Professor Plamen Peev, Lary Zhang and Alicia jones posing with a cardboard cut out at the national collegiate sales competition

Sales-savvy students lead TU’s debut in national sales competition

Larry Zhang and Alicia Jones competed against 400 students from 80 institutions at the National Collegiate Sales Competition (NCSC) earlier this month, marking the first time Towson University has been represented at the event.

Founded in 1999 to promote and enhance the practice and professionalism of sales, the NCSC is the longest-running role-play sales competition for university students in existence. Individuals compete in 20-minute mock sales meetings, playing the part of a salesperson presenting a product to a representative from a fictional company. Students were judged on their approach to the client, needs identification, presentation, overcoming objections and close.

“The National Collegiate Sales Competition confirmed my future in sales,” said Jones, a mass communications major with a dual track in public relations and advertising and a minor in marketing. “I got the chance to speak with other students, professors and companies outside of Towson to get new perspectives on the future. It shifted my goals, boosted my confidence and made me realize I need to aim higher.”

Although neither Zhang, a nursing major, nor Jones won overall, they tied for second through fifth place among the 17 universities competing for the first time—earning TU a guaranteed spot to send competitors to the 2019 competition. The competition is only open to 80 universities each year and previously competing schools that place in a certain rank are given preference for the following year’s competition.

“The exposure students get to national recruiters from 43 companies (list included) is unparalleled – attending the event one really feels like the cream of the crop in terms of sales students has converged on Kennesaw State’s campus and it is not uncommon for contestants to get 30+ interviews out of it,” said Plamen Peev, Associate Professor of Marketing, who teaches professional selling courses in the College of Business and Economics.

Both Zhang and Jones competed in the third annual CBE Sales Competition in October, which made them eligible to attend the national event and helped prepare them for the intense competition.

The CBE Sales Competition is open to students of all majors and no experience or previous interest in sales is required. In addition to the opportunity to network with judges and buyers looking to hire, students can compete for scholarship prizes along with the chance to attend next year’s national sales competition. First place is $1,500. Second plans is $1,000 and third place is $500. CBE’s 2018 competition is scheduled for Oct. 26.

“Students should definitely think about participating in the sales competition even if they have never considered sales before,” said Jones. “In this short amount of time since the Towson Sales Competition I realized sales is certainly where I see myself in the future.”

Erika CAvallo tests her blood sugar

‘Invisible’ disability doesn’t stop student’s success

Webster’s Dictionary defines a disability as a, “physical, mental, cognitive, or developmental condition that impairs, interferes with, or limits a person’s ability to engage in certain tasks or actions or participate in typical daily activities and interactions.”

While some disabilities are visible, not all disabilities can be seen—that is the case for students like Erika Cavallo.

A senior majoring in business administration with a marketing concentration, Cavallo was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes on April 3, 2015—a date she will never forget, because it changed her life forever.

Type I Diabetes is often called the “invisible disease” because its effects on the body can’t be seen and its symptoms aren’t always noticeable to others. Daily activities that may be routine to some people can be challenging for diabetics, including Cavallo, who never knows what the day will bring.

“If I had given up when I got sick, I wouldn’t be where I am today. This disease makes me who I am.”

With Type 1 diabetes, the body does not produce insulin, which is needed for glucose, which is needed for energy. Cavallo wears a wireless insulin pump on her arm called an Omnipod and a glucose monitor on her other arm called a Dexcom. Together, these devices help her get through the day a bit easier. Sometimes though, her insulin pump fails, and she doesn’t get enough insulin, causing her sugar to be higher or lower. Sometimes she gives herself too much insulin, causing a life threatening low, and she passes out.

Her entire day revolves around what her sugar is, and sometimes because of her sugar level, she is unable to do the things she wants to do. All day every day, she monitors how many carbohydrates she consumes. Over time, she has learned what things she can and can’t eat, but sometimes even when she does everything right, her sugar escalates or de-escalates at random.

However, no matter how Cavallo is feeling physically, she pushes through and doesn’t complain.

“Towson University and the College of Business and Economics have been amazing when it comes to accommodating my disease,” Cavallo said.

Towson University’s Disability Support Services (DSS) helps Cavallo provide documentation to her professors each semester, informing them of the accommodations she must have in the classroom at all times. If for some reason these accommodations are not followed, DSS will step in and assist, ensuring Cavallo receives what she needs. As a diabetic, Cavallo has rights. Laws were put in place to accommodate and help when needed. She is allowed to have food and drinks on her at all times in case of emergency. She also can’t be discriminated against in the workplace. She is allowed to do anything and everything that everyone else does.

Cavallo hasn’t let her challenges stop her from pursuing a future career in sales. She recently accepted an outside sales position with ADP. The interview process was extremely hard and consisted of five rounds of interviews. Throughout the interviews, her disability came up several times during conversation. She used it as an opportunity to demonstrate to everyone in the room how hard she has worked to get where she is today.

“If I had given up when I got sick, I wouldn’t be where I am today,” she said. “This disease makes me who I am.”

Cavallo wants everyone to know that it’s important not to judge people with disabilities.

“We might be different, but we are able to do anything that anyone else can do. We just do it in a different way,” she said. “Our disabilities don’t fully define us. We are real people with real feelings, and we deserve respect just like everyone else does. You never know what someone is going through on the inside, so you should always be kind to people.”

For more information about diabetes, visit: http://www.diabetes.org/

By Lisa Simmons, Business Excellence

This story is a part of the colleges monthly CBE Celebrates Diversity Series, which highlights student, faculty and staff stories from our diverse community.

 

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