includes statements from the practical to the aspirational, the focus was 100% on this group of individuals who yearned to come together as a team.

EMBA 43 Quick Facts

  • 25% were born outside of the United States
  • Members are traveling to St. Louis from California and Florida.
  • Average management experience is 11 years
  • Nine members of the cohort are either retired or active duty military, bringing a powerful blend of military and civilian leadership into the classroom.
  • 46 companies are represented

Go! Week will conclude with several events, including a special celebration of the 30th anniversary of Olin’s Executive MBA program. The program, which has expanded beyond St. Louis to Shanghai, Kansas City and now Denver, will share this milestone celebration with all current Executive MBA classes and alumni of the EMBA program at the Charles F. Knight Executive Education Center on Friday, September 20. Until then, Go! Week for EMBA 43 continues and we’ll be counting the sleepless hours of our 10 EMBA 43 teams!




The forecast called for eight inches of snow, but that didn’t stop dozens of Washington University alumni, friends, and media from attending the official launch of Olin’s Executive MBA program in Denver, February 20.

Andy, the sign guy, made and installed the new banner! Billboards like this will be popping up around Denver soon.

A huge banner announcing the arrival of our top-ranked program to Denver welcomed guests to the Innovation Pavilion, a startup incubator with 80 tennants and counting, in Centennial, Colorado, just south of the capital.

Vik Ahmed, BS ’88, is the founder of the Innovation Pavilion and a serial entrepreneur (more on that later).

Vik Ahmed, founder of the Innovation Pavilion and proud Wash U alumnus.

He was a gracious and enthusiastic host for the event. His brother, Umer Farouq, BSBA’88, is commuting from Virginia right now to help Vik manage the thriving incubator. The two of them are in constant motion, going from meetings with entrepreneurs and VCs to heping their events staff set up tables or find another roll of velcro tape! An entrepreneurs work is never done!

 

Umer Farouq, CFO of the Innovation Pavilion.

When all the banners were in place, microphones tested, caterers standing by with hors d’oeurves, and the cameras were ready to roll, Wash U alumnus (BS’67, MA’69 Architecture), and trustee Ralph Nagel (pictured above) welcomed the crowd and said he was looking forward to the day that Denver would recognize the vision, leadership, and investment of Chancellor Mark Wrighton and his tenure at the university. Nagel praised  the many partnerships the chancellor has fostered around the world on behalf of the school and the decision to launch the EMBA program in Denver. The Chancellor and Dean Mahendra Gupta took turns at the podium and talked about the decision to bring the EMBA program to Denver’s dynamic and growing business community.

Left to right: Umer Farouq, Vik Ahmed, Panos Kouvelis, Ralph Nagel, Chancellor Wrighton and Dean Gupta pose for the cameras at the Innovation Pavilion.

Denver’s active and 3,000-strong alumni club held one of their monthly events following the EMBA announcement and reception. It featured a panel of alumni-entrepreneurs who told true tales from the roller coaster world of startups. Stay tuned for more on that event!