Executives offer career tips

Elise McClure, left, and Eileen Frack, center, listen as Angelina Lusetti addresses the audience.
Elise McClure, left, and Eileen Frack, center, listen as Angelina Lusetti addresses the audience.

A trio of executives, all College of Business graduates, spent an hour Monday afternoon fielding questions and offering career tips to about 40 students during a panel discussion in the Austin Hall Events Room.

The panel included Angelina Lusetti, a human resources business partner with Target; tax attorney and retired Starbucks vice president Elise McClure, and Eileen Frack, director of executive management development for Daimler Trucks North America.

The session started with suggestions for applying and interviewing:

  • Find a way to make your interview answers stand out from everyone else’s.
  • Be aware that prospective employers are looking at the entire resume, not just grade-point average.
  • Research the organization you’re interviewing with before you go in for the interview.
  • Say you really want the job and why you’d be great at it.
  • Hone your face-to-face communication skills and writing skills, both of which can suffer from too heavy a day-to-day reliance on text messaging.
  • Take pains to come across as a good, friendly person, since many organizations have a strict no-jerks hiring policy.

The talk then shifted to how to establish yourself in your career and move it forward, and the array of tips centered around one key theme: “Manage your own career and compensation,” said McClure, meaning it’s up to you to try to make things happen regarding advancement and raises, because if you don’t, likely no one will.

Other thoughts from McClure:

  • “Don’t be afraid to move.”
  • “Understand the culture of your company.”
  • “Be willing and able to ask questions.”
  • “Be open to what comes,” as in, don’t become hidebound by the career plan you’ve mapped out.

Frack stressed the importance of learning how to say no and trying hard not to work for bosses you don’t like or respect. She also urged students to “find what feeds your soul” and to establish a healthy work/life balance, including serving on boards of volunteer groups, both for community benefit and to develop leadership skills.

Lusetti emphasized balance too, noting that she puts personal activities on her calendar as a means of holding herself accountable to actually doing them. She also told students to be willing to step outside of their comfort zones as a path toward learning and growth.

The Career Success Center organized Monday’s event. For more career advice, drop by the center, Austin Hall 102, and follow it on Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/OSUBIZJOBS.

About 40 students attended the panel discussion.
About 40 students attended the panel discussion.

Target recognizes three College of Business students in leadership awards

Target's Angelina Lusetti stands with Lidia Kusnadi, Leslie Mak and Daniel Changkuon at the Target Leadership Awards lunch.
Target's Angelina Lusetti stands with Lidia Kusnadi, Leslie Mak and Daniel Changkuon at the Target Leadership Awards lunch.

The three finalists for this year’s Target Leadership Award proved there’s no template for a successful Oregon State College of Business student.

The trio all has different majors and even come from different countries, but each found a home at Oregon State and caught the attention of Target in the company’s annual award for OSU senior business students.

“I’m so impressed with the students and what they do on campus, the leadership they display, they’re just very impressive,” said Angelina Lusseti, Target Albany store team leader. “At Target when we talk about the caliber of students OSU always stands out.”

Daniel Changkuon, an accounting and business information systems major from Ecuador, Lidia Kusnadi, a finance major from Beaverton, and Leslie Mak, a marketing major from Toronto, were honored at a private lunch at the Big River Restaurant in Corvallis on Tuesday.

Changkuon was recognized as the Target Leadership Award winner, with Kusnadi and Mak finalists.

“They all did such a phenomenal job and it was such a great pool of candidates we wanted them all to be celebrated and recognized together,” Lusetti said.

Changkuon, who originally came to OSU on a study abroad trip and later decided to stay, will intern at Nike this summer. He said the diversity at OSU was a major reasons he decided to remain in Corvallis.

“I like diversity,” he said. “When I came over here I said I want to stay here even though I don’t know where I’m going to be. I like to know a lot of people.”

Kusnadi will be starting her second internship with Intel this summer. She said just being included with Mak and Changkuon was special.

“I was really excited to be a finalist because I was able to see the caliber of students who applied,” she said. “Just knowing Leslie and Daniel from the Dean’s Leadership Circle, I was honored to be chosen among them and sit down with Angelina.”

Mak, who will be starting a job with E & J Gallo Wines soon, said being honored by Target was significant because of the role the company has played in her time at OSU.

“For me it was a really nice award because it’s solidifying Target’s role in my education,” Mak said. “They’ve kind of been visiting my classes and helping us with these projects where we get real-life experience working with a company instead of just learning it in a classroom. And just earning this award is a huge honor because I know how incredibly accomplished all the seniors in the College of Business are.”

In addition to the lunch reception and award plaque each honoree received a Target gift card.

Lusetti, an OSU grad herself and frequent campus recruiter for Target, said the award helps the company strengthen its role with the university and its support of students in the College of Business.

“It’s just another piece to show we’re invested in their education and especially leadership,” Lusetti said. “ We want to show them we recognize the leadership they’ve had on campus. Since all our positions are leadership based, we truly value the leadership and scholastic abilities of the students who are at OSU.”