| Grad Student Still Learning From Girl Scouts
Without
selling a single box of Thin Mints or Peanut Butter Patties®,
LSU Master of Business Administration student Lara Carter helped
one Louisiana Girl Scouts organization with its bottom line.
“Lara focused on improving our financial operations by streamlining
procedures,” said Sheila Ryan, executive director of Girl
Scouts–Audubon Council Inc., which serves 9,100 girls
in a 10-parish area. “She also improved inventory control
for our shop operations where we sell Girl Scout merchandise.”
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The Girl Scouts -
Audubon Council helps financially support activities
and learning experiences for girls in kindergarten through
12th grade. |
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Students in LSU’s Flores M.B.A.
Program are encouraged to seek internships and other “real-world”
opportunities to gain valuable hands-on business experience. Carter,
who received her M.B.A. in May, was seeking just such an opportunity,
but hoped to put her skills to use for a community organization.
“We are not required to be involved
in the community, but we realize the importance of giving back ...
and there are many programs set up through the M.B.A. program that
facilitate these efforts,” said Carter.
Carter explained that one of her professors told her about the
Girl Scouts opportunity, informing her that the organization was
looking for someone to support its accounting operation and help
improve its bookkeeping processes. As a child, Carter spent six
years in the Girl Scouts, and she jumped at the chance to help an
organization she said played an important role in her life.
“It was an organization that did a great deal for me, in
terms of developing confidence and socialization skills,”
she said. “I felt very lucky when the opportunity presented
itself to me.”
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The Girl Scouts
mission includes helping girls to "develop a sense
of responsibility, commit themselves to the highest
ideals to live by, and foster teamwork so that they
could learn to support and assist one another." |
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Carter said that she had never worked for a non-profit organization
before, so her first step was to learn issues, terminology, and
processes specific to that segment of the business world. Once that
was accomplished, she helped the Audubon Council staff identify
issues and brainstorm solutions.
“The staff at Audubon Council do a great job of supporting
the girls and the community, and their workload keeps them very
busy,” she said. “My job is to help alleviate some of
their workload.”
According to Carter, one of the most rewarding aspects of her
work with Girls Scouts–Audubon Council has been witnessing
the fruits of her labor. “Because the organization is small
compared to large, public corporations, I can see results almost
immediately,” she explained.
In addition, she feels that her experience has provided her with
a valuable way of “testing” what she has learned in
the M.B.A. program.
“Knowledge isn’t really powerful until you use it,”
she said.
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Written by Rob Anderson | University
Relations
May 2003
Related Links
Girl Scouts–Audubon
Council
LSU MBA program
National Girl Scouts
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