DWC program helps firm meet
marketing challenges
A
four-color advertisement focusing on brand recognition and company
differentiation that runs in industry publications was among the
work produced by a team of Daniel Webster College students for XMA.
Published: Friday, May. 25, 2007
When XMA Corporation – a
Manchester-based provider of radio frequency and microwave products
– sought to beef up its marketing efforts, it found what turned out
to be a perfect match with a group of Daniel Webster College
students.
Dave Crocker, XMA’s vice president and general manager, had the idea
of augmenting his lean organization – which doesn’t have its own
in-house marketing group – by teaming up with college students to
conduct research, evaluate the competition and make marketing
strategy recommendations.
After contacting 15 New Hampshire colleges offering business or
marketing degrees, Crocker said DWC was the “obvious choice” to fill
his needs because of the college’s “strong focus on experiential
education as a key ingredient to a well-rounded education, coupled
with an open-minded flexibility towards forming new, creative
partnerships with industry.”
DWC students in the upper-level marketing course spend 50 percent of
their time on classroom work and 50 percent working on companies’
actual marketing problems. It’s not an internship, nor is it a
classroom activity. The student consultants work for a real client
with guidance from Daniel Webster faculty.
And work they did at XMA, spending hours of their own time in three
groups to research, plan and execute that plan to meet the
challenges that the Manchester firm faced.
“Functioning as a real company, we learned the demands you will be
faced with in the ‘real world’ and how meeting the need of the
customer is most important,” said junior Erin Moseley. “Although we
were young and inexperienced, we approached the task head-on.
Originally asked to only propose a marketing plan, we became so
involved with it all that we ended up following through with its
implementation even after the semester ended.”
Led by Professor Neil Parmenter, the marketing firm created by the
students, Eagle Marketing Consulting, developed and presented a
marketing plan for XMA and, working with XMA, designed a four-color
advertisement that focused on brand recognition and company
differentiation. The ad is currently running in two radio frequency
and microwave industry publications.
The students also proposed a new Web site concept and implemented an
interim Web site upgrade.
“This is a unique partnering where our students couldn’t get a
better understanding of real world business practices,” said
Parmenter, pointing to the opportunity of allowing students take the
marketing theories they learn in class and apply them to solve
actual problems.
XMA also was pleased with the result.
“This successful first step towards a much broader teaming
relationship between XMA Corporation and Daniel Webster College
provides powerful evidence of one way to achieve the next generation
of experiential educational opportunities for tomorrow’s business
leaders, while at the same time enhancing the productivity of U.S.
businesses,” said Crocker.