Tuesday, April 19, 2016

[430] MTSU summit offers tips to help students turn passions into professions


Nashville entrepreneur shares advice at Nonprofit & Social Innovation Student Summit


“What is that thing that you believe deeply?” he asked those gathered inside the Student Union Ballroom as part of the third annual event hosted by the Department of Management in the Jones College of Business and the Department of Communication Studies and Organizational Communication in the College of Liberal Arts.

Southern Living magazine named Davidson one of 2015’s “50 People Who Are Changing the South” for co-creating Batch, a subscription service to deliver Southern-made, city-themed artisan goods nationwide. In just two years, he led Batch as CEO to cross the $1 million annual revenue threshold. He also co-founded the company “Cool People Care,” which sold apparel to support nonprofits.

The Nashville native is also author of the books “Simplify Your Life, 50 Things Your Life Doesn’t Need” and “New Day Revolution.” His messages focus on entrepreneurship, leadership, service, innovation and how you can have a better impact through each.

Davidson told students that he’s heard so many stories over the years about people who started something based on a passion, “something that they want to live for … and they don’t want to relegate that passion to nights and weekends.” He spent the next hour offering students tips on how to properly identify their own passions, honestly assess their talents and strategically embrace a need in the world that those passions and talents can address.

“When you can show somebody something, they’ll pay for it,” he said. Learn more at http://samdavidson.net.

MTSU senior Travis Elliott, a business administration major from Clarksville, Tennessee, said Davidson’s insights helped him understand “how I could change the world based on my passions, my talents … and the needs of the world.”

Elliott, who graduates in May, is passionate about Christian ministry work. Among his goals is to use his business training to own a hotel that takes in the homeless and turn his passion for cooking into a ministry “to feed the world.”

Such inspiration was among the goals for the summit, said Leigh Anne Clark, a summit organizer and associate professor of management in the Jennings A. Jones College of Business, which now offers a Master of Science in Management with a nonprofit management concentration as well as a minor in not-for-profit management.

“One of our goals with the conference is to be a catalyst for students, that it either really inspires them or gives them a connection, a skill or a thought that leads them further down their path,” Clark said. “This is important to all students, because when you’re building your resume, you want to show that you’re more than just a good student. You want to show your interests elsewhere.”

Over the past two years, the summit has drawn a cross-disciplinary mix of more than 400 student participants. For students who are interested in pursuing careers in the nonprofit arena, the summit gives them a great opportunity to network, gain a deeper understanding of the nonprofits and perhaps secure an internship through a volunteer/internship fair that attracted more than 40 local nonprofits this year.

A session on “Working Across Borders” featured representatives from three nonprofits that do work overseas — James Threadgill from Team Rubicon USA, Dave Rogers from Hope for Justice, and Lindsay Moore from Project C.U.R.E.

The week of events was made possible with primary support from the Jennings and Rebecca Jones Foundation in addition to support from funding from the sponsoring departments.


For more information, contact Dr. Leigh Anne Clark at la.clark@mtsu.edu.

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