Graduate Riley Kinser’s Experiential Learning, Honors Thesis Help Him Land a Dream Job

Riley Kinser

Riley Kinser kept himself more than busy in his time at Oregon State. Kinser was in the College of Business’ Honors program, took part in the Austin Entrepreneurship Program (where his team took first place in the Business Plan Competition), and served as the president of the Oregon State Investment Group (OSIG).

Even though graduation took place just over a week ago now, Kinser has already moved to the San Francisco Bay area where he’ll be working with Union Square Advisors, a middle-market investment bank that specializes in mergers and acquisition advice for tech companies. Kinser’s role as analyst will involve building presentations and financial models for clients. Kinser said that he was looking specifically for investment banks on the west coast that specialize in technology, which is how he ended up interning with Union Square Advisors in the summer of 2013.  After completing his internship, Kinser received an offer to come to work for the company full-time upon graduation.

“Nearly all of the people I know who had work right after graduation found their jobs because of an internship they did,” said Kinser. “It’s important to start doing internships as soon as possible, as the more experience you have, the easier it gets to land interviews in the future. Internships will also help you discover what you like and don’t like in a potential career,” he said.

Kinser’s completion of Oregon State’s Honors College program also helped prepare him for today’s competitive job market.

“My research thesis was brought up in almost every internship interview I’ve ever had, and I think it played a major role in differentiating me from other applicants,” said Kinser. “Writing my honors thesis was probably the most challenging thing I did in my entire college career, but I learned a lot doing it and had the opportunity to thoroughly explore a topic I found interesting. I think more business students should choose to join the Honors College,” he said.

Kinser’s thesis study looks at whether two characteristics — physical attractiveness and perceived competence — have an impact on financial analysts finding large discrepancies between current prices and target prices of investments. Kinser’s research paper presented some intriguing evidence that overconfidence in investment recommendations may be correlated with an individual’s physical appearance. This is an especially important finding because when investors behave irrationally and make financial mistakes, many theories point the blame squarely at that investor’s overconfidence.

“Using only physical appearance, individuals can form a variety of opinions of others ranging from how physically attractive someone is to how competent they anticipate them to be,” said Kinser. “These judgments we make of others likely play a subtle yet important role in how we interact with each other. If these subtle differences in how we interact with each other have a cumulative effect, it is possible we would see individuals who are perceived to be extremely attractive or extremely competent becoming overconfident in themselves,” he said.

Now that Kinser has moved on from Oregon State and is starting the next chapter of his professional life, he leaves future and current Oregon State students with this advice:

“My advice to everyone is to try something new and say yes to opportunities. When I was a freshman I moved dorms from Callahan to Weatherford during the second week of school. While visiting the Resident Director of Weatherford to finalize my move, I just happened to run into a College of Business staff member who asked me if I was there for the Austin Entrepreneurship Program meeting. I had no idea what that was but it sounded interesting. I’d never envisioned myself becoming an entrepreneur, but I thought it sounded like fun so I said yes and went into the meeting. I was lucky and got to join an amazing team and over the course of the year I had the opportunity to watch a company form from an idea. My team ultimately went on form a company, Rowan Greenhouse Technologies, and won first place in the Austin Entrepreneurship Business Plan Competition. It was an amazing experience and it happened because I just happened to be in the right place at the right time and I decided to try something new. If you’re a new student, go check out some clubs and find something you like whether it be a business club or something else. The more involved you get, the more fulfilling your college experience will be.”

College of Business students learn what it takes to fill the room

Jessica Kim introduces speakers Ken Saito, Jim Merryman and  Jenny Billips of Oregon Freeze Dry
Jessica Kim introduces speakers Ken Saito, Jim Merryman and Jenny Billips of Oregon Freeze Dry

Entering the International Affairs Club’s event Wednesday night, featuring Oregon Freeze Dry President Jim Merryman, organizer Jessica Kim was keeping her expectations grounded.

“I said if we got 50 it’ll be a success,” Kim said of Merryman’s talk at the LaSells Stewart Center’s C & E hall. “It’s a cozy room.

“We ended up not having enough seats for everyone,” Kim said.

The event attracted more than 200 attendees in the first major event the club has held and first big talk Kim and fellow club member Riley Kinser have organized.

Kim said the idea came from a desire to do something different than the traditional student club guest speaker, but something smaller than the Dean’s Distinguished Lecture Series put on by the College of Business the pair had volunteered with earlier in the year.

“We decided [DDLs are] great, but we wanted something more intimate, less like a lecture, and more geared to stories and not just what their business is about,” she said. “Riley and I are finance majors so we hear that all the time.”

College of Business Dean Ilene Kleinsorge introduced Merryman to Kim and Kinser last year, and the executive agreed to take part in an event. Kim said the group started preparing last spring, touring Oregon Freeze Dry in Albany, and kicked into high gear during fall term.

Kim said Merryman and Oregon Freeze Dry made a compelling invite because the company has needed to navigate the Great Recession while maintaining a global business, keeping their business moving in uncertain times both nationally and internationally.

“They’re a private company, so not a lot of the things they are in the media, and a lot has happened over the past 10 years, so we wanted to hear how they went through all the volatility in the market,” she said.

In the past few months Kim said the amount of work started to overwhelm her and Kinser, but a callout to club members over winter break and assistance from the Dean’s Student Leadership Council helped keep everything under control.

“It was fortunate for us that they stepped up,” Kim said.

Crowd at Oregon Freeze Dry talk

The night of the event went smoothly, Kim said, the only issue a few spectators sitting in the aisle after all available seats filled up.

“Jim was a lot more relaxed, and very witty,” Kim said. “Lots and lots of stories. Because he got the audience so engaged, lots of people raised their hands.”

After her first major event Kim, said her advice for other student groups would be to just put as much work in as possible before the event but let go as the day came.

“Just put in all the effort you can until the day before, then forget about it,” Kim said. “If you’re stressed out, nothing gets done. Most of the time, if you put in a lot of work, things come through.”

-Photos courtesy Jessica Kim

College of Business student wins award at Model UN competition

The Oregon State Model United Nations team at Seattle University
The Oregon State Model United Nations team at Seattle University. From left: Rodney Snyder, Jessica Kim, Violetta Iakovenko, Dan Edwards, Lisa Nelson, Justin Zhang, Riley Kinser, Artem Ulyukin, Kevin Wiencek, Stephen Nguyen, Svea Larson, Charles Wong, Rayeed Ibtesum, Ben Fairgrieve, and Tori Cole.

While College of Business students are really good at, well, business, they also excel at many other activities on and off campus.

This month the Oregon State Model United Nations team competed at a conference at the University of Seattle. Members were split between the United Nations Security Council and three national cabinet committees; the Chinese, the Indian and Pakistani. The 60 delegates from five schools sat down to figure out a solution to the disputed Kashmir region between India and Pakistan.

Oregon State students sat on the cabinets for France, India, Morocco, Pakistan, and Togo.

The day played out true to life. India and Pakistan argued over the area, eventually moving to war.

India eventually won the conflict, but took much longer than hoped following a United Nations no-fly-zone.

Within that, though, College of Business student Riley Kinser took home an award for OSU, earning Most Diplomatic in the Security Council as a member of the French cabinet. Kinser is also the founder of the International Affairs Club, a student group dedicated to the general subjects of international business and politics.

Lisa Nelson, OSU IAC Model UN Vice President, said that while war isn’t necessarily the best conclusion, the day was instructive for everyone involved.

While waging war is never  a good outcome, the results of this simulation conference were fairly  realistic in that not everything can be solved through conversations, let alone in only one day.

We all experienced the frustration of inefficient governments, the trouble of dealing with those who refuse to cooperate, and the confusion of complexity that is characteristic of any international conflict; patience was definitely a must.