Bigger Business
Agustin Parraguez-Huisman has what you might call an enterprising spirit. In high school, he tapped into his technical skills to start a business providing IT services for businesses in Michigan and nationwide. His side gig gave him a perspective not available to most high school students鈥攁 unique window into the workings of small-scale businesses. Over time, he noticed a pattern that would eventually prompt his study of business and accounting at Calvin.
鈥淚 wanted to learn more about operating a small business...and how bigger businesses work.鈥Augustin Parraguez-Huisman '21
Many of Agustin鈥檚 clients were small companies not much larger than his own鈥 and they struggled to understand and manage their finances. 鈥淚 saw that my clients needed someone with a fundamental base in accounting鈥攕omebody who could understand finance statements and budgeting and who could communicate financial concepts to their employees.鈥
That was a need he could envision himself meeting. By the time he began his studies at Calvin, he knew he wanted to dig deeper into the financial side of business. 鈥淚 wanted to learn more about operating a small business,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut I also wanted to understand how bigger businesses work.鈥 How might a small company like his make the transition to something grander?
Agustin smiles. 鈥淚鈥檝e got that entrepreneurship spirit.鈥
bodyimage1EXPANDED OPTIONS
Embracing and empowering that enterprising attitude lie at the heart of a series of major new additions to Calvin鈥檚 business program. The business department recently announced a significant expansion of its academic offerings: Students can now major directly in finance, marketing, and human resource management鈥攁reas of specialization previously only available as concentrations within a business major. New minors in entrepreneurship and supply chain management round out the additions.
The entrepreneurship minor illustrates the intent behind the changes. Its new status as a standalone minor adds academic depth to the study of entrepreneurship at Calvin. And crucially, it makes a structured entrepreneurship education much more accessible to the many students who aren鈥檛 pursuing a business major but who know they鈥檒l benefit from applying business savvy to their areas of interest鈥攚hatever those might be.
bodyimage3This is especially useful in a market increasingly reliant on the 鈥済ig economy,鈥 in which creative people like Parraguez-Huisman are spinning their personal talents and interests into side jobs and contract work. 鈥淲e want to equip students to engage in the gig economy if they want,鈥 says Professor Peter Snyder, who teaches entrepreneurship in the business department. 鈥淵ou might be working as a contractor, a writer, a programmer, or a musician, but what you鈥檙e ultimately doing is running a business. You need to be able to market yourself, handle your own finances, identify problems that your abilities can solve, and create value.鈥
That means that whatever a student鈥檚 field of study, from engineering to biology to art to international relations, there鈥檚 value in taking courses in business fundamentals. The entrepreneurship minor makes that more easily accomplished for students who aren鈥檛 able to add a full major in business to their four-year schedule. 鈥淲e feel that if you鈥檙e going to work in the arts, in communication, in speech pathology, in the nonprofit sector鈥攚herever you鈥檙e headed鈥攈aving an entrepreneurship mindset and skills is very helpful,鈥 says Leonard Van Drunen, co-chair of the business department.
callout1ADAPTABLE PROGRAMS
Jobs in the gig economy are as unique as the people doing them鈥攁nd so the entrepreneurship minor was designed to be adapted to the interests a student brings to the program. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no one entrepreneurship journey,鈥 Snyder notes, 鈥渟o there can鈥檛 be one simple set of courses that people should take. We鈥檝e created paths for people based on where they want to go. If you want to do a small commercial venture like a coffee shop, there鈥檚 a set of courses for you to take. If you want to do large-scale entrepreneurship, there鈥檚 another set of courses for you. And if you want to work in a large-scale organization but approach it with an entrepreneurial mindset, we鈥檝e got yet another academic path for you.鈥
鈥淭he new business program offers a lot of freedom. It caters to the individual student goals, rather than making students contort to fit into a rigid set of courses.鈥 Abby Koops 鈥20
That flexibility appeals to students like Abby Koops, a finance major and psychology minor who鈥檚 considering adding an entrepreneurship minor to her academic plan. 鈥淭he new business program offers a lot of freedom. It caters to individual student goals, rather than making students contort to fit into a rigid set of courses.鈥
Entrepreneurship isn鈥檛 the only part of the business program that鈥檚 been bolstered by these changes. Marketing options in particular are expanding greatly. 鈥淢arketing is our largest concentration,鈥 says Marilyn Stansbury, co-chair of the business department and director of Calvin鈥檚 master of accounting program. 鈥淧reviously, we had a business major with one general marketing focus. The fact that we now have three full marketing major tracks students can pursue鈥攁nalytics and research, marketing management, and professional selling鈥攊s very exciting.鈥
BREADTH AND DEPTH
Despite the significance of the changes, it would be a mistake to view this as a dramatic break from the past. Van Drunen emphasizes that the revised academic offerings don鈥檛 represent an abrupt overhaul of the business program. Rather, they鈥檙e the realization of a decade-long effort to balance what he describes as the 鈥渂readth and depth鈥 of the business program.
鈥淭he idea behind these changes has been on our mind for a long time鈥攅ven 10 years ago,鈥 Van Drunen said. That鈥檚 when the business department first separated from the business and economics department to become a distinct program. Since then, the business department has grown to become one of Calvin鈥檚 largest, averaging more than 160 graduates each year. But Van Drunen, Stansbury, and their department colleagues never stopped exploring ways to strengthen the program. The new changes are inspired by extensive research and ongoing interaction with peer institutions, Calvin alumni, and employers.
鈥淲e heard from business alums that they loved their liberal arts degree, but they wished they had been given more depth in their field,鈥 says Jill Risner, who teaches marketing and introductory business courses in the department. 鈥淥ur new degrees were designed to meet that need. Students will graduate with more depth and more practical knowledge that I believe will make them more prepared for their chosen careers.鈥
鈥淥ur goal has always been to provide both a breadth of options for students and a depth of exposure to different fields,鈥 Van Drunen explains. 鈥淎 decade ago, adding concentrations like marketing, human resources, and operations to Calvin鈥檚 business major added the breadth half of the equation. And now, elevating those concentrations into standalone degrees bolsters the depth.鈥
That added depth appeals to students like Parraguez-Huisman, who likes the sharper focus that the new degrees represent: 鈥淭hey give me a clearer understanding of the job and career options they prepare you for.鈥 That clarity and specialization can also help employers better understand what a Calvin graduate stands to bring to their organization.
bodyimage2RELATIONSHIPS AT THE CENTER
But the depth that Van Drunen describes means more at Calvin than academic heft. It鈥檚 about a perspective on business that鈥檚 built on a Christian understanding of human relations. With the changes to the academic program comes a renewed emphasis on business as a point of relationship between people. People who study business at Calvin are interested in working with people, Van Drunen says.
That鈥檚 certainly the case with Gretchen Karsten, a finance major and history minor whose mother (a financial adviser herself) jokes that Gretchen grew up watching CNBC. Her interaction with the Calvin business program, particularly as a member of the Women鈥檚 Business Institute, showed her a vision for business that was centered on service and problem-solving in response to real human needs. 鈥淚t was eye-opening,鈥 Karsten recalls. 鈥淚 always thought that business was just money. But it鈥檚 so much more鈥攊t鈥檚 ultimately about relationship with people.鈥 The relationships she formed with professors, Calvin alumni, and her mentees in the institute shaped her understanding of business.
It鈥檚 all about meeting human needs, says Snyder. 鈥淎ll organizations鈥攚hether they鈥檙e big or small, for-profit or nonprofit, exist to solve problems and meet needs.
鈥淲e want to empower students who want to make an impact, who are driven to understand people鈥檚 needs鈥攁nd then create solutions to meet them.鈥