400
The capstone course for all business majors, this course examines the process of managing the strategy, formulation, and implementation functions of a firm. Teaches students to think strategically and to consider the perspective of the total enterprise utilizing cases, readings, and professional presentations. Taken during one of the student’s last two semesters. (Business majors only.)
3
Prerequisites
Senior status.
Facilitates the transition from college student to business professional, with students completing a variety of career development activities. Experiences include seminars, planning and leading a senior service project, and networking events. Students will finish their professional electronic portfolio. (Graded on a P/NP basis.) Fee: $30.
1
Prerequisites
BUS 302, Senior status and Business majors only.
Leaders in sustainability must be able to understand rapid changes in environmental and social conditions, innovate to adapt to those changes, collaborate to envision transitions to sustainable futures, and engage with others to realize those visions. To build these capacities, this course develops systems thinking skills using readings and case studies drawn from environmental, social, and business contexts.
3
Prerequisites
ENV 182 or
CE 367 or permission of instructor.
Cross Listed Courses
EGR 408,
ENV 408
Examines critical issues necessary to evaluate and report on business combinations, corporate consolidations, and partnerships. Includes accounting research methodology and case analysis.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 311
Explores how humans create and use messages that focus on the term “sustainability.” This newly minted “god term” is ubiquitous in our culture, used to promote environmental, political, and commercial services and products. Course explores how communication scholars examine, explore, and explain this language, including how businesses and policymakers constitute themselves, products, services, and policies using the term sustainability.
3
Prerequisites
Senior status
Cross Listed Courses
CST 421,
CST 521
Surveys the field of investment analysis and portfolio management. Topics include: investment process and financial planning, the structure of capital markets, the definition and measurement of risk and return in global markets, security law and ethics, stock market indicators, investment media and risks, stock and bond valuation models, real estate investment, municipal bonds, and government securities.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 330
Examines the various financial markets that play a crucial role in helping individuals, corporations, and governments obtain financing and invest in financial assets such as stocks, bonds, mortgages, and derivatives. Includes the study of financial institutions that facilitate management of financial market transactions.
3
Prerequisites
ECN 120 and
BUS 330 .
BUS 430 is recommended.
Provides the informational and decision-making tools needed for planning and implementing a successful personal financial program. Topics include money management models, consumer finance issues, insurance, investing, retirement, and estate planning.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 330.
BUS 430 recommended
Course covers real estate finance and investment. Topics include the various forms of real estate investment including home ownership, rental property, REITs, real estate syndicates, mortgages and packages of mortgages, real estate companies, investment in land, etc. Brokerage, real estate mathematics and loan analysis, real estate valuation techniques and the application of these techniques, will also be covered.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 330 and
BUS 430 recommended
Examines derivatives, their markets and their role in portfolio and corporate financial management. Emphasis on risk management techniques employing derivatives and the pricing of options, futures, forward contracts and swaps. Other topics include market structure, speculation and arbitrage.
3
Provides an in-depth examination of international money and capital markets, exchange-rate determination and currency-risk management techniques employing forward, futures, and options contracts. Considers the functions of international financial management in relation to the overall objectives of the organization.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 330 and
BUS 430 recommended.
Applies marketing principles to the contexts of international and global business. Topics include strategies, risks, and benefits of marketing across national and cultural boundaries. Also examines consequences and ethical considerations of globalization.
3
Covers government regulation of business including securities regulation, antitrust, and union and employer relations. The course also explores private law topics including formation and operation of corporations, sales, leases of goods, real and personal property, bankruptcy, commercial paper, secured transactions, suretyship and professional liability.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 250 and Junior status.
Takes a comprehensive view of the concepts, tools and realities of successfully managing projects. Covers project selection, justification, planning and scheduling, and cash flow management including methods such as PERT/CPM, Critical Chain, Earned Value Analysis, and Simulation. Addresses important management and leadership issues including contracts, team composition, team building, motivation and compensation/incentives.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 355
Develops skills in examining and improving the flow of materials and information through the network of suppliers, manufacturers, distributors, and retailers in order to effectively match supply with demand. Topics include inter- and intra-firm coordination, incentive design, the impact of uncertainty, and the role of information technology.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 361 or permission of instructor.
Takes a comprehensive look at approaches and tools for planning, executing and closing projects based on the Project Management Institute's (PMI) library of global standards. Presents a process-oriented view of project integration and managing project scope, cost, time, resources, quality and communications. Provides an excellent preparation for PMI's Certified Associate in Project Management and Project Management Professional certification examinations.
3
Prerequisites
Junior status.
BUS 452 recommended.
Cross Listed Courses
BUS 548
Provides fundamental systems analysis and design concepts and methodologies essential for successful and effective development of complex information systems. Approaches the development of business systems from a problem-solving perspective including traditional systems life cycle and object-oriented models. Intended for students who plan on becoming business analysts or systems developers.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 255.
BUS 356 recommended.
Presents a comprehensive view of managing the flow of inventory to, within, and from the organization. Deals with the balance between shortages and excesses in an environment characterized by demand and supply uncertainty. Includes critical aspects of contemporary strategies such as JIT, lean, and reverse logistics (sustainable supply chains). Emphasizes both theory and practice applications.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 361.
BUS 453 strongly recommended.
Examines theories and practices of staffing, training, assessing, and compensating employees from the perspectives of line management and the human resource department. Explores union/management interactions and healthy workplace environment while considering employment laws, the diverse labor force, and internal influences.
3
Prerequisites
Senior status.
BUS 360 recommended.
Provides a survey of income tax issues for businesses. Includes overview of tax theory, taxation of corporations, partnerships and other business entities. Emphasizes how tax issues impact decision-making.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 210 and Junior status.
Provides information on the theory, methodology, and specific techniques used in the verification and presentation of financial data provided to outsiders. Course introduces specific verification services, including assurance, attest, and audit services while concentrating on external audits of publically traded companies. Audit techniques, documentation of work completed, and audit opinions are studied and performed by the student.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 311 and
BUS 365.
Covers advanced topics in accounting, including: accounting for governments, charitable organizations, colleges and universities, and hospitals, accounting for foreign currency transactions and hedging foreign exchange risk transactions, translation of foreign currency financial statements, developments in International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), comparison of US accounting standards to IFRS and other emergent issues in accounting.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 311
Covers the fundamentals of the federal taxation of individuals and investments. Emphasis on planning transactions to minimize tax. Includes research using both print and computerized tax materials and the Internal Revenue Code.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 210 and Junior status.
Students accepted into course will study portfolio management while managing the Miller Fund. Since this is an applied course involving the ‘real-time’ management of money, students must possess strong financial analytical skills and a solid financial/accounting knowledge base before beginning the course. Concepts such as investment philosophy, asset allocation,asset class management, investment process, and behavioral finance are covered.
3
Prerequisites
Application and professor approval required.
Cross Listed Courses
BUS 567
Provides a detailed examination of the uses of advertising, sales promotions, public relations, personal selling, and other promotional tools in achieving different types of marketing goals. Emphasizes hands-on learning through development of a communication plan.
3
Prerequisites
Junior status.
Presents personal selling as a professional marketing activity with a special focus on fundamentals of consultative selling. Helps students develop professional selling skills, including identifying and qualifying prospects, discovering customer needs, developing and making a sales presentation, handling objections, and closing a sale. Examines the role of selling in the total marketing process.
3
Prerequisites
Junior status.
Provides students with hands-on experience developing web marketing strategies for businesses and non-profit organizations seeking to leverage digital media in their competitive strategies. Topic areas include web marketing planning, website design, search engine optimization, online advertising, and marketing via email, blogs, social media, and mobile media.
3
Focuses on managerial, financial and process control issues specific to fast growing young companies. Organization systems and structure topics as applied to early stage growth companies also included.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 210 and one of the following:
BUS 312,
BUS 330,
BUS 364,
BUS 365 or
ECN 310 and Junior status.
Provides an understanding of important roles of finance and accounting in funding and growing new ventures. Topics covered include (i) sources of financing young, fast growing business lines, (ii) valuation of new ventures, (iii) construction and presentation of pro forma financial statements, (iv) cash-flows in new businesses, (v) IPOs, (vi) measurement of financial performance, (vii) tax planning for new ventures.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 205 or
EGR 351 and Junior status.
Designed as the culminating course in the Entrepreneurship and Innovation Management major. Students are provided a hands-on opportunity to develop, test, present and launch a viable and sustainable business model as a stand-alone entity or new venture at an established firm. Includes in-depth development of business plan and presentation to a panel of experts.
3
Prerequisites
BUS 385 and Senior status.
Examines innovative organizations that are created to improve social conditions. These organizations adopt aspects of the market model leveraging profit to a social end, rather than as an end itself. The course emphasis is on how such organizations are started, how they are sustained, and the various business models that are adopted to achieve an organizational mission.
3
Prerequisites
Senior status.
Designed for superior students desiring extensive and intensive study in a particular area of interest.
Credit arranged.
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor, advisor, and dean.
In the semesters in which offered, varying subject matter as business faculty deems appropriate for needs of the student in meeting the objectives of the undergraduate business program.
Credit arranged.
In the semesters in which offered, varying subject matter as business faculty deems appropriate for needs of the student in meeting the objectives of the undergraduate business program.
Variable
Credit arranged.
Variable
Credit arranged.
Variable
Credit arranged.
Variable
Credit arranged.
Variable
Students may complete a second internship related to their major areas in a different capacity than a previous internship. (Preapproval by internship director. Business majors only.)
Variable
Prerequisites
BUS 302 and Senior status.
Research, study, or original work under the direction of a faculty mentor, leading to a scholarly thesis document with a public presentation of results. Requires approval of thesis director, dean, and director of the honors program, when appropriate.
3
Prerequisites
Senior standing, 3.0 GPA in the thesis area or good standing in the honors program.