• Professor Elam

    Friday July 29, 2011

    Here is a link to some of the most creative resumes around. I suspect there is a good reason to let your resume do the talking for you by demonstrating what in fact you can do. 

     

    Here is an example of a resume for a creative graphics job. This may be too creative for the accounting world but I like it!Screen shot 2011-07-29 at 6.08.38 AM

     

  • Professor Elam

    Monday July 25, 2011

    Gina Faimondo warns that Rhode Island Pensions need reform.

     

    The Unions cheer, what's up with that? This is topic we will visit this fall in Intermed II. We will take a look at this report as part of the lesson on that chapter in Intermed II. 

  • Professor Elam

    Monday July 25, 2011

    The unemployment picture turned worse at the beginning of may and continues to do so. 

    This report on long term unemployment is a must read for students. 

    Since the collapse in 2008, the number of jobs available each month is much lower. Meanwhile the number of people looking for jobs who lost a job continues to grow. AND there are more new would be workers (college and high school grads as well as school drop outs over 18) entering the job hunt. 

    The result is a deficit of jobs available versus the number of people looking.Clearly this will be a huge drag on the economy. The US is far short in the job creation necessary to just get us back to pre 208 levels. 

    I have emphasized the importance of obtaining professional certifications. This report backs me up!

  • Professor Elam

    Friday July 22, 2011

    The end of Borders Bookstores is bringing growth to the remaining independent book sellers.

    Small retail has long lamented the dominance of national chains with their buying power. Funny thing, not long ago many feared Wal Mart, now we don't hear so much about that any more as the Dollar Stores invaded WMT turf. 

    So perhaps we will see more opportunities for small specialty shops again. 

  • Professor Elam

    Wed July 2, 2011

    Barry Ritholtz posted this Final Exam for aspiring business students. How well would you do?

  • Professor Elam

    Tuesday July 19, 2011

    P6190004 The College of Business moves to Brooke City Base to begin classes this Fall Semester, which is to say August. We had our first look at the facility today. 

    First, the correct address is at the left, 2601 Louis Bauer Drive. 

    The address currently shown under Quick Links is 6201 which is incorrect!. 

    And the Google Map as well as your GPS won't be much help as the names of some streets have been changed!  So allow some extra time to locat the building. At this date there are not any signs on Brooke indicating the location of the building, forewarned is forearmed. 

    Now having said that it is a great 77,000 sf facility. 

    P6190050 Here is a shot of Cynthia exiting the front entrance to the building. 

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    P6190024 Yes faculty will have real offices, here is a shot of mine sans my stuff, we move in next month two weeks before school begins. 

    P6190018 This will be an open computer lab, at least I think that was the explanation. 

    Everything about the building is modern and first class. 

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    P6190010

    Judy Lewis Henry Ramirez, and Donna Dancak try out a class room. Nice chairs and the tables are not pebble grained, but smooth for writing!

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    P6190027
    The facility has two theater style rooms. Here Prof Ramirez relaxes in the 250 seat  theater.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    P6190045 This is the smaller 150 seat theater. We plan on Second Saturday movies in this venue. 

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    P6190049

    Okay here is the layout of the entire building. Business is at the right rear, Education at the left rear. 

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    P6190015 

    Here is a shot of yet another room; again this is all well laid out. 

    So more to follow, just be sure to come early your first day and allow time to orient yourself. Brooke is not laid out in right angled streets. 

     

    This is a fine move for us and a vastly improved facility. 

     

     

     

     

     

  • Professor Elam

    Monday July 18, 2011

     

    I just received a god inquiry from a student about the bond market. As he said, the textbook assumes that one knows a good bit about bonds. So here are a few suggestions regarding free on line sources to read. 

    The bond Book This is an excerpt from Google Books

    The Wall Street Journal

    go to http://www.wsj.com

    Click on Markets

    Click on Bonds

    I suspect that same URL comes up every day so you could just book mark it. But reading every day will help you understand more about the market. And European Sovereign Bonds, issued by countries are very much in the news every day as you will notice. 

    Finance.yahoo

    http://finance.yahoo.com/

    Go to News, then Markets, then Bonds for  a list of current stories

    Marketwatch

    http://www.marketwatch.com/markets

    This displays a nice list of headlines, then you can click on bonds for daily updates

    Bloomberg

    http://www.bloomberg.com/

    cut to the chase and click here

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/bonds/

     

    There is a wealth of information out there, one has to take advantage of it!

  • Professor Elam

    Monday July 18, 2011

    Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff wrote This Time is Different.

    Eight Centuries of Financial Folly reveals for example that modern Greece, since 1823, has been in default as much time as it has paid its debts. Now they explain why QE 3 won't work.

    Eventually the debt becomes a drag on growth. And for my two cents, the government 'stimulus' just goes to pay off political deadbeats and hangers on. 

  • Professor Elam

    Sat July 16, 2011

     

    Bull Market Boomers

    Our entire lives, all seventeen or eighteen years, had been spent in a bull market. Bull markets are the result of positive social mood. And so, with a lifetime of positive reinforcement, we thought eighteen boom years in a near row, was perfectly normal.

    Our parents were Tom Brokaw’s Greatest Generation. The War was over, American had won, the party would seemingly never end.  Ike, the very symbol of the US Victory, presided over the   manufacturing juggernaut that had produced the Allied Victory. Televisions, washing machines, the passenger jet airplane,  air conditioning, America was a production line of labor saving devices. Made in Japan was a negative moniker for most of that era; who imagined that would change?

    The culture was like no other, and why not?  Separated by two giant oceans from the rest of the world’s problems, we could afford the luxury of self-indulgence. Foreign countries were, well, foreign. In grade school Mexico was still called  ‘Old Mexico.’  America was not bordered by other countries but two time warps. In our minds, Mexico was rooted in a sort of 1830s California nostalgia. One could still see people using burrows pulling carts for transportation. Canada was some hazy French and British  blend of the Royal Canadian Mountie, with great scenery to boot.

    A Cuban, Desi Arnaz, invented the television sit-com.  Unimaginably perfect families like the Nelsons were on display. Mom stayed home, after all, this was still an era when Father Knew Best .  Vaudeville made the move to television. George Burns and his buddies wore sport coats and neckties around the house on the weekend.  Gracie wore a pearl necklace and a dress. And they thanked us for inviting them into our homes for a half an hour.

    Such a positive mind set spawned lots of positive cultural events. Little Richard ‘invented’ Rock ‘n Roll. In the space of a few weeks in 1955 we stopped listening to our parents music and adopted our own.   The purity of the event didn’t last long but for a time, Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis, and rockabilly Carl Perkins ‘shook up’ the staid music establishment of the Gisele McKenzies.

    Pop reached a crescendo in the 1960s. In an ode to the profligate American use of cheap energy, the Beach Boys, Jan and Dean, the Ripchords, all sang to the glories of the big V-8 American automobile. It was a first and last, a zenith never to be heard again.  Who’s singing about cars these days?

    Musicals went form Broadway to the big screen. Hollywood, fearful that the new medium of television would shut down movie attendance, rolled out new versions of Technicolor, Todd AO, and Cinemascope, all the better to brighten our world. Walt Disney invented the ‘theme park.’ We experienced our first national marketing blitzes. First it was Davy Crockett (King of the Wild Frontier) and then the Hula-hoop. Bull markets after all are marked by zany antics, each trying to outdo the other. It was hedonism on display.

    Cowboys were the heart and soul of the action movie.  From Roy Rogers and Gene Autry to Fess Parker to John Wayne, we couldn’t get enough of the Great American Hero. Television responded to the demand producing Maverick, Cheyenne, Broncho Lane, Colt .45 (imagine a television series today named after a revolver), Sugarfoot, Josh Randall, the Lawman, and Paladin. Shucks, the cowboy finally went Ozzie and Harriet with Bonanza. We no longer had to fantasize in black and white, GE brought the colorful West that Never Was right into the Sunday Night Living Room. 

    There were social disruptions to be sure but in a bull market all news is bullish.  And so Ike banished Governor Wallace from that school room door .  Civil unrest was at hand but like Old Mexico, hardly a real concern for most of us.

    A Cold War caused both sides to frivolously spend lots of time and money on useless projects. A DEW line of Northern Radar Stations was built as our Distant Early Warning system against them unruly Russkies coming over the Pole after us. SAC, TAC, and other pointless military adventures were the order of the day. Sputnik would be the early warning system that our education system was even then in some decline.

    Green energy was decades away. Instead America feasted on the abundance of the ordinary carbon based variety. Rock Hudson and Liz Taylor  portrayed the Giant fantasy down the road in Marfa. Yep right out the dining room window, oil  pump jacks shared the pasture with fat cattle.  Life was good in Texas.

    Dennis Elam is a graduate of the Andrews High Class of 1966 

    Their 45th Class Reunion is July 22-23, this is the first of several reminisces on that era. 

     

  • Professor Elam

    Monday July 11, 2011

    The Chairman  of PwC makes some comments on the new global environment, social media, and mentoring new hires. I think you will find this interesting.