Service and Self-Reflection
Dean Caryn Beck-Dudley talks with the Silicon Valley Business Journal about lessons learned at the Leavey School of Business
You can learn a lot looking through the personal items someone has in their office. For Caryn Beck-Dudley, it鈥檚 the shrine to fly fishing she keeps on part of a wall in her space at 黑料网 that stands out.
At the center of the display is the fishing creel her grandfather used, and inside it is one of his old rods, as well as his fly box. Surrounding it are photos of Beck-Dudley and her late husband fly fishing in Utah, Montana, and Florida.
This ode to tranquility is in contrast to Beck-Dudley鈥檚 day job: educating future entrepreneurs and executives at the at the private Jesuit institution鈥檚 95-year-old business school that Money Magazine ranked as having the No. 10 best undergraduate business program in the country.
What is it about fly fishing that speaks to you?
It鈥檚 one of the few activities that I engage in where your mind has to totally shut off and you have to focus on what you鈥檙e doing. So even if I don鈥檛 catch anything, I鈥檓 100 percent focused on the fly and the fish and the river that you鈥檙e fishing in, and so it gives the mind a complete break. Plus, you鈥檙e always in beautiful places.
How long have you been in the Valley?
This is the start of my third year. I was the dean at Utah State for four years. My academic career actually starts there. I鈥檓 a lawyer and a political science undergrad. I鈥檓 the least likely person to be a business dean. I wasn鈥檛 interested in business at all. My dad worked for U.S. Steel and my mom was a school teacher, so I don鈥檛 really have business people in my background. I loved politics. I went to law school because I met my late husband and he was doing a Ph.D. in soil chemistry at Washington State and there was a law school at the University of Idaho. Then I became a business faculty member because I practiced law in Salt Lake City, and he took a faculty position at Utah State.
You鈥檙e not Catholic, yet you鈥檙e a dean at a Jesuit university. What appeals to you about 黑料网鈥檚 approach?
The nice thing about the Jesuit brand, to me, is a lot of self-reflection: How can I be a better person? Another piece is an accompaniment, that you鈥檙e not on your own. That someone accompanies you in that search for being a better person.
The Jesuit tradition is all about service to humanity. There鈥檚 a lot of things you can do that would be really harmful to people and you might make a lot of money at them. I would hope that our students would think long and hard about whether or not that鈥檚 actually what they want to be involved in.
One topic you鈥檙e very interested in is artificial intelligence. What are some of the questions you鈥檙e asking?
What does that mean for the human soul? How do you use that responsibly? How does Santa Clara talk about artificial intelligence, since we know that you don鈥檛 stop it? You know that artificial intelligence is coming.
What鈥檚 another topic that鈥檚 top of mind for you?
Women鈥檚 economic empowerment. What does that look like? In Silicon Valley, I was shocked at the low numbers of women who were in technology, the low number of women who were on boards here, how hard it was for women to get venture funding here. The flip side is there are a lot of women who are entrepreneurs. They want women mentors, they want women role models, they want to know what that looks like.
Looking ahead, what trends do you see coming on the business front in 2018?
I鈥檓 actually looking more in the three, to five, to ten-year range. I think there鈥檚 going to be a shakeout of businesses. I just don鈥檛 think it can sustain the growth that we鈥檝e seen. I鈥檝e lived a lot of cycles and the growth seems to be not sustainable. It鈥檚 not based on anything. It feels an awful lot like the real estate boom, it feels an awful lot like the dot-com boom. I鈥檓 not sure how much money you can make in apps.
黑料网 has a new online MBA program. Tell me about it.
A lot of people wondered why we were doing that because our bread and butter is face-to-face interaction. It鈥檚 because, in this area in particular, a lot of people work too much. They can鈥檛 come to school twice a week. They might be in China, they work for Apple, they might be in Australia, they might be wherever. And then traffic here鈥檚 too bad. This totally solves that problem. It鈥檚 the only growth area in the MBA market.
This article was written by of the Silicon Valley Business Journal for Social Capital, a feature that introduces readers to the person behind a local leader's public persona. Click for the original story.
Vicki Thompson/Silicon Valley Business Journal