Garden City’s Adelphi University has given high schoolers, who are aspiring business professionals, the chance to get an early taste of their potentially cut-throat futures.
The Adelphi Apprentice Challenge, mirrored after the Donald Trump-helmed television program The Apprentice, is a multi–high school competition that enables students to experience the rigors of real-life marketing specialists in a legitimate, boardroom-style environment. According to Brian Rothschild, Assistant Dean of the Robert B. Willumstad School of Business and emcee for the event, it’s a great way for pupils with a business leaning to get their toes wet in the industry without the threat of being subjected to Trump’s infamous catchphrase: “You’re fired!”
“Students come here and get put on teams with students from different schools, all of whom they have not had access to prior to today. This enables them to be creative and to learn how to work in teams, which they will do once they get into college and in life,” Rothschild said. “They are given a case study—in this case, a product for a company—for which they must create a marketing plan within one hour, and present that plan to a panel of judges.”
The Adelphi Apprentice Challenge began in 2006. This year, 265 students from 21 high schools in the tristate area participated.
The daylong event began with a marketing presentation by an Adelphi professor, followed by the introduction of the 15 judge panel, all of whom came from high-level positions within the business field. From there, the hastily assembled teams of students—all complete strangers to one another—were given one hour to brainstorm and come up with a viable marketing plan for a company’s product. In this case, Sol Republic Bluetooth wireless headphones, which are considered a hot commodity in the music scene.
“It’s a true boardroom experience, and it offers them the chance to see what it is like to be out there in the real world, making presentations to senior-level executives,” Rothschild said. “It either affirms their desire to get into the business and marketing field or it can show them that the field really isn’t for them after all. Plus, it looks great on a resume.”
Each team has a designated “rival” team against which they must compete head-to-head. The winning team then progresses onward in the tournament-style competition, until—as a popular movie once decreed—there can only be one, Rothschild said. Each team is supplied with a laptop computer connected to a network printer, dry erase board, index cards, tape, pens and so on. The marketing skills, however, have to be supplied by the students themselves.
Sibin Samuel, a freshman at Herricks High School, is itching to be an entrepreneur, with designs to start his very own business. When attending competitions such as this, he said, it gives him the information he needs to improve and take the steps he needs to accomplish his lofty goals.
“Being thrown together with a bunch of strangers and having to work intensely for just one hour on a marketing plan is crazy, but it’s also fun,” he said. “You meet these people who all have the same ambitious ideas and you learn from them, and the experience you can glean from that is invaluable. It could really make you a better person.”
Samuel said his team’s marketing strategy revolved around the creation of a smartphone app that ties into a contest amongst people that buy the Sol Republic headphones, with prizes awaiting the winners.
Eric Pappas, a senior at MacArthur High School in Levittown and one of the many competitors in this year’s Adelphi Apprentice Challenge, is eyeing a career in business, and said that he’s potentially looking to focus on sports marketing.
“I think today will prepare me for later in life because if you get a job, you won’t know the people there and knowing how to go into that kind of social/business situation with more confidence will prepare me and help me fit in well,” he said. “As for my team’s marketing plan, we’re looking to find an up-and-coming young singer as a spokesperson, and we want to run ads in some of the bigger venues in New York, such as Madison Square Garden.”
Jericho High School Junior Daniel Rosenthal said that he really enjoys all aspects of marketing and has already gotten a taste of it by doing social media and promotional work for a small company part-time after school.
“I’m the president of my school’s chapter of Future Business Leaders of America, so when I heard about the Adelphi Apprentice Challenge, I knew I had to get involved,” he said. “It’s
a great experience to learn more about marketing and meet new people. The setup here is very interesting, as you get to hear the ideas of all these different people; people from different schools may have wildly opposite ideas about marketing strategies, and hearing all their views is really interesting.”
Westbury High School senior Marco Rizza said that he was hoping to get more experience in the social aspect of the business and marketing world. Clearly, there’s no better way to do so than to be thrust into a team of complete strangers racing against the clock while (hopefully) bonding as a cohesive unit, he noted.
“At first it was awkward, but as it progressed, it’s clear that we all want the same thing and that we all want to win,” he said. “We’re really gelling together nicely right now. We’ve come up with a campaign for the Sol Republic headphones that focuses on real people instead of celebrities. We’re taking a less mainstream approach.”
Gerard Smith, a football player and senior at Garden City High School, said that taking part in the Apprentice Challenge is a great way for business-minded individuals to develop focus and on-the-spot decision-making skills, which are a must if someone is hoping to make a successful impact in the corporate world.
“Once I got to know everyone on my team and we all noticed that we had a lot of similarities, we started having fun meeting all these new people…we came together and really put together a plan and stuck with it,” he said. “Our advertising is going to be centered around well-known people who are nonetheless not big-name celebrities, as well as a focus on social media such as Instagram and Twitter.”
Dionnee Harper, vice president of marketing for Atlantic Records, is a returning judge for the competition. She said that the Apprentice Challenge gives kids today a valuable opportunity that didn’t exist when she was in school.
“This is a nice way to give back to the students and share some of the things I’ve learned over the years,” she said. “It also gives me the chance to see what fresh ideas and what talented young people are out there, waiting to jump into the business and marketing field feet first.”