Lauder Class of 2017 Student Bios - Lauder Institute
Transcription
Lauder Class of 2017 Student Bios - Lauder Institute
Class of 2017 Biographies The Joseph H. Lauder Institute of Management & International Studies Equipping yourself with an MBA from the Wharton School or a JD from the Law School, combined with an MA in International Studies from the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Arts & Sciences, is smart business. As a pioneer in intercultural management education with international studies and language and cross-cultural proficiencies, the Lauder Institute offers students: • Joint MBA/MA and JD/MA • Regional expertise through the customized language and culture programs • The study of global business, inter-cultural management, and the impact of geo-politics on business practices in the new global program • Two-month, in-country immersion programs • Supportive global community of students, alumni, faculty, and corporate leaders • Dedicated Lauder faculty During the course of the 24-month program, students learn about business, culture, language, history, politics, and art. The Lauder Institute Class of 2017 ARABIC Hoda El-Ghazaly CHINESE Victoria Cheng Jonathan Delikat Maggie Diehl Yue Li Shu Liu Charlie McCarren Dee Ng Daniel Odette Travis Pfander JamesRandall Sumiko Taku Naga Tan Emily Tung Joshua Van Dyke Ray Wang John Withers Wilson Wong FRENCH Joelle Birge Max Ducharme Caio Guimarães Christopher Jones Imran Karim Alexandre Nogueira Allegra Richards Stephen Snyder SophieThompson GERMAN Stephanie vonStaaToledo GLOBAL Xinlong Cheng Miguel GonzálezHerranz Jackson Hui Yifan Li Andrei Vallejo Margarit AntonioMuñoz Villaneuva Gabriele Pigoli Pushpak Pujari Ivy Wu JungHa Yi HINDI Neha Goel Manu Mohan Nidhi Shah Aroon Vijaykar JAPANESE Eric Detweiler Paul Moss Ruiheng Wang PORTUGUESE Michael Alerhand Xavier Argente Jeff Aziakou Christine Burq Casey Dwyer Joel Filippi Stéphane Fisch Claudel Kamgang Jay Lanners Pierre Le Normand Yann Manibog Guillermo Medina Benitez Guillermo Nemirovsky Dager Typhaine Robert Francisco Taboada Lorenzo Zavala Carvajal SPANISH Renan Andrade Jose Sebastian Apud Gennadiy Babenko Frank Ballard Koehler Briceño Christina Cerezo Randal Drew Vanessa Frances Bobby Gianchandani Mizuho Imanishi Craig Jones Jessica Kong Thomas McElwee Rafael Paixão de la Rosa Monica Scheid MICHAEL ALERHAND Michael was born in Marlboro, New Jersey, and raised by two Jewish parents from Mexico City. As a result, he grew up in a multilingual and multicultural household that emphasized education and giving back to the local community. In high school, for example, he created an ESL tutoring program for Latino immigrants in central New Jersey. Michael later enrolled at the University of Virginia, where he studied History and Government. There he was elected to leadership positions for a socially responsible investment organization and a student-run historical research publication. In addition, he undertook one summer internship that supported Latino immigrants in their efforts to become American citizens and another internship with Mexico’s Ministry of Economy. Following graduation, Michael was chosen by Israel’s Ministry of Education to become an Israel Teaching Fellow for a program that focuses on reducing the achievement gap in Israel’s public-education system. During this time, he lived in Netanya and taught English to at-risk youth in a significantly under-funded and under-staffed public elementary school. After a year in Israel, Michael decided to pursue his interest in international business by moving to Mexico City to join Goldberg Alerhand y Asociados, a boutique investment bank focused on M&A transactions. There he was exposed to a number of industries, ranging from real estate to consumer goods, infrastructure, and microloans. Among his main contributions, he directly supported the CEO of a credit-factoring startup company by producing, developing, and managing its long-term business plans and corporate restructuring; this company grew its credit portfolio eightfold in three years. In addition, Michael led the valuation process of nine commercial real-estate development projects across Mexico and subsequently supervised due diligence procedures for a Canadian investment firm’s entrance into a multi-billion peso real-estate investment trust. At Wharton/Lauder, Michael hopes to gain a stronger understanding of Latin American economics and business practices, and to develop his Portuguese skills to a native level. After graduation, he intends to pursue a career in investing, with a primary focus on Latin America. In his spare time, Michael enjoys travelling, long-distance running, water sports, and reading history books. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese RENAN ANDRADE Renan was born and raised in the suburbs of Porto Alegre, a town in southern Brazil. On family trips to Uruguay and Argentina during his teenage years, he developed a passion for multicultural experiences, which moved him to start learning English, Spanish, and French. At Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Renan majored in International Relations, graduating with a first-in-class honor. He also broadened his perspective on world affairs and learned how to reach consensus among different value systems through student-exchange programs in the U.S., Portugal, and Sweden. Inspired by his experiences in those countries, once back in Brazil he helped to expand the AIESEC network to Porto Alegre and to foster the creation of UN modeling in public high schools. After graduation, Renan joined McKinsey as a Business Analyst, where he worked on a variety of projects from public-service risk analysis to transport & logistics and strategic planning. He also completed a McKinsey Global Institute secondment in London, where he helped to redraft and write No Ordinary Disruption, which focused on explaining the upcoming global trend breaks. He grew professionally through these projects, learning how to perform effectively at a high level in politically and strategically sensitive environments, and also refined his passion for business, finding an aspiration to foster public impact with infrastructure strategy. Renan later joined GP Investments, a Brazilian private equity fund, to develop a newly created fund focused on infrastructure. Specializing in ports, railways, and urban mobility, he refined GP’s strategy for those assets, developed new partnerships for co-investing, and led the analysis of several projects. Over the past several years, Renan has sharpened his strategic and pragmatic mindset while building a strong analytical problem-solving skillset. At Wharton/Lauder, he plans to leverage his passion for politics and infrastructure with his business skills, focusing particularly on Latin America. In his free time, Renan enjoys watching movies, practicing sports (running and football in particular), and playing the guitar. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Spanish JOSE SEBASTIAN APUD Sebastian was born in Argentina and moved to the Washington, D.C., area at age 8. His interest in economic development and business began when he witnessed the devastating effects of the 2001 Argentine economic collapse. As a Wharton undergraduate, he majored in Business and Public Policy in hopes of one day helping to spur socioeconomic change. After internships in Congress and at the World Bank, Sebastian realized that social impact investing (SII) would allow him to use his Wharton degree in a way that was personally meaningful. To gain the necessary skills, he joined Lazard in New York as an M&A investmentbanking analyst on its Metals & Mining team and spent time at MBA Lazard in Argentina. In 2010 Sebastian fulfilled his dream of working in SII by joining the Private Equity team at Developing World Markets, the largest social-impact investor in the U.S. and one of the largest in the world. For the next 4.5 years, he worked on investments in microfinance, microhousing, education lending, and SME lending in Latin America, South Asia, and the Eastern Caucasus region. He was also a panelist at UPenn Undergraduate Microfinance Conferences (2011-2013) and at the Wharton MBA Latin America Conference (2013). Sebastian played rugby both in high school (2003 team ranked #12 nationally) and at Penn (2004 D-I Conference Champions), retiring after countless scars and injuries. In 2014, he ran the NYC Marathon and the NYC, Brooklyn, and Staten Island half-marathons. He has decided to come out of retirement to play for Wharton’s Wharthogs. In 2012 Sebastian joined the board of the Microfinance Club of New York (MFCNY), a nonprofit whose mission is to be the leading forum for microfinance topics, and became its president in 2014. From 2012 to 2015, he coached eight- and nine-year-olds at the South Bronx United, a nonprofit that uses soccer for social change; the team won the championship during his final season. His other experiences included a volunteer trip to Ghana in 2010 to coach U12 and U14 teams. Sebastian loves to travel and recently needed to add extra pages to his passport. He completed his Advanced Open Water Scuba Diving Certification and has been snowboarding for 18 years. After completing the Wharton/Lauder program, he hopes to find more ways to harness the power of markets to generate social change and create large-scale economic development. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Spanish XAVIER ARGENTE Xavier was born in Barcelona, Spain. At age 12, he travelled for the first time to Asia and was completely fascinated by the experience. He started learning Mandarin Chinese and developed a passion for exploring different cultures and languages. During high school, Xavier was selected to participate in the Ruta Quetzal program, a cultural-exchange backpacking trip through Guatemala, Belize, and Mexico, where he fell in love with Latin America. Since then, he has gone back to Central and South America on many occasions. The summer before graduation, he spent two months in El Salvador working as a pro-bono consultant for an agricultural business initiative. Xavier attended ESADE Business School, where he majored in Business Administration. He also founded the Consulting Club and grew a student-run business that offered consulting services to local companies. He spent his semester abroad in Singapore, where he continued to hone his Chinese, backpacked all around Southeast Asia, and worked on a market-entry project in Indonesia for a local skin-care brand. After graduation, he joined Bain & Company in Madrid, Spain, for which he worked in over ten countries and had exposure to a broad set of management issues. Among his projects, he helped to define the strategy for a soft-drink company and participated in the due diligence that led to the acquisition of two major brands in Europe and Nigeria. In 2014, he transferred to Bain’s San Francisco office for six months. There he worked in Silicon Valley for a tech client on its manufacturing and procurement strategy. In his free time, Xavier loves skiing, biking, hiking, diving, and food. During high school he was part of a local skiing racing team and completed the Camino de Santiago by mountain bike with his friends. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese JEFF AZIAKOU Jeff was born in Washington, D.C., to a Chinese mother and Franco-Beninese father, both of whom were journalists. Moving every few years, he grew up in Paris and Fontainebleau in France, and in Washington, D.C., Chicago, and New York City in the U.S. Jeff attended Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, where he majored in Applied Economics and Management and studied overseas in Shanghai, China. At Cornell, he managed an independent publishing business contracted to produce the university’s yearbook, cofounded an apparel-design consultancy, was active in Greek life, and volunteered locally with the Ithaca Youth Bureau in its Big Brother program. After graduation, Jeff joined the management training program at Aldi, a multinational grocery chain. As a trainee based in upstate New York, he first worked as a cashier and store manager, learning all aspects of store operations. He was then promoted to manage the company’s Central Connecticut stores and more than 50 employees. Seeking an opportunity to further his understanding of the agribusiness supply chain, Jeff joined Olam, a global commodities trade house. Initially a business analyst covering the U.S. business, he then joined the cocoa desk as a trader. He was responsible for the sourcing of cocoa and cocoa derivatives products from across the globe and managed client accounts for major chocolate companies in North and South America. He was also charged with hedge execution and co-managed a proprietary futures-and-derivatives trading book. In his spare time, Jeff is an avid cook, a long-distance runner, a motorcycle enthusiast, an amateur iPhone photographer, and a fan of ballet and contemporary art. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese GENNADIY BABENKO Gennadiy was born and raised in Kazakhstan. At age 15 he moved to Moscow, where he finished high school and was accepted into the Academy of National Economy under the sponsorship of the President of the Russian Federation. After spending two years there, he added a double-degree program at ESLSCA in Paris, France, where he could expand his specialization in Finance as part of the BBA program. In 2010 he graduated from both universities with honors. Later that same year, Gennadiy was accepted into the Master in Finance program at IE Business School in Madrid. During his 10 months in Spain, in addition to being part of a highly competitive program, he gained access to a large network of young international professionals and first identified his interest in Latin America. After graduation in 2011, Gennadiy joined Renaissance Capital, a large Russian bank focusing on emerging and frontier markets, as part of the Macro and Strategy research team. In this role he gradually acquired coverage of Kazakh macro; Russian and, later, EMEA and frontier-market strategy; and MSCI indices coverage. During his 3.5 years with RenCap, the company underwent a series of restructurings, which allowed him not only to grow as a professional, accumulating more and more responsibilities, but also to gain experience as a crisis manager. In February 2015, Gennadiy joined O’KEY Group, a large Russian retail chain with 112 stores in 29 Russian cities, as Investor Relations Manager. During the short period he was there, prior to Wharton/Lauder, he was able to experience all the duties of the role, including a financial-results presentation, an annual-report release, and preparation for and participation in an international non-deal roadshow with Tony Maher, CEO of the company. Gennadiy enjoys travelling and playing soccer, having served as goalkeeper for his university and corporate teams. He is also a long-time member of the Belarus Warhammer 40,000 team that participated in the European Team Championship, a world cup among the strongest national teams of eight. In addition, he holds the titles of Russia individual and team champion. He speaks Russian, English, Spanish, and French. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Spanish FRANK BALLARD Frank was born and raised in Indiana, near Louisville, Kentucky. After studying Spanish with a passionate high-school teacher, he decided to pursue the language seriously during his undergraduate studies at Indiana University. He spent his entire junior year abroad, studying Spanish in Lima, Peru, where he lived with a host family. Frank earned his Bachelor’s in Economics from Indiana University with Honors, High Distinction and Phi Beta Kappa. He also earned a Certificate in Latin American Studies and completed a minor in Spanish. After graduation, Frank moved to Bolivia to help run a multi-center wildlife refuge in the Amazon. While there, he incorporated a not-for-profit to raise tax-exempt funds for the NGO in the U.S., increased revenues, and expanded the NGO’s recognition globally. (He also reared an anteater, cared for howler monkeys, and walked jaguars through the jungle.) After working in South America, Frank moved to China to learn Mandarin. He travelled throughout Asia before returning to the U.S. to work for Grameen Foundation in Washington, D.C. There he was responsible for evaluating projects in the area of poverty alleviation for global programs in India, Kenya, Indonesia, Mexico, and Nepal. He also worked with Muhammad Yunus and spoke at various international conferences. When not studying, Frank is often investigating low-cost travel deals. Last year, he travelled through Turkey and Korea on a shoestring budget by avoiding the tourist spots and with the use of a rented car. Frank looks forward to improving his Spanish-speaking skills while at Lauder and gaining even more international exposure. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Spanish JOELLE BIRGE Joelle was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and raised in the suburbs of Chicago, Illinois. Her mother’s family traces its roots back to the Normandy and Alsace-Lorraine regions in France. In addition to learning French at home, Joelle has travelled extensively with her family in Europe, Africa, and South America. Joelle graduated from Princeton University, where she earned a Bachelor of Arts in English and American Literature, as well as a Certificate in Finance from the Bendheim Center for Finance. In addition, she was captain of Princeton’s club field hockey team and a writer for the campus magazine The Tory. She was also actively involved in Service in Style, a social-service group focused on raising funds and awareness for autism. As chair of the organization during her junior year, she led several student-run teams in producing a charity fashion show to benefit Autism Speaks. While at Princeton, Joelle took advantage of the university’s close proximity to New York City. To pursue her interests in writing, fashion, and French culture, she interned at W Magazine and Harper’s Bazaar during the spring semesters of her junior and senior years. As an editorial intern focused on the French and Italian markets, she gained a deeper understanding of French culture while practicing her language skills in a business context. In addition to her passion for French culture, Joelle also developed an interest in financial markets through her Economics coursework at Princeton. She interned as an investment banking analyst in the Healthcare group at Credit Suisse during the summer following her junior year. After graduation, she moved to New York to work for Credit Suisse full time. She spent two years in the Healthcare group before moving to Boston to accept a position at Advent International, a global private equity firm. She continued to focus on the Healthcare sector there and developed a deeper interest in global health and other social sector issues, which she hopes to pursue during her time at Wharton/Lauder. Joelle has remained involved in social service, volunteering with the mentoring and scholarship organizations Student Sponsor Partners and Access Better Learning and Education while living in New York and Boston. In her spare time, she enjoys running, reading, and travelling with her family and friends. Lauder Focus: Europe and French KOEHLER BRICEÑO Koehler was born in North Carolina to an American mother and Bolivian father. She has always loved history, and has been a bookworm all her life. These aspects, combined with her interest in her family’s southern roots and her lifelong quest to understand, embrace, and actively participate in her father’s culture, led her to major in anthropology in college. As part of her studies, she traveled to Chile and submitted a thesis on investigative anthropology that remains, to this day, her longest written Spanish work. After graduating from UNC-Chapel Hill with highest honors, she spent six months traveling from Chile to Mexico, hiking up nearly every volcano along the route. This trip planted the wanderlust seed in Koehler, who has hopped across the U.S. and Americas ever since, never staying more than two years in any one location. Koehler moved to Austin, Texas, to spend two years as an Americorps volunteer for College Forward, a nonprofit that works to support low-income and first-generation high school students in achieving their dreams of going to college. During this time, she managed the budget and logistics for a pilot program to incentivize senior students to remain as active participants in College Forward. The program sparked an exponential increase in scholarship applications and attendance rates among the participants and continues to be an essential element of College Forward senior year. After completing her service at College Forward, Koehler took advantage of the opportunity to spend three months with her family in Bolivia. She also volunteered at a nonprofit there, where she dabbled in marketing and event promotion. She then moved to Washington, D.C., to expand her experience in international work, and became Project Manager at KaBOOM!, a nonprofit that promotes community building across North America. Koehler spent the past year as Director of Project Development for a small nonprofit in Cochabamba, Bolivia. She frequently visits her family in Tarija, Bolivia, and avidly follows the progress of their vineyard. Eventually, she hopes to develop the vineyard’s international reach, which she aims to complement with an on-site volunteering nonprofit. Koehler enjoys family time, Bolivian food, rivers, sailing, reading, cheering on the UNC Tarheels and Carolina Panthers, and wandering around mountains and towns. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Spanish CHRISTINE BURQ Christine was born near Paris, France, to a French father and Chilean mother. Raised in a multicultural and bilingual family, she spent her childhood in both countries. Speaking French and Spanish at home and eager to learn more languages, she studied Latin and German for several years at school in France. Her parents, through their diverse and international careers, stimulated her passions for travelling, multicultural collaboration, and new international experiences. After high school, Christine moved to Chile to reconnect with her Chilean roots, and studied Business Administration at the Pontificia Universidad Católica. Returning to France as an exchange student for a year, she specialized in International Finance and complemented her studies with International Institutions courses that led to an internship in change management at the United Nations headquarters in New York. After graduating first in her class and receiving a Leader for the Future award from Strategy newspaper, Christine spent six months at a small Chilean technological company that focused on laser volume measurement, with clients in Brazil, the U.S., and Germany. Primarily in charge of reorganizing operational flows, she also won innovative-technology government subsidies for the mining industry in Chile and the lumber industry in the U.S. Following this entrepreneurial experience, Christine joined the newly created risk-management department at JPMorgan Chile and, with her manager, built the area to monitor credit and market risk, satisfying regulators with a stronger risk-management framework and clearer procedures. After a year, she was assigned a much greater challenge: project manager for the implementation of COMDER, the first derivatives clearinghouse in Chile. There, she successfully coordinated the work of 12 different areas. In close collaboration with JPMorgan and COMDER’s senior managers, she managed the development of new operational flows and new technology procedures with impacts on derivatives valuation, accounting, and risk reporting. In her free time, Christine teaches accounting and project costing to students at her university and to micro entrepreneurs as a volunteer for a nonprofit organization. For leisure, she loves dancing ballet, tango, and salsa and playing the piano and the harp. She also enjoys baking French pastry, skiing, scuba diving, and horseback riding. At Wharton/Lauder, Christine looks forward to learning Portuguese and international management so she can join an international financial institution with social impact, such as the IMF or the World Bank, with a special focus on projects in Latin America. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese CHRISTINA CEREZO Christina was born in London to an American mother and Spanish father and spent her childhood summers in the U.S. and Spain. When she was age 10, her family moved to Brazil. From a young age, she has been interested in languages, travel, and culture. Christina completed her undergraduate degree in Mathematics and Philosophy at Bristol University. She particularly enjoyed writing her dissertation on the “Unity of Consciousness.” After graduation, Christina pursued the opportunity to spend a year studying abroad to improve her Spanish language skills and gain international experience. She first lived in Madrid for several months to immerse herself in the language and then travelled to Central America. While pursuing her joint degree, Christina completed an internship in asset management in Brazil. While she thoroughly enjoyed both working in that country and the international experience that came with the role, she decided to focus on investment banking. After completing an internship in mergers and acquisitions at DC Advisory, she joined Lazard full time in July 2008. By first working in the general pool and later specializing in the technology, retail, and consumer team, she had the opportunity to work for a wide variety of clients across a broad spectrum of industries. Projects with a Latin America focus were of particular interest to Christina. Although there was no particular team focused on that geography, she was able to leverage her language skills on the sell side of the Latin American business of Damovo Group while also learning about some of the nuances of conducting business in Mexico and Brazil. While at Wharton/Lauder, Christina looks forward to improving her language skills and gaining more business-oriented experience, with plans to join a global corporation in a business-strategy role. She would like to work across a variety of geographies, including Latin America and Spain. In her free time, Christina enjoys reading and planning her next travel expedition. She is a diving enthusiast and has enjoyed diving adventures in Honduras, Mexico, Belize, Cuba, Brazil, Nicaragua, Colombia, Panama, Thailand, Vietnam, and the U.K. (where she became certified). Lauder Focus: Latin America and Spanish VICTORIA CHENG Victoria was born in Qingdao, China, home of the famous Tsingtao Beer. At age 8, she immigrated to the U.S., specifically to South Carolina, where she learned English and adapted to a new world. Even after years of living in the U.S., she has always felt the pull of her Chinese roots. The Wharton/Lauder program provides the perfect opportunity for her to finally reconnect and to learn more about her country of birth. After living in South Carolina and Georgia for ten years, Victoria moved to California on her own to attend the University of California Berkeley on a full academic scholarship. She majored in Business Administration and held a variety of internships, including at the Apple headquarters in Cupertino and at a futurist think tank in Washington, DC. She also studied Japanese and lived in Japan for six months. After college, Victoria joined the Strategy & Operations practice of Deloitte Consulting’s San Francisco office. She worked on projects in a variety of industries, from healthcare to manufacturing, and in a number of countries, including Malaysia and Japan. However, the draws of Silicon Valley, technology, and entrepreneurship were irresistible. After a year at Deloitte Consulting, Victoria left to join a brand new mobile gaming startup, Kiwi, as its first Product Manager. She played a major role in building the company from fewer than ten employees to over 200 in a year and a half’s time. After releasing several hit games at Kiwi and putting the startup on a sound financial path, Victoria joined Storm8, one of the top mobile gaming companies in the world, where she launched the most profitable game in the company’s history and one of the top games on iTunes — Candy Blast Mania. In her spare time, Victoria often travels by herself and always has a trip abroad scheduled. Prior to entering Wharton/Lauder, she embarked on a four-month-long, one-woman journey, busing through Latin America, driving on the left side in Oceania, eating through Asia, and scuba diving wherever there was water. Victoria is also an avid martial artist with years of experience in karate and Muay Thai. Her other hobbies include painting in Photoshop, reading books of all genres, and keeping up with the latest technology. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese XINLONG CHENG Xinlong was born in Suzhou, China. He lived there until the end of elementary school, when he moved to Nagoya, Japan, to join his parents. Not knowing any Japanese, he had to learn to grow outside his comfort zone and to break through barriers. Within two years, he had made many friends and become the top student in his class. Xinlong then moved to the U.S. at the beginning of high school. He attended Washington University of St. Louis (WashU) with a double major in Biomedical Engineering and Finance. In addition to being on the Dean’s List every semester, he organized karaoke competitions and danced during the school’s Lunar New Year Festivals. He also published a research paper on auditory research and managed a startup’s website while working in summer internships. After WashU, Xinlong joined Capital One Bank full time in 2011. As an analyst on the Consumer Bank’s pricing team, he worked on quantitative models that managed deposit portfolios in excess of $50 billion. He rotated to more white-space strategic teams after a year, where he led initiatives to study customer behavior and preference. In his most recent role, he built a behavioral customer segmentation that bridged quantitative analyses with qualitative insights. He also led efforts to revamp the bank’s customer-experience strategy based around Net Promoter Score and text analytics. Throughout his tenure at Capital One, he was highly regarded by many professional partners and was promoted to manager in just over three years. When not at a desk or in a classroom, Xinlong enjoys jogging, table tennis, travelling, photography, and history. Given his knowledge of Chinese and Japanese, he often reads news topics in multiple languages for a more complete perspective. He recently finished a photo-essay series of top-10 sights in Washington, DC, and continues to add more worldwide destinations to his travel blog. Clearly, Lauder is an exceptional opportunity to expand this endeavor. After Wharton, Xinlong is looking forward to opportunities to apply his experience in international financial services. Lauder Focus: Global Program JONATHAN DELIKAT Jon was born in New York City and raised in Greenwich, Connecticut. His travel abroad as a young child fueled his passion for foreign cultures and exploring new places. In the wake of 9/11, Jon decided to pursue a career with international impact. He entered Cornell University in 2006 as an inaugural member of the new China Asia-Pacific Studies (CAPS) major. He studied Mandarin intensively; spent semesters in Washington, DC, and at Peking University in Beijing; worked on a presidential campaign; interned at the 2008 Summer Olympics; and authored a thesis on Chinese environmental-policy entrepreneurship. He also indulged his passion for the performing arts, appearing in lead roles in three Cornell Theater mainstage productions and performing in Cornell’s improv comedy troupe, The Whistling Shrimp. Jon graduated from Cornell magna cum laude and was awarded the Sherman Cochran Prize for Outstanding Performance in China Asia-Pacific Studies. In 2010, Jon was awarded a Princeton-in-Asia fellowship and relocated to Hangzhou, China, where he designed curricula and taught U.S. political and cultural classes to over 200 students at the Zhejiang University of Technology. In 2011, he joined FTI Consulting, a NYSE-listed advisory firm, working in its Global Risk and Investigations Practice for six months in Hong Kong and three years in Shanghai. By 2013, he was leading a team of over 20 professionals on the China Practice’s largest project by revenue, a multimillion dollar risk-management program for a Fortune-20 client. In the process, he oversaw over 400 investigations in over 100 Chinese cities annually, and developed and led the successful pitch for an innovative data analytics product to enable the client to better visualize and react to the volumes of data generated by this investigations program. He also coordinated and led more than 30 fraud and internal investigations, as well as an undercover field operation into a large Chinese consumer-goods counterfeit syndicate that resulted in five arrests and the seizure of 70,000 cans of infringing product. In 2013, he was selected by management to receive special training in fraud-interview techniques. He subsequently conducted numerous successful interviews in Mandarin, with many resulting in admissions of guilt from suspects. At Wharton/Lauder, Jon intends to build on his interest in risk-management solutions for companies operating abroad, particularly in China. In his spare time, Jon enjoys scuba-diving, golf, biking, hiking, cooking, and the occasional stab at stand-up comedy. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese ERIC DETWEILER Eric was raised in Fort Worth, Texas. He developed an interest in Japanese culture and customs through early exposure to Japanese media during his youth, which subsequently led him to a lifelong study of the language. Eric attended Southern Methodist University (SMU), where he completed an undergraduate degree in Finance, with minors in Japanese and Economics, and a master’s degree in Accounting. During this time, he participated in a year-long study-abroad program at Kansai Gakuin University, where he polished his language skills and deepened his passion for the Japanese culture and way of life. After returning to SMU, he passed the highest level of the Japanese Language Placement Test (JLPT). After graduation, Eric accepted a position on Ernst & Young’s (EY) Japanese Business Services team in New York. There, he primarily supported Japanese multinational corporations by performing audits of their local subsidiaries, with a focus on manufacturing and distribution clients. After being promoted to Senior, he assumed responsibility for leading the day to day operations of multiple audit teams, and assisted with both managing client relationships and coordinating with senior executives in EY’s branch offices in Japan. He also earned licensure as a CPA in the state of New York. Seeking to develop knowledge of the financial-services industry and to gain experience in a transaction environment, in June 2014 Eric transferred internally to EY’s Structured Finance Advisory Service practice, where he performed due diligence procedures on commercial mortgage-backed securities issuances. His transaction experience spans a wide range of pool sizes ($200 million to $4 billion), collateral types, transaction structures, and client investment banks. During this time, Eric also volunteered in programs organized by New York Cares, a nonprofit organization that focuses on community-revitalization projects in the New York City area. In his spare time, Eric enjoys spending time with family and friends, listening to music, experimenting in the kitchen, and travelling. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Japanese MAGGIE DIEHL Maggie was born and raised in Nashville, Tennessee. Studying French from a young age led to her keen interest in foreign languages and cultures. A high-school trip to Greece and a summer job as a camp counselor in rural Germany strengthened her passion for international travel. Maggie attended the University of Virginia, graduating Phi Beta Kappa with a double major in Economics and Foreign Affairs. She spent two semesters studying at Beijing Language and Culture University and Fudan University in Shanghai in 2008, where her fascination with Chinese language, culture, and history began. After graduation, Maggie moved to southern California to work as a Portfolio Management Analyst at PAAMCO, a $9 billion fund of hedge funds, where she covered the quantitative trading strategies in the Equity Market Neutral space. After a year, she was selected to move to the firm’s Singapore office. In addition to providing analytical support for the $400 million Asia Pacific portfolio, she directly oversaw and wrote monthly risk reports for over $100 million of assets, specifically those deployed to a Japanese long-short equity fundamental value strategy and a Pan Asia fixed-income arbitrage strategy. She also conducted an in-depth quantitative analysis on the opportunity set and return profile of an Asia dividend-yield strategy that led directly to the initiation of the due diligence process for a $15 million investment. Through conversations with managers in Tokyo and Hong Kong, Maggie was exposed to the nascent Chinese hedge-fund industry as well as the developing financial markets there. To build on her study-abroad experiences and deepen her understanding of China as a whole, she left Singapore to enroll in the Inter-University Program for Chinese Language Studies at Tsinghua University in Beijing. After 10 months of intensive Mandarin study, she rejoined the work force and moved to Shanghai. She was the first foreign hire by Yuanhao Capital Management, a $100 million offshore Chinese long-short equity fund, awarded Best Chinese Hedge Fund in 2014, to build its account-management and business-development infrastructure. Maggie enjoys being outdoors and, while in Singapore, discovered a passion for scuba diving. In her free time she loves to experiment in the kitchen and plan her next trip with friends over a bottle of wine. She is constantly trying to make a dent in an ever-expanding list of books and is barely surviving her first few months of CrossFit. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese RANDAL DREW Randal was born in Jacksonville, Florida. Fascinated by world affairs from an early age, he completed his undergraduate studies in international relations at Georgetown University’s Walsh School of Foreign Service (SFS). There, he also continued his lifelong study of the Spanish language during a term abroad at Universitat Pompeu Fabra in Barcelona, Spain. His academic accomplishments included a John Carroll Fellowship, a certificate in social and political thought, and magna cum laude honors at graduation. He is also an award-winning debater and served as president of Georgetown’s Philodemic Society debating club. During his summers at Georgetown and after graduation, Randal worked in public-policy research for organizations including the American Enterprise Institute and ResPublica. His research and writing covered diverse topics ranging from military technology and strategy to civil society and economic mobility. Through his work in public policy, he became passionate about business as a form of public service. He decided to transition into management consulting and joined Accenture in 2012. Randal spent three years at Accenture’s Washington, D.C., office. As a generalist, he worked on strategy-consulting projects across industries, including agriculture, healthcare, telecommunications, and industrial equipment. He helped companies achieve substantial growth and attain cost-reduction targets through new go-to-market strategies, operationalefficiency improvements, and international expansion plans. He is especially interested in how companies enter and compete in new markets, in how public-private partnerships promote economic development, and in venture capital ecosystems. In his spare time, Randal reads widely and enjoys travel and the outdoors. His favorite recent trip was a trek through Uzbekistan with college friends. He also remains an active Georgetown alumnus and an advocate for the Philodemic Society. He founded the club’s alumni association, mentors current students, and has launched an effort to establish a permanent endowment at the university to benefit the Philodemic. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Spanish MAX DUCHARME Max was born in New York City and raised in Montreal. His cultural fluency comes naturally from growing up in a bicultural home in a cosmopolitan city. Extensive travel and working abroad have turned that fluency into a passion for an international career. Max graduated with honors from Lehigh University, where he completed majors in Accounting and Finance. He began his career in New York City as a member of KPMG’s Transaction Services group. In that role, he supported strategic and private equity buyers and sellers with a focus on scrutinizing target companies’ historical results, forecasts, and business plans and preparing businesses for sale. He was promoted early and given the responsibility to lead teams in roles normally reserved for more senior staff members. His most significant assignment was the $1.8 billion carve-out of Barnes & Noble’s e-commerce platform. Seeking to leverage the project management and analytical skills he had developed at KPMG and to further his interest in international business, Max moved abroad. He joined the executive team of Bité International Group, a telecommunications operator in Lithuania and Latvia, where he held the position of Head of Strategic Planning and Development. He was charged with evaluating the company’s strategic options and preparing the company for sale. His cultural fluency was a tremendous asset in operating and leading effectively in a new and challenging environment. He was also active in the local community and formed many lifelong friendships. For Max, the Wharton/Lauder experience offers him the opportunity to develop an international understanding and awareness as a foundation for leadership. Max is happiest cooking and eating with family and friends, ideally after an adventurous day of skiing on fresh snow. Lauder Focus: Western Europe and French CASEY DWYER Casey was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and grew up in and around New York City. In high school he was a competitive rower and captained his heavyweight team to the U.S. National Championships. He attended Columbia University and received a dual BA in Economics and Political Science. While there, he was a Middle Eastern Languages Scholar, founded a successful student organization focused on international relations, and was elected to the Student Governing Board. He wrote his undergraduate thesis on asymmetric oil trading and specific resource allocation between Latin America and the U.S. After graduation, Casey joined a strategy-focused rotational program at JPMorgan. Following several rotations in corporate strategy and sales in New York, he moved to São Paulo as a Junior Relationship Manager, covering Brazilian Private Equity Funds and Family Offices. While there, he focused on building both relationships in the Brazilian market and a professional fluency in Portuguese. After six months, he was asked to join the Brazilian office full time on a project to insource JPMorgan’s equities and fixed-income clearing business from a competitor. During the course of the two-year project, Casey served as Product Manager, Project Manager, and Program Manager. He successfully managed an $8 million budget and a team of six employees and consultants across three locations. He led workshops in New Delhi, London, Rio de Janeiro, and New York and, in doing so, learned many valuable lessons about executing a large project within a multinational business. The project was completed successfully, and JPMorgan migrated $80 billion ahead of schedule and realized an ~$40 million profit in the first year of this sector’s operation. Casey then moved back to New York to join JPMorgan’s Private Equity Group as a Junior Portfolio Manager. He worked on the management of several large investments in Colombia, Russia, and Chile, as well as the execution of several large secondary transactions comprising 100+ investments across real estate and buy-out private equity portfolios. He continues to be actively involved socially and professionally in Brazil and is an investor in several small Brazilian companies. At Wharton/Lauder, Casey plans to grow his skill set as an investor and to continue to learn about Brazil, Latin America, and international business management. He spends his free time engaging in outdoor activities, listening to audiobooks, playing cards, scuba diving, trying new food, and discussing investment ideas. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese HODA EL-GHAZALY Hoda grew up in an Arabic-speaking home to parents who encouraged her understanding of and appreciation for her dual Egyptian-American heritage. Every Saturday through her teenage years, she attended an Arabic school that, combined with biennial summer trips to Egypt, provided her with a rich foundation for perceiving different cultural perspectives and country-specific idiosyncrasies in addition to sparking her intellectual curiosity about the Middle East region. While pursuing an economics degree at the University of Tennessee, Hoda studied abroad at the American University in Cairo, where she advanced her Arabic language skills and gained significant exposure to the field of development economics through coursework and volunteer grant-writing at the Institute of Cultural Affairs, Middle East & North Africa. Her interest in Egypt’s informal economy evolved into a senior thesis, for which she gained funding to return to Egypt to conduct interviews and visit research centers throughout Cairo in an effort to examine the implications of the economy’s size. This experience deepened her appreciation for economic research and led her to accept a Research Associate position with the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. During her two years with the Federal Reserve, Hoda analyzed volumes of bank balance-sheet data and authored articles on topics ranging from banking crises around the world to the growing number of multinational companies emerging from developing economies. To flex her creative muscles, she also worked with three other researchers to develop an Excel application to interface with the Federal Reserve’s website. This application gained recognition from economic commentators, including Paul Krugman and Barry Ritholtz, and earned the team the Federal Reserve’s Innovation Award. Hoda then transitioned to Cornerstone Research, a finance and economic litigation consulting firm, to expand her experience in economic applications. There she worked on a variety of cases, from investigating allegations of benchmark interest-rate manipulation at a large multinational bank to dissecting customer data to evaluate bases for class certification. She also gained a tremendous appreciation for the tools and techniques used to analyze big data. In her spare time, Hoda enjoys watching classic movies, skiing, reading, travelling, dabbling in photography, and hiking on sunny days. Lauder Focus: Middle East and Arabic JOEL FILIPPI Joel was born and raised in Verona, Italy, speaking both Italian and French at home under the tutelage of his mother, who grew up in Paris. His passion for foreign cultures and languages blossomed under the positive influence of his parents, both French teachers who pushed him to go beyond the pure knowledge of a language and to discover new cultures by travelling around the world. During his high-school years, he journeyed across Europe, spending several summers on immersion programs in both Spain and the U.K., where he picked up the languages and deepened his knowledge of the local cultures. He continued to follow his passion by exploring 25 countries spanning five continents. During his studies in Aerospace Engineering at the University of Padova in Italy, Joel also decided to pursue a double degree in Engineering at the Ecole Centrale de Nantes in France. There, for two years he lived with three Brazilians who shared their culture and nurtured his passion for South America, and Brazil in particular. While in college, he also interned in the Congo for an Italian civil-engineering company and in France for Procter & Gamble and Airbus. In 2012, after graduation, Joel joined The Boston Consulting Group as a Management Consultant serving consumer-goods companies. He focused on the travel and tourism and packaged-goods sectors, helping clients to address challenges, such as strategic planning and cost-optimization programs. He also spent six months in São Paulo, where he developed a market-entry strategy for a European coffee manufacturer. While at Wharton/Lauder, Joel hopes to fully embrace his philosophy of being a world citizen through a strong MBA education surrounded by a vibrant international environment and culture. Joel speaks Italian, French, English, Portuguese, and Spanish. He is passionate about travelling and sports — especially soccer and skiing — cooking, and spending time with family and friends. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese STÉPHANE FISCH Stéphane was born and raised in France to a family of medical doctors and civil servants. At age 16, Stéphane’s high-school teachers recognized his passion for philosophy, and he was appointed to the concours general de philosophie, which selects the top 0.1% of students in France. This experience led him to pursue studies in the field of political science. Stéphane had his first professional experience at age 18 in a French renewable-energy startup in Jiangsu Province, China. He graduated from the Paris School of Political Science (Sciences Po) with a Bachelor’s degree in Political Science in 2009 and a Master’s in Public Affairs in 2011. While at Sciences Po, he participated in an exchange program at King’s College London to study War Studies and Medieval Literature. During his Master’s pursuit, he worked part-time in the office of the French Minister of the Budget, François Baroin. At age 21, Stéphane was the youngest student to enter the Ecole Nationale d’Administration (ENA), where he studied public finance, law, and economics. Stéphane’s professional experience is linked largely with French public administration. After serving as second secretary at the Embassy of France in Beijing and chief of staff for the governor (préfet) of Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, in 2013 he became head of the Department of Coordinated Healthcare for Performance and Productivity Improvement in the French Ministry of Health. There, he focused on innovative techniques to improve the efficiency of the healthcare system and reduce the impact on public finances. The following year, he was appointed government commissioner for the 2015 National Healthcare Bill. Since 2013, Stéphane has been a lecturer at Sciences Po for MPA students in Economics and International Relations. Stéphane speaks French, English, Portuguese, and Spanish fluently and is conversational in Mandarin Chinese and Russian. In his spare time, he likes to play tennis, practice kick boxing, and run half-marathons. He has played the piano since age 5 and was laureate with honors at the international piano competition Concours National de France in 2005. He also published a book of poetry, Eloge du Pays Rêvé, in 2014. At Wharton/Lauder, Stéphane plans to develop a better understanding of international business and to learn Portuguese. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese VANESSA FRANCES Vanessa was born in London, England. She spent her first three years living in Barcelona, Spain, and New York City, before her family settled in Miami, Florida. Raised on the multicultural island of Key Biscayne and in a bilingual home, she was exposed to the Spanish language at a very early age. She gained an appreciation for the diversity in Hispanic culture from her interactions with friends in the classroom and on her soccer team. In addition, she studied French in high school. She and her family travelled to Barcelona, Spain, twice a year for winter and summer holidays, which helped her develop her Spanish language skills and learn some basic Catalan. Vanessa attended Princeton University, where she majored in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and completed a certificate in Sustainable Energy. She completed a senior group thesis on micro-scale turbine engines and endeavored, with two colleagues, to convert such an engine into a power plant to supply energy in developing nations. Following her sophomore year, she spent her summer as a Corporate Contacts representative for Business Today, where she met with numerous Fortune 500 executives in the Midwest. She not only raised money to help fund the following academic year’s events, but also brought notable C-suite executives to Princeton’s campus as seminar and conference speakers. The summer after her junior year, she interned with TNO in Helmond, Netherlands, conducting research on automotive powertrains. After graduation, Vanessa joined Schlumberger as a Field Engineer in Well Integrity Technology in Villahermosa, Mexico. She worked on natural-gas well sites throughout the region, which advanced her Spanish-language expertise. She was also given the opportunity to complete her operational school training in Tyumen, Russia, during which she spent two months in Siberia studying well-cementing techniques and learning the mechanics behind the heavy machinery used at the well sites. She left Schlumberger after eight months to pursue a position that was more relevant to her mechanical and aerospace background. She was hired by GE Aviation in Lynn, Massachusetts, to work in the Inlet and Exhaust Systems group, where she was responsible for military afterburner hardware for the F414-400. She spent three years working on afterburner mechanical design, first for the Navy and later for a New Product Introduction project. In her free time, Vanessa enjoys travelling, contemporary art exhibits, and boxing. She follows Formula 1, English Premiere League soccer, and NBA basketball. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Spanish BOBBY GIANCHANDANI Bobby’s interest in Spanish-speaking countries was sparked during his undergraduate studies at Tufts University, where he took courses focused on Latin American and Spanish literature, arts, theater, and history to complement his degree in Economics. This initial interest led him to study abroad at the Universidad de Alcala in Spain. After graduation, to build on his interest in Spanish-speaking countries, Bobby took a yearlong position as an ESL teacher for adult business professionals in Santiago, Chile. While in South America, he became further fascinated by the Latin American culture and spent time travelling through Argentina and Bolivia and volunteering at an orphanage in Peru. Upon his return to the U.S., Bobby joined IMS Consulting Group, focusing specifically on healthcare, pharma, and biotech issues in emerging markets. He concentrated on Latin American projects and helped to build the Latin American teams’ competency in his specialty area of Market Access, centering particularly on Mexico, Brail, and Argentina. His project work culminated in a temporary six-month transfer to IMS’s office in Mexico City. Given his unique expertise at IMS, Bobby was promoted twice during his tenure to a Senior Consultant, managing teams of 2-8 global consultants. In addition, he served as chair of the firm’s Community Service Initiative and brought over $50,000 of funding to partner charities such as New York Cares and the American Cancer Society. Bobby enjoys travelling and, since his year in South America, has slept in mud huts in South Africa, climbed through ice caves in Iceland, navigated through rural Indian backwaters, and explored culinary delights in Hong Kong. He also enjoys alternative rock and indie music and recently attended SXSW in Austin, Texas, and the Northside Festival in Brooklyn, New York. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Spanish NEHA GOEL Neha was born in San Francisco, California, to a close-knit family that had recently emigrated from New Delhi, India. Since so many relatives remained in India, she spent much of her childhood travelling between both cities and developing a love of Indian culture. She completed most of her schooling in San Francisco, with a brief stint in England. Neha became interested in Indian history as a teenager, creating her own self-study course for high-school credit and teaching herself the Devanagiri script. She was fascinated by the gradual shift of power from the Mughals to the British Raj and the effect this had on newly independent India’s economic policies, which in turn reverberate in today’s market. These interests led Neha to earn an A.B. in Public Policy, with a minor in South Asian Studies, from Princeton University. While at Princeton, Neha spent a summer working for Ashoka: Innovators for the Public, a social entrepreneurship fellowship and network, in New Delhi. The experience was very challenging but also clarified Neha’s future goals. After graduation, Neha spent three and a half years at Deloitte Consulting, in its Strategy & Operations group. She focused on payments in particular, helping to coordinate the firm’s Mobile Payments & Financial Services Practice. She worked with credit-card issuers, mobile wallets, credit-card networks, and other payment players on projects ranging from acquisition strategy to change management. Prior to entering Wharton/Lauder, she did a brief internship at NerdWallet, a booming consumer-finance education startup best known for its credit-card recommendation tool. Through these experiences, she found the perfect way to marry her interests in innovation and social impact: “fintech,” or financial technology. She ultimately wants to work in this field, ideally in India or elsewhere overseas. Neha loves to read, bake, and travel, having already been to 30 countries. She’s tremendously excited about the personal and professional development the next two years promise at Wharton/Lauder. Lauder Focus: South Asia and Hindi MIGUEL GONZÁLEZ HERRANZ Miguel was born and raised in Madrid, Spain. In 2004, he began his Electrical Engineering and Computer Science studies at Universidad Politécnica de Madrid and moved to Paris, France, in 2008 to complete a double degree in Engineering at TELECOM ParisTech. A year later he graduated magna cum laude. After graduation, Miguel went to work for Telefónica in Paris as part of the five-person team that started the business. A year later, after contributing to Telefónica’s 27% growth in France, he moved to Dublin, Ireland, to join Google’s cloud computing division as a Product Specialist and, later, a Technical Strategist. During this time, Miguel stood out as the top performer on a 100-engineer team, building the first non-English support team and leading the closure of the largest cloud computing deal ever signed by Google (with bank BBVA for $43 million). In addition, his social commitment crystallized in May 2012 when he founded JuntoSalimos (www.juntosalimos. org), a philanthropic venture that aims to leverage technology and the collective intelligence to develop the entrepreneurial and socioeconomic ecosystems in Spain, Latin America, and other parts of the world. After three years in Dublin, Miguel moved to Colombia to join Google’s engineering organization as its Head of Emerging Markets in Colombia, Chile, Peru, Argentina, Central America, and the Caribbean. In this role, he managed a team of eight Project Leaders managing 80 agents and operated a $3 million budget dedicated to developing the Internet and the technology ecosystem in the region. Keenly attuned to life-changing opportunities, in October 2014 Miguel joined BBVA as its Head of Digital Innovation. As the youngest Head of a division at the bank, he built the Digital Innovation organization from scratch (16 employees) and designed a disruptive strategy that positioned BBVA Colombia as the digital banking leader in the region. Outside work, Miguel has been a keynote speaker on social entrepreneurship at several events in Europe and Latin America, has served as a juror at several entrepreneurship contests in Latin America, and is currently an advisor for two tech startups in Peru. In his free time, Miguel enjoys soccer, cycling, tennis, reading, and travelling (he has travelled to 29+ countries on four continents). He speaks Spanish, English, French, and Portuguese. Miguel looks forward to one of the most fulfilling periods of his life within the Wharton/ Lauder community. Lauder Focus: Global Program CAIO GUIMARÃES Caio was born in Salvador, Brazil, but grew up in Rio de Janeiro. He had his first crosscultural experience at age 9, when his family moved to the U.S. for four years. Interested in learning different languages from an early age, he began studying sign language in middle school. Back in Brazil, Caio attended the Instituto Tecnologico de Aeronautica (ITA), where he majored in Aeronautical Engineering. During this time, he was very active both on and off campus, dedicating a considerable amount of time to one of his passions: education. In 2005, he created Rumo ao ITA (“On my way to ITA”), a not-for-profit interactive portal where undergraduates could post materials for prospective candidates to top Brazilian engineering schools. Over the years, he grew the portal into a 100% self-funded organization that is highly regarded by applicants nationwide. In 2007, following an invitation from a fellow ITA alumnus and owner of a famous Brazilian publishing company, he dedicated himself to what became a new hobby: writing. Since then, he has published two mathematics books that have reached top-selling status among applicants to ITA. During college, Caio also studied French in hopes of someday complementing his degree with a study program in France. His enjoyed his first real French experience in 2007, when he had a summer internship in Paris with an oil and gas technology firm. A year later, he went to Toulouse as part of a yearlong student exchange, after convincing ITA of the value of such programs. After graduation, Caio worked primarily in management consulting. Following two years with Monitor Group, he moved to the Boston Consulting Group in 2013, where he worked for the most part with energy-related topics. His ultimate goal is to lead the transformation of his family business into a relevant and innovative services firm in the oil and gas technology space. At Wharton/Lauder, he looks forward to learning more about developing family businesses with a focus on international growth, specifically in French-speaking countries in Africa. Caio enjoys travelling and music. In his free time, you will most likely find him with a guitar in his arms, ready to start a new band – no matter what type of music genre. He speaks Portuguese, English, French, and conversational Spanish. Lauder Focus: Europe and French JACKSON HUI Jackson was born and raised in Hong Kong. While growing up, he experienced education systems in Hong Kong, Beijing, Singapore, and Finland. After completing his GCE exams in Hong Kong, Jackson was granted early admission to Tsinghua University in Beijing, with a full government scholarship. To overcome the cultural barrier and better understand his motherland, he immersed himself fully in the mainland Chinese environment, e.g., taking the military training and working as a volunteer in rural China for three consecutive summers. In addition, he explored different parts of the world and participated in exchange programs with Singapore Catholic High School and Finland Helsinki University during high school and college, respectively. Jackson began his career in the Beijing office of CICC, the largest investment bank in China. His four-year investment-banking career enabled him to see first-hand the inner workings of an emerging China, and he accomplished a number of deals with total consideration of over $30 billion in both the Chinese and Hong Kong capital markets. Proficient in Cantonese and Mandarin, he was entrusted with communicating with regulators both on the mainland and in Hong Kong, which taught him how to navigate and accommodate the two different systems. In 2012, Jackson joined the Shanghai office of Advent International, a global private equity fund with $30 billion in assets under management, focusing on buyout transactions in Asia. Many of the investments he worked on had cross-border angles and involved global offices’ participation, giving him opportunities to work at the Boston headquarters and the Mumbai offices. As a CFA holder and avid investor, he also supported Sunley House Capital, Advent International’s hedge-fund arm, overseeing Chinese stock-investment opportunities. In his spare time, Jackson enjoys endurance sports. He has completed the Ironman 70.3, full marathons, triathlons, and 24-hour charity-run relays in eight cities in Asia and the U.S. over the past ten years. Lauder Focus: Global Program MIZUHO IMANISHI Mizuho was born and raised in Tokyo, Japan. Influenced by the extensive international experiences of her parents and older siblings, she loved watching TV documentaries about unfamiliar cultures and enjoyed visiting other countries with her family. Mizuho became especially curious about Latin American cultures, although she had never visited the region. At age 16, she enrolled in the AFS exchange program. Arriving from Tokyo to spend a year in a small town in Santiago del Estero in northern Argentina, she experienced a huge difference in how people lived. Adjusting to that shift in her daily reality, she became very flexible and responsive to those around her. Being the only Japanese person in the town, she immersed herself in the local community and quickly learned Spanish and made new friends. Upon her return to Japan, Mizuho entered Sophia University in Tokyo and, with her recent experiences in mind, decided to major in International Economics. During her senior year, she spent ten months at Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico City, expanding her knowledge of regional economic and social issues and discussing historical and current topics with fellow students from Mexico. After graduation, Mizuho became a member of the Energy Unit of a Japanese general trading company. During her first three years, she actively oversaw her company’s investments with a Brazilian partner in a bio-ethanol project located in Brazil. Her responsibilities included monitoring the project’s monthly progress and evaluating its viability. Regular communication with the staff of the Brazilian partner included travelling to Brazil for meetings. Since most of the documents and presentations were generated in Brazil, she developed a working knowledge of Portuguese as well. In 2013, Mizuho joined the trading company’s Liquefied Natural Gas Department. She worked on developing LNG export projects located in the U.S. as well as off-taking LNG from global suppliers for Asian buyers. To strengthen the company’s network in the EU, she worked at the company’s branch in London for three months in 2014, actively interacting with both Spanish and European LNG parties. In addition to Japanese, Mizuho is fluent in Spanish and English and has a working knowledge of Portuguese. In her spare time, she enjoys international travel, scuba diving, and street dance. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Spanish CHRISTOPHER JONES Chris was born in a suburb of Houston, Texas. Southern by upbringing, but Irish by descent, he was bitten by the genealogy bug at a young age. By high school, he had traced his lineage back to a small town in Ireland, where he reconnected with long-lost Irish cousins. These early genealogical exploits ignited his passion for foreign cultures and fueled his desire to get to know the world beyond America’s borders. Chris studied economics at Princeton University, where he graduated magna cum laude. While there, he served as president of the Princeton Katzenjammers a cappella group; worked for a summer at NGO Gariwo, an educational charity in Bosnia; and spent a semester abroad at Cambridge University researching the economy of Ireland’s Gaelic-speaking communities. After a summer stint at Lehman Brothers in 2008, he returned to Princeton for his senior year, intent on pursuing his interest in international macroeconomics. His senior thesis, examining the interplay between language barriers and international trade, received the Walter C. Sauer ’28 Prize for most outstanding undergraduate work on a topic related to U.S. foreign trade. After attaining his Master’s degree in Economics from Queen’s University in Canada, Chris began his career as an economist with TD Bank in Toronto. There he was responsible for analyzing U.S. macroeconomic trends for the bank’s business units and retail clients. He frequently appeared on Canada’s BNN and Sun News television networks; and his macroeconomic research was regularly cited by major print media outlets such as The Globe and Mail, Wall Street Journal, and the Associated Press. Living and working in Canada also sparked his love for the French language. In 2011, he enrolled in his first French class at the Toronto branch of the Alliance française and quickly developed an advanced proficiency in the language. In late 2012, Chris joined Pacific Investment Management Company (PIMCO) as a client-facing associate in the firm’s Newport Beach office. In this role, he helped to advise large U.S. public retirement systems on their fixed-income investment portfolios. He also authored the monthly economic commentaries and investment outlook for the PIMCO Total Return Fund, the world’s largest actively managed fixed-income mutual fund. At Wharton/Lauder, Chris looks forward to improving his French while developing cross-cultural competencies for helping pension funds manage their assets in a global marketplace. In his spare time, he enjoys Crossfit, skiing, and country music. Lauder Focus: Europe and French CRAIG JONES Craig grew up in El Paso, Texas, where he spent his first years of elementary school in bilingual Spanish/English classes. From a very young age, he was excited to learn about his Hispanic classmates’ language and culture. He later moved to Kansas City, Kansas, for high school and then went on to study Accounting and Finance at the Whitman School of Management at Syracuse University. Craig spent the first semester of his junior year in a study-abroad program in Madrid, Spain, living with a host family to maximize his immersion in Spanish. After graduation, he moved to New York City to work for the Global Capital Markets group with PricewaterhouseCoopers. Several years later, he volunteered to move to the Mexico City office to help grow the Latin American practice. There, he was given responsibility for capital-market transactions in Mexico, Peru, and Columbia, and advised clients throughout the deal process, specializing in SEC financial reporting and raising capital (IPOs, 144As). During this time in Mexico City, Craig and his wife founded Alegria Home, a modern home-decor brand. The company works with artisans in Mexico and Guatemala who design, develop, and sell their products around the globe. It also supports artisans in developing countries and provides them with economic opportunities to bring their unique products to market. The couple travelled throughout Mexico and Guatemala — sometimes spending up to 20 hours at a time on buses — to attend trade shows and to meet the artisans. Craig will study real estate at Wharton and use his experiences living in Mexico and the knowledge he gains through Lauder to participate in the growth of the Mexican and Latin American economies. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Spanish CLAUDEL KAMGANG Claudel was born and raised in Yaoundé and Douala, Cameroon. His travels around the country exposed him to its various unique cultures and resources. He also became very aware of the crucial role education plays in enhancing people’s standard of living. Thus, at age 15, with his high school diploma in hand, he took on the highly rewarding challenge of studying in France, a country more than 6,000 miles away. Claudel graduated from Paris Diderot University with High Honors in Computer Science. In order to gain significant work experience before returning to Cameroon, he accepted a position with Veolia Water, a leading water-treatment and distribution company in Europe. Soon after, a newly passed French immigration law prevented him from transitioning from a student visa to a work visa. He wrote letters, met with numerous officials, and had his story published in Le Monde. His actions, along with those of others in similar straits, led to the law being overturned. Witnessing such a result at age 21 made Claudel aware of the close relationship between government oversight and business. He also understood how vital it is to consider the roles of a country’s government regulations and social dynamics when thinking about business of any kind, whether as an employer or an employee. At Wharton/Lauder, Claudel hopes to understand the secrets behind Brazil’s emergence and how to strengthen the growing relationship between Brazil and Sub-Saharan Africa. Ultimately, he plans to provide the means for access to fresh and drinkable water in Cameroon to the half of the population that now lacks it. His four years at Veolia Water taught him how water is treated, transported, and distributed to people. As an IT consultant, he also witnessed firsthand how much of an accelerator new technologies can be in the process. In his free time, Claudel enjoys listening to music, watching movies, and travelling. He previously played chess professionally, so he can’t resist sitting in front of a chess table whenever he stumbles upon one. He also hopes to overcome his fear of deep water by learning how to swim. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese IMRAN KARIM Imran was born in Vancouver, Canada, to Kenyan- and Tanzanian-born parents of Indian origin, and grew up in Ottawa. At home he spoke English and the Indian dialect of Kutchi. At age 5, he also began to study French at school through an intensive bilingual program. His immersions in a wide range of language and cultural settings shaped his international perspectives early on. Imran attended Cornell University, where he completed a major in Government and a concentration in French. At the same time, he also learned to speak Hindi and Urdu proficiently, and actively pursued International Relations-related activities such as the university’s Model United Nations organization. During his junior year, he spent a semester in Washington, D.C., furthering his knowledge of foreign policy and international finance. He also spent a semester studying at the Université de Paris in France and a summer at Dartmouth College’s Tuck School of Business in the Business Bridge Program. After graduation, Imran was awarded a prestigious fellowship in International Development Management by the Aga Khan Foundation, for which he went to India to work on civil-society initiatives for participatory irrigation management in rural Gujarat. He then joined the Canadian Foreign Service and was posted for two years in New Delhi, where he worked to further Canadian commercial interests in the country, to overcome obstacles to international business development, and to increase the size and diversity of the $5 billion per year Canada-India trade relationship. During this period, he also assisted in the coordination and advancement of the Canada-India free-trade-agreement negotiations and helped launch the Government of Canada’s India trade-advocacy strategy. In his other Foreign Service assignments, he worked on initiatives to increase the attractiveness of foreign direct investment to Canada in the oil and mining sectors, briefed Ministers on South Asia commercial relations, and coordinated Canada’s input on services trade at the World Trade Organization. In addition to his other language skills, Imran has developed intermediate proficiency in Spanish through his travels in Latin America. He enjoys running, swimming, hiking, and international music and cinema. At Wharton/Lauder, Imran aspires to gain new perspectives on innovation and businessgovernment dynamics in the context of multinational management, social enterprise, and sustainability. Ultimately, he hopes to bring together his interests in business, international development, and foreign affairs to lead entrepreneurial initiatives for the purposes of social and international development. Lauder Focus: Europe and French JESSICA KONG Jessica was born to and raised in Maryland by native Korean parents. She grew up speaking Korean at home and studied Spanish in school. Her interest in international business led her to study at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts, where she majored in Business Administration, with a concentration in Finance and Spanish. Nearly two years of Jessica’s time at Northeastern involved studying, travelling, and working abroad. She spent her summers in Korea, Mexico, and Spain, and enrolled at the University of Barcelona in 2010 to study liberal arts. As part of Northeastern’s co-op program, she interned full-time for a semester at the Department of the U.S. Treasury, Financial Management Services Bureau, supporting the CFO on special projects, and also at the Allianz HQ in Munich, Germany, with the internal strategy group supporting the COO. While these experiences exposed her to a wider realm of industries, Jessica is passionate about retail. At Northeastern, she founded Haute Fashion, the school’s first fashion- and retail-based interest group, while helping to launch BCBGeneration in 2009 as a BCBG Brand Ambassador. Through these experiences, she developed a strong network within the fashion and retail community in Boston, planning and hosting numerous citywide events. After graduation in 2011, to gain broader international experience, Jessica joined McKinsey’s Dubai office, where she worked across various industries. She then transferred to the Mid-Atlantic office in 2012 to specialize in Retail and CPG. She worked throughout Korea, Japan, the UAE, the U.K., and the U.S., supporting senior clients on strategic growth. In 2013, Jessica decided to transition to luxury retail, joining renowned Swedish bed brand Hästens. As Country Manager for the U.K., she was responsible for building both the retail and wholesale channels. After doubling the volume of business within one year in London, she was promoted to Head of Strategy, Global Retail in 2015 to develop the retail channel worldwide. In her spare time, Jessica enjoys travelling and developing her nonprofit, Invest.Her, an organization dedicated to mobilizing the next generation of underrepresented female business leaders. She is elated to join Wharton/Lauder and looks forward to gaining experience and knowledge in Latin America with an eye toward helping new brands enter and develop their businesses in the region. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Spanish JAY LANNERS Jay was born in Atlanta, Georgia, and grew up in the nearby small town of Covington. He graduated from Davidson College in 2011 with a major in Economics and a minor in Spanish. Travelling in Europe several times with his family before college piqued his interest in other countries and cultures. Jay began studying Spanish during his first semester at Davidson and immediately became passionate about learning the language. He studied abroad twice in Spain, including a summer program in Cádiz and a semester in Madrid. He also did a summer internship in Buenos Aires, where he fell in love with Argentina, thanks to its kind people and their zest for life. This experience solidified his desire to pursue an international business career focused on Latin America. Thus, he began to study Brazilian Portuguese through a self-instructional program during his last semester of college. He immersed himself more deeply in the language during month-long trips to São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro in 2011 and 2013, respectively. After spending two years as an Associate Consultant at Bain & Company in Atlanta, Georgia, Jay accepted a job in Buenos Aires with MercadoLibre, the leader in eCommerce in Latin America. There, he spent a year and a half in a multifaceted role that involved Strategic Planning, Investor Relations, and Corporate Development. Exposure to the tech and startup environments in Latin America fostered his interest in entrepreneurship, leading him to co-found Klöver (klover.com.ar), a service dedicated to arranging a round of drinks between two groups of three friends in Buenos Aires. During his time at Wharton/Lauder, Jay hopes to further develop his entrepreneurial and Portuguese skills in hopes of returning to Latin America as an entrepreneur. He plans to focus his long-term career on startups and venture capital in emerging markets, especially Latin America. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese PIERRE LE NORMAND Pierre was born and raised in France. At age 8, he joined The Little Singers of Paris, a world-famous boarding school and boys choir, with which he toured many countries over six years. Through this early exposure to very different cultures, he developed a keen interest in cultural diversity and foreign languages. Pierre holds a Master’s in Management from Reims Management School and is a CFA charterholder. During his graduate studies, he served as founder and treasurer of a local branch of Cheer-Up!, a national association in France that helps young cancer patients work on various projects. His internship experiences with large financial institutions in the Middle East and Europe, working with large multicultural teams, reinforced his passion for global business. In 2010, Pierre joined MetLife in Latin America as part of a highly selective two-year program for recent graduates. He worked in Chile and Colombia, leading large projects in different areas. After completing the executive-development program, he oversaw the strategic planning of the agency business for MetLife in Chile, where he helped to expand the sales force from 600 to 1,200 agents. He also had a direct impact on the sales process by implementing a mobile sales platform that helped to increase agents’ productivity. In March 2014, he was promoted to strategy deputy to lead both the company-strategy team and the cross-selling team. During that year he led the strategic-planning process that identified cross-company initiatives to unlock $20 million in operating earnings over three years. In his spare time, Pierre loves to participate in sports such as running and horseback riding. He has run in several half marathons and finished his first marathon in just over three and a half hours. He has also been a long-time volunteer for the organization team of the Concours Hippique du Clermontois, a national show-jumping competition in the north of France. Pierre is native in French and fluent in Spanish and English. At Wharton/Lauder he hopes to expand his international business horizons and become fluent in Portuguese. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese YIFAN LI Yifan was born in the port city of Dalian, in northeastern China, and moved to the San Francisco Bay Area at age 10. He attended kindergarten in Japan for a year when his parents were working there. These experiences of transitioning from one country to another fostered his deep interest in learning the language, geography, culture, and history of different regions. Yifan attended Harvard University, where he majored in economics and government. He continued to study Japanese and gained a deeper understanding of modern Japanese society and politics through an internship with a National Diet representative during the heated general elections of 2009. He also gained exposure to the Greater China region through a study-abroad program at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and by interning at Nomura International. After graduation, Yifan joined Bain & Company’s Silicon Valley office, where he worked on project management, global sales strategy, organizational design, and forecasting and planning assignments for leading technology and utilities firms in the area. To gain further cross-cultural team-management experience and exposure to India, he transferred to the Bain Capability Centre in Gurgaon, India, for six months, where he led teams of local analysts to support more than 40 assignments from Bain offices worldwide and spanning all practice areas. During this time, Yifan also volunteered for the Sunshine Library, an NPO that aims to bridge the rural-urban gap in education in China through tablets loaded with quality educational content. Combining his passions for maps and cross-cultural learning, he created innovative geography-education content that transformed the way geographic concepts were taught in the supported rural schools. In 2014, he joined Guanghe Xinzhi, the online education-content provider affiliated with Sunshine Library, in Beijing. He helped to establish a structured production management process and provided firm-wide training on principles and practices based on his own experiences to increase productivity and build a more open and proactive working culture. Yifan speaks Mandarin, Japanese, and various Chinese dialects, including Cantonese, Hokkien, and Hakka, which he learned because of his interests in the Chinese diaspora and East Asian linguistics. In his spare time, he maintains his own satellite-map database of transportation infrastructure, social and political phenomena, and historic monuments around the globe, which he uses extensively for travel planning and for learning about differences in architecture, urban planning, and economic development. Lauder Focus: Global Program YUE LI Yue, who goes by Yueli, was born in the southern Chinese city of Nanchang. She moved to the U.S. when she was six and spent most of her childhood in the suburbs of Detroit, Michigan. Growing up in a Chinese household in the middle of Midwestern America, she developed early on a love of experiencing other cultures. Inspired by her engineer father, Yue attended MIT, where she majored in Mechanical Engineering and minored in Music. In addition, she continued to cultivate her interest in other cultures through MIT’s study-abroad program. She spent a month teaching high school math and science in Sicily, Italy, and a summer working for El Tecnológico de Monterrey in Córdoba, Mexico. She also had the opportunity to intern in Beijing during the 2008 Summer Olympics at the Indianapolis-based diesel-engine company Cummins. That memorable summer gave her the impetus to learn more about her Chinese heritage and to take Chinese history and Mandarin courses in college. After graduating in 2011, Yue moved to New York City and joined Oliver Wyman Financial Services as a management consultant. She worked on a range of strategic projects with large banks, insurance companies, private equity firms, and government institutions. Seeking a more operational- and results-oriented role, she left Oliver Wyman after two and a half years for the Business Operations team at Venmo, a small mobile-payments company acquired by PayPal in late 2013. While living in New York, Yue traveled extensively, both domestically and internationally, and explored the cultural mecca right outside her apartment. Inspired by her experiences, she cofounded a cross-cultural catering company, the Hutong NYC, which served authentic Beijing-style steamed buns to companies and individuals across the city. This side venture combined her interest in operations and love of food and culture. Looking forward, Yue hopes to solidify her Chinese language skills in a business context at Wharton/Lauder to prepare for a career in operations for a multinational food company. In addition to travel and food, Yue enjoys skiing, yoga, Broadway shows, and board games. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese SHU LIU Shu was born in China and spent most of her childhood in Beijing, often travelling to various Latin American countries, where her parents were stationed as diplomats. From ages 13 to 18, she attended Chase Academy, a private boarding school in the U.K., where she completed her GCSEs and A-Levels. She also developed a passion for classical music, attaining a DipABRSM in flute performance and a Grade 8 with distinction in piano performance from the Royal Academy of Music. She went on to win the Staffordshire Young Musician of the Year award and was invited to join the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain, a prestigious symphony orchestra that tours throughout the country. Shu moved to the U.S. to attend Rutgers University, where she graduated cum laude with a B.S. in Finance. She was heavily involved with Beta Alpha Psi, Ascend, and Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA). During this time, she interned at major Chinese banks in New York City and Shanghai. After graduation, Shu spent three and a half years working as an Associate at Solera Capital, a New York City-based private equity firm. There, she took an active role in the full spectrum of private equity, ranging from fund-raising and deal-sourcing to business-building and exit. She was also involved in the Annie’s Inc. IPO in 2012, which was named “the single best IPO performance since LinkedIn” by the Wall Street Journal. With a strong commitment to diversity, mentorship, and core values, Shu was active in various organizations, such as the Fortune/U.S. State Department Global Women’s Mentoring Partnership, Women’s Forum Inc., and the Women’s Sports Foundation, where she helped to organize events and activities to support female leaders and entrepreneurs from around the world. These experiences led to her passion for developing similar platforms and networks for female business leaders in China. At Wharton/Lauder, Shu hopes to further develop a deeper social, political, and economic understanding of China and to discover opportunities to help promote female advancement in the Asian business environment. In her spare time, Shu volunteers with various organizations, including the Rutgers Team Up Mentorship program, the Overseas China Education Foundation, and the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. She enjoys running, yoga, travelling, great food, and symphony concerts. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese YANN MANIBOG Yann was born and raised in Washington, D.C. The son of two World Bank economists from France and the Philippines, he developed an early interest in global issues and cultural and socioeconomic diversity. He deepened his understanding of these issues through the multilingual international school he attended and his experiences in his mother countries. Yann majored in Mechanical Engineering during his undergraduate studies at Northwestern University. He also developed his problem-solving skills while working for a startup, where he designed a micro-scale wind turbine for consumers in rural India. After winning the Dow Chemical Innovation Award, he and his team worked in Gujarat, India, where they conducted tests with local families. In between school and work, Yann hosted a weekly radio show and deejayed in clubs in Chicago. He graduated from Northwestern magna cum laude and received the Director’s Award for Engineering Design. Yann found his place in global business as a management consultant with A.T. Kearney, where he focused on advising global clients in the energy and public sectors. His experience revolved around enterprise-wide cost transformations, whether in merger-integration settings or more general performance improvements. Most recently, as the youngest Manager in the firm, Yann had the opportunity to lead a change management program in the UAE. In this role, he helped to establish a new government entity in the region. This experience — and other experiences developing strategies for various multinationals — helped him understand how large organizations operate and how to make decisions in these often-difficult environments. In his spare time, he participated in business-development efforts for AT Kearney’s Energy and Process Industry practice and founded the San Francisco office’s soccer team. Yann enjoys running, playing soccer, riding motorcycles, and exploring drum and bass music, a niche and evolving genre of dance music. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese ANDREI VALLEJO MARGARIT Andrei wasborninIbagué,Colombia,toaRomanianmotherandColombianfather.Helived primarily in Bogotá until moving to New York City at age 6. He is fluent in Romanian, Spanish, and French; proficient in Portuguese; and is currently working on adding a nonRomancelanguage—Turkish—tohisrepertoire. Throughout hislife,AndreihasremainedclosetohisfamilyinRomania,spendingevery childhood summer in his mother’s home village in the Romanian countryside, which affordedhim a unique perspective of the country’s painful transition from communism. Growing up in such contrasting environments fostered his curiosity and desire to understand the forces that shape the world’s immensely different societies and economies. This desire led Andrei to pursue his undergraduate degree at Wharton, concentrating in Finance and minoring in Economics and Mathematics. During this time, he also enjoyed a semester abroad, studying in Lyon, France. After graduation, during the height of the global financial crisis, Andrei began his career in Morgan Stanley’s Financial Institutions Investment Banking group, where he had the opportunity to work immediately on some of the firm’s highest-profile assignments, including advising the U.S. Treasury Department on the successful bail-out and restructuringofFannieMae and Freddie Mac. Seeking amoreinternationalandentrepreneurialexperience,AndreithenmovedtoHSBC tohelpestablishitsLatinAmericaM&AgroupinNewYorkCity.There,headvisedLatin American and Emerging Market clients such as Camargo Corrêa, BRF Brasil Foods, and Almaraioncomplex,cross-borderM&Atransactions. To develophisunderstandingofhowtomanagecompanies,AndreileftHSBCin2012tojoin CoveView Capital Partners, an operationally focused, lower-middle-market private equity firmbasedinConnecticut.There,heworkedhand-in-handwithportfolio-company management teams to design and implement operational improvements and growth initiatives across the industrial and retail sectors. As amemberoftheGlobalProgramatLauder,Andreihopestogainexposuretoareasofthe world he has not seen or experienced yet, such as Africa and Asia, and thus further his understanding of their important and growing roles in the world economy. Andrei is passionate about science and the outdoors and enjoys trail-running, back-country skiing, scuba diving, and virtually every other outdoor activity. He is also an avid sci-fi and fantasy fan. Lauder Focus: Global Program CHARLIE McCARREN Charlie was born and raised in Denver, Colorado. Growing up in the shadows of the Rocky Mountains, he developed a keen interest in the outdoors. To this day, he remains an avid skier, snowboarder, and trail-runner. Charlie attended the University of Michigan, graduating in 2007 with a degree in Economics and History. There, he was active in the student government, played on the men’s club water polo team, and served as a mentor to local middle-school students. His interest in economics and Chinese history culminated in a senior thesis that sought to address why Hong Kong remained a British crown colony during the post-war period of decolonization. After graduation, he received two fellowships to study in Beijing, China — first at Peking University and then at Beijing International Studies University (BISU). During his time in Beijing, Charlie quickly improved his knowledge of Mandarin from a rudimentary to an advanced level. He spent three semesters studying Chinese at BISU, taking classes in the morning and interning at SJ Grand International Business Solutions, a boutique consulting firm, in the afternoon. At SJ Grand, he was responsible for drafting bi-weekly reports addressing key developments in China’s business and regulatory environments. After completing his internship in Beijing, Charlie moved to Seoul, South Korea, to take up a sales position for a firm specializing in international employee relocations. In addition to gaining direct sales experience, he had the opportunity to study Korean in the evenings. Living and working in Korea provided him with another vantage point from which to analyze the regional dynamics at play in East Asia. After two years, he decided to return to the U.S., where he joined IHS as an economist, researching and forecasting commodity prices. His knowledge of Mandarin played a crucial role in broadening his team’s coverage of commodity and material prices throughout China. Charlie aspires to deepen his connections with China and East Asia more broadly through Wharton/Lauder. In particular, he wants to transition into a management or strategy consulting role in the region, focusing on the consumer electronics, industrials, and metals & mining sectors. In his spare time, Charlie still finds time to enjoy the outdoors. He also helps coach a U.S. Masters swim team and is a nationally ranked Masters swimmer. Outside the pool, he enjoys reading books on Asian history, business strategy, and science fiction. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese THOMAS McELWEE Tom was born and raised in Charlotte, North Carolina. His interest in Latin America and Spanish began when he was a middle-school exchange student in Mexico City, Mexico. This experience led him to study the language in high school and to major in Comparative Literature and Spanish at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. While at Chapel Hill, Tom spent a semester studying abroad in Buenos Aires, Argentina. This adventure inspired his senior thesis in Comparative Literature, which compared the historical, lyrical, and musical similarities between the Argentine Tango and Mississippi’s Delta Blues. Feeling that one semester in Latin America was not enough, Tom moved to Buenos Aires immediately after graduation in 2009. He spent most of his two years there working with Horizon Capital, a boutique merchant and investment bank focusing on energy and transportation. While investor interest in Argentina continued to wane, exciting opportunities were opening in nearby Brazil; and Tom decided that he needed on-the-ground time in that country to broaden his Latin American experience. He moved to São Paulo, Brazil, in 2011 to pursue new opportunities. With visa options proving difficult, he enrolled in an accounting program at a local university in order to qualify for internships, and took a six-month position with JP Morgan’s Latin America Equity Research team. At the end of the internship, he was hired full-time and spent over three years covering the Industrials and Agribusiness industries of Brazil, Mexico, and Chile. At Wharton/Lauder, Tom hopes to broaden his Latin American experience further by gaining a better understanding of Peru, Mexico, and Colombia. Eventually, he hopes to leverage this knowledge within a corporation looking to grow in the region. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Spanish GUILLERMO MEDINA BENITEZ Guillermo was born and raised in Mexico City, Mexico. At age 17, he was awarded a scholarship to study at the United World College of South East Asia (UWCSEA) in Singapore. After his time at UWCSEA, Guillermo decided to pursue a B.A. in Economics and Mathematics at Macalester College because he believed in the practical applications of both degrees in today’s business environment. Based on his earlier experience in Asia and his passion for internationalism, he studied abroad at Template University in Japan during his junior year. At Macalester, he was involved in a number of activities, including the Macalester Sustainability Committee and the Macalester Investment Group. He also co-wrote multiple chapters of the econometrics textbook currently used by students there. After graduation, Guillermo joined Deloitte Consulting’s Strategy and Operations division, where he focused on the M&A and Restructuring area. He gained significant experience in the Consumer and Industrial Products and Financial Services industries while supporting multiple global transactions. He also co-led the Deployment and Retention Committee as part of his involvement with the National Business Analyst Action Committee and led multiple Junior Achievement projects in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Building on his previous experiences, Guillermo became passionate about international business and entrepreneurship opportunities. At Wharton/Lauder, he plans to continue exploring business opportunities in Latin America while learning Portuguese. In his spare time, Guillermo is an avid soccer fan and enjoys international travel. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese MANU MOHAN Born in New Delhi, India, Manu spent his formative years being planted in and uprooted from five cities and seven international schools in Thailand, India, and Singapore. He grew up speaking Thai with his nanny, English with his parents, Hindi with his grandparents, and German with his classmates. His upbringing as a third-culture child molded his alternate sense of belonging and deep-rooted adaptability to people of other cultures. Manu’s entrepreneurial passion led him to enroll at the National University of Singapore and Stanford University for a joint-degree program focused on engineering and entrepreneurship management on a full academic scholarship. In addition to a position on the Model UN team, he held leadership roles on organizing committees for business-plan competitions at NUS and Stanford. He started a company in his junior year that melded his keen interests in finance and venture capital. Armed with this perspective, he interned on the Sales Trading floor at Deutsche Bank in India and Nomura’s Investment Banking division in Singapore and Hong Kong. After graduation, Manu spent two years in Goldman Sachs’ Investment Banking division in Hong Kong, where he was instrumental in executing over $7 billion in equity transactions in the Financial Institutions, Natural Resources, and Healthcare sectors in Asia. Realizing that the most rewarding aspect of his job was working with nascent companies in the developing world, he joined International Finance Corporation, the private-sector arm of the World Bank, where he helped structure equity, debt, and mezzanine investments deploying upwards of $270 million toward projects that increased access to nutrition, healthcare, and education in Asia. Manu continued his entrepreneurial journey, serving as the CFO of his most recent startup, Oddle, which provides F&B vendors with online enterprise software for sales-order management, marketing, and data analytics. Oddle has received $1million in venture capital and private investor funding. In his spare time, Manu is an avid photographer, self-proclaimed music and film aficionado, and voracious traveller, having backpacked across Europe, traversed America on numerous road trips, and camped in urban Japan on shoestring budgets. At Wharton/Lauder, Manu hopes to understand in his culture of birth the same nuances he has sought to grasp in other cultures. He wants to build proficiency in Hindi; improve his understanding of India’s history, culture, politics, and business practices; and develop the cross-functional leadership and management skills necessary to succeed in a global economy. Lauder Focus: South Asia and Hindi PAUL MOSS Paul was born and raised in Southern California, but has lived in cities across the U.S. most of his adult life. In addition to his domestic travels, he spent an extended period of time living and working in Asia, where he developed knowledge of the Japanese language and culture. Paul’s love for language and culture initially began in high school, where he studied Spanish for three years and enjoyed many aspects of Latin American culture. Shortly after completing high school, and with no knowledge of Japanese, he was sent on a volunteer assignment to Tokyo, where he spent two years learning the language through a full immersion. In Japan, he participated in a number of volunteer activities, including work with the elderly and disabled, English instruction, and various other character-building leadership activities. Upon his return from Japan, Paul entered Brigham Young University, where he majored in psychology and took advantage of many of the Marriott School’s business offerings. He served as president of the Consulting Club and was selected as a member of the school’s Business Strategy program. He also took a number of courses to build on his foundational knowledge of Japanese and spent time serving as a volunteer interpreter for the school. He graduated cum laude in 2011 with a B.Sc. in Psychology and a minor in Business Strategy. After graduation, Paul took a position with Deloitte Consulting’s Strategy and Operations practice in Seattle, Washington. There he advised clients in a number of industries, including Life Sciences, Technology, Retail, and Telecommunications, while developing a broad skill set across strategy, finance, and M&A. He was sent to Japan on a number of occasions to advise U.S. and Japan-based clients, which allowed him to work closely with Japanese executives in a variety of settings. Prior to joining Deloitte, he worked for Boeing, in a Corporate Finance role, and for a boutique strategy consultancy, where he led the firm’s training initiatives. In his spare time, Paul enjoys reading, long-distance running, and eating sushi. Through the Wharton/Lauder program, he hopes to expand his interest in Asian economies and further improve his proficiency in Japanese. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Japanese ANTONIO MUÑOZ VILLANEUVA Born and raised in Ciudad Real, a small city in the middle of Spain, Antonio was exposed to multicultural environments from a young age. He lived in Germany, spent several summers in the U.K. under different academic exchange programs, and travelled frequently around Europe. These experiences helped him develop a strong awareness of global business and international relationships. He is business-fluent in Spanish and English and is conversant in German, French, and Portuguese. He has worked in Spain, Germany, Brazil, and Cameroon and has visited more than 30 countries. In 2008, Antonio graduated with a degree in Civil Engineering from the universities of Castilla la Mancha, Spain, and RWTH Aachen, Germany. After graduation, he joined the ACS Group, one of the world’s largest construction companies. In 2010, he moved to the Allianz Group’s Global Corporate & Specialty division, serving as an underwriter and global-risk engineer. At Allianz, Antonio led multicultural and cross-functional teams, leading technical due diligence and risk analysis for corporate clients in the energy and heavy civil industries. One of 12 people worldwide selected for Allianz’s Global Talent Development Program (Class of 2014), he led a multinational six-person team that completed a global productivity analysis, reporting directly to the Chief Financial Officer. He also spent several months in São Paulo, Brazil, helping in the development of the local team. An avid social entrepreneur, Antonio directed the construction of a hospital and a primary school in Cameroon, and currently serves as an advisor and angel investor in two startups in the healthcare and data analytics industries. Antonio has played for one of the best handball teams in the world, Club Balonmano Ciudad Real, which won the Spanish National League, the European Champions League, and the World Clubs Cup, among other honors. He has also played in the third German handball league. At Wharton/Lauder, Antonio plans to develop a regional focus and gain the grass-roots cultural exposure he is seeking. Lauder Focus: Global Program GUILLERMO NEMIROVSKY DAGER Born and raised in Caracas, Venezuela, Guillermo is the son of a Venezuelan mother with Lebanese roots and an Argentinean father of Russian descent. Growing up around a dining-room table that coupled arepas, kibbeh, and borsch with the respectful discussion of sensitive issues, he developed a keen interest in multiculturalism and the importance of diversity of thought. Seeking to further understand and find solutions for the socio-political challenges in his country, Guillermo attended the Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University, earning a degree in International Politics and a certificate in International Development. He complemented his studies with internships in the Economic Department of the Embassy of Venezuela and conducted research at the International Monetary Fund, both in Washington, D.C. After graduation, Guillermo joined the Export Credit & Multilateral Agency Financing (EAF) team at Citibank in New York, where he covered Latin American clients. His transaction experience included structuring a World Bank Guaranteed Loan for the construction of the $2 billion Panama City Metro and negotiating U.S. government-backed lending for microfinance and SME portfolios in Central America. He also developed expertise in corporate finance and asset-backed fixed-income structures in the aviation sector. Guillermo was then hired by the Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG) to participate in the development and management of its EAF product in the Americas. In this role, he led the issuance of MUFG’s first U.S. Export-Import Bank-Guaranteed Bond, which supported the sale and financing of multiple Boeing 737-800 aircraft. He then transitioned into MUFG’s Project Finance Department, focusing on advising the implementation of non-recourse green-field transactions in the oil and gas, infrastructure, and power space. He participated in marquee transactions, including assisting South Africa’s Sasol Corporation in financing the construction of its $9 billion Lake Charles polyethylene plant in Louisiana and in a $700 million Samsung-sponsored combined-cycle power plant in Antofagasta, Chile. Guillermo was heavily involved in MUFG’s corporate social responsibility efforts, and was selected to present on the bank’s results in this space during the 2014 One Young World Conference in Dublin, Ireland. In New York, he is also a junior board member of South Bronx United, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping first-generation youth from immigrant families achieve academic and athletic success. In his free time, Guillermo enjoys watching Argentinean futbol, participating in winter sports, and playing the tenor saxophone. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese DEE NG Dee grew up in Hong Kong and studied Chinese history and literature throughout her middle-school education. At age 15, she moved to Boston for high school and began her journey abroad. During her college summer internship in Los Angeles, California, she worked part-time on weekends at a Taiwanese teahouse, where she practiced speaking Mandarin and continued to advance her conversational skills by speaking the language with her friends. Dee was a McMullen Scholar at Cornell University, where she majored in Operations Research. She participated in the engineering co-op program with Estée Lauder’s manufacturing plant in Long Island, where she helped to optimize the efficiency and operating costs of the company’s production lines. Melding her love of sports and music, she was the captain for an intramural volleyball team, which reached the finals several times, and cofounded an a cappella group that performs Asian music at different cultural events. After graduation in 2007, Dee moved to New York City and joined Capgemini Consulting’s technology transformation practice, where she helped to formulate business-technology strategies for Fortune 500 clients. She later joined Ernst & Young’s consulting practice in New York and was promoted to Manager in 2012, leading and managing $300,000-$5,000,000 client projects across the Life Sciences, Retail, and Utility industries. In 2013, she returned to Hong Kong and joined Deloitte Consulting, delivering business and operational strategies for Healthcare and Public Sector clients. There, she managed a team of ~20 consultants in a diverse working environment where she spoke English, Cantonese, and Mandarin with different project teams. Throughout her consulting career, she has also been an active mentor, leading counseling and campus-recruiting initiatives for her companies. At Wharton/Lauder, Dee looks forward to leveraging her professional experience in the U.S. and China with her international business education to facilitate future cross-cultural business opportunities. During her free time, Dee helps to support her family’s garment-manufacturing business in marketing and client development. She also plays in competitive volleyball leagues and enjoys snowboarding trips in Asia and Europe. She is a vocalist for her church’s worship arts team and a teacher for the children’s program on Sundays. Her weekend evenings are usually spent with fellow foodies, exploring new restaurants and cuisines from different countries. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese ALEXANDRE NOGUEIRA Alexandre received his Industrial Engineering degree from the Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG) in Brazil. There, he was a junior researcher and led a project at Vallourec & Mannesman to increase the efficiency of internal logistics by using simulation software. He was awarded the Santos-Dumond scholarship and spent a semester at ISIMA in France, with a focus on industrial computer programming. During this time, he developed a strong interest in the French and Maghrebian cultures. Back in Brazil and increasingly interested in finance, he participated in an internship at a Brazilian financial consulting company, where he developed and implemented algorithms for credit analysis. After graduating from UFMG, Alexandre pursued a Master’s in Finance at HEC Paris, France, concentrating on asset management and graduating with Highest Honors. During this one-year program, he joined Goldman Sachs’ Wealth Management division as a summer intern in Geneva, Switzerland. He worked on a multicultural team where he was responsible for conducting research and analysis for ultra-high-net-worth individuals’ investment portfolios. He was offered a full-time position and was transferred to São Paulo, Brazil, where he joined Goldman Sachs’ Portfolio Management group. There, he co-managed 49 funds of funds for the Wealth Management division’s clients. In 2014, Alexandre left Goldman Sachs to join J. Mendes, an investment office. Among his many projects, he redesigned the offshore-investment structure, created the first in-housemanaged fund of funds, implemented in-house portfolio consolidation, restructured family members’ retirement funds, and led new partnership negotiations. At Wharton/Lauder, Alexandre plans to further investigate how to create value by investing in private companies. He also wants to expand his cultural awareness and communication tools to help him navigate through the French and North African ways of doing business. Alexandre speaks fluent Portuguese, English, and French. He studied Mandarin for two years and plans to take up these studies again someday. He is an avid reader and a passionate cook, having obtained a French-cuisine diploma from École Ritz Ecoffier in Paris. He is a PADI-certified diver and has completed several long-distance running races. Lauder Focus: Europe and French DANIEL ODETTE Daniel was born and raised in Baltimore, Maryland. Early experiences travelling with his family and studying French and Spanish sparked his interest in other cultures and languages. He began studying Mandarin at Middlebury College and completed the Middlebury Summer Language School prior to spending a semester in Hangzhou, China. He then spent two months backpacking across China and Southeast Asia. To better understand the forces of globalization and development he had observed, he completed a double major in Chinese and Economics, graduating with honors. After graduation in 2010, Daniel moved to Shanghai and spent four years working in the research department for the real-estate firm Jones Lang LaSalle. He eventually became manager of the firm’s Real Estate Intelligence Service, which provides analyses of the residential, office, and retail property markets across 26 cities in mainland China. In this role, he coordinated a team of more than 40 researchers across 12 offices and travelled extensively to conduct first-hand research in cities around the country. He also oversaw the firm’s research on real-estate capital markets, tracking investment trends and advising a wide variety of clients, including real-estate developers, private-equity investors, and sovereign wealth funds, on their strategies in China. Daniel’s experiences in China led to his keen interest in the country’s ongoing economic expansion and, in particular, the fields of urbanization and real-estate development. He is a member of the Urban Land Institute and was a participant in its Young Leaders Group in Shanghai, where he organized property tours, panel discussions, and networking events. He was also a member of the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai and, as part of its Real Estate Committee, presented regularly to the Chamber’s members on real-estate and economic trends in China. He is passionate about architecture and urban planning, particularly the fields of sustainability and green building design. He received Green Associate certification from the U.S. Green Building Council and has conducted research on the environmental sustainability of commercial properties in Shanghai. Daniel helped to organize the Middlebury Alumni Association in Shanghai. He also initiated a summer-internship program at his firm for Middlebury students. Daniel hopes his experiences at Wharton/Lauder will strengthen his understanding of global economic and business trends and enable him to work in a global role in the real-estate industry. In his free time he enjoys reading, snowboarding, playing guitar, and travelling. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese RAFAEL PAIXÃO DE LA ROSA Rafael was born in São Paulo, Brazil, and lived most of his life both there and in a mid-sized city in the south. Descended from Spaniards and Italians, he carries a passion for learning and exploring new places and cultures. Rafael earned a bachelor’s degree in Business Administration from Fundação Getulio Vargas, graduating in the top 5% of his class. He was also part of the group (finishing in second place) that represented the school at the 2008 Scotiabank International Case Competition in Canada. Concurrently, he worked as an intern for ten months in the Wholesale Business Intelligence division of Banco Santander, where he and his manager implemented a new wallet-size tool and performed key competitive analyses. He then embarked on a six-month exchange program in the Netherlands at Universiteit Maastricht. As he experienced more of the world and expanded his goals, he decided to continue his education and entered the prestigious law school at Universidade de São Paulo (USP), simultaneously attending evening classes and working full-time. Rafael then joined General Electric (GE) through its Financial Management Program (FMP), a two-year program that provided four assignments in Brazil and the U.S. He then chose to work in GE’s healthcare business, first as the FP&A for the Brazil aftersales P&L, shaping reports and controls to support an increase in profits. Later, he became the Brazil Commercial Controller, managing policies and commercial processes as well as integrating the healthcare division’s first acquisition in Brazil. Just over a year later, he was promoted to Commercial Finance Manager, his most recent position, where he led the contract-risk management-system simplification, coordinated the implementation of payment instructions for customers, and revamped both the order-booking process and the operational team. At the same time, he maintained strong ties with the leadership program, co-leading an internal recruiting initiative of strong interns and assigning them to extended preparation prior to their joining the FMP. In addition, he was a grader for the Controls module during 2H’2013 and coached some of the FMP freshmen. At Wharton/Lauder, Rafael plans to examine Latin American issues in depth and then translate his acquired knowledge into action to meet local needs and characteristics. In his spare time, Rafael enjoys going to the gym, running, travelling, and reading. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Spanish TRAVIS PFANDER Travis was born and raised in Dayton, Ohio. During middle school, he traveled to Western Europe as part of the People to People Student Ambassadors program, which sparked an early international interest. At Chaminade Julienne High School, he pursued this interest by studying both Latin and, briefly, Spanish. Travis attended Princeton University, graduating with honors with a degree in Operations Research and Financial Engineering. He was active in a wide range of campus groups, including Business Today, The Daily Princetonian sports section, and the Orange Key tour guides. He was treasurer of the Princeton Charter Club, one of the school’s eating clubs. Despite having no foreign-language requirement as an engineering student, he chose to begin studying Mandarin Chinese from scratch. He spent the summer between his freshman and sophomore years at the Princeton in Beijing immersion program and continued his Chinese studies over the next three years. After graduation, Travis joined Goldman Sachs in New York as an investment banking analyst in the Corporate Risk Management group. He spent two years structuring bespoke interest rate and foreign exchange derivative transactions for the firm’s corporate clients. He worked across industries ranging from healthcare and consumer retail to industrials and natural resources, and he structured hedging transactions in a variety of situations. After realizing that the market-oriented nature of the group interested him the most, Travis joined the Goldman Sachs Investment Strategy group, a global macro tactical investment team. There, he researched and analyzed economic and financial markets for the firm’s high-net-worth private wealth management clients. He contributed to the team’s research publications, including two of its annual comprehensive Outlook publications, and developed trading ideas for implementation in the team’s tactical portfolio. In his free time, Travis enjoys a wide range of interests. He learned to ski in the last few years and recently joined a curling league in Brooklyn. He enjoys fantasy football and is an avid sports fan. He currently serves on the board of governors of the Princeton Charter Club. At Wharton/Lauder, Travis looks forward to expanding his knowledge of international business, investment, and strategy and furthering his understanding of East Asia, after spending the first part of his career in New York. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese GABRIELE PIGOLI Born and raised in Italy, Gabriele developed a passion for all that was diverse when he was very young. At age 14, he embarked on his first semester abroad in Ireland, which was soon followed by a semester in Australia and California. Believing economics would be a way to combine his passions for history and problem solving, Gabriele attended Bocconi University, where he earned his Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in Finance. While there, to fund his travels, he started a profitable tutoring agency, connecting university students from out of town with local school teachers. This enabled him to visit five continents before graduation. A strong supporter of the equity story of emerging markets, Gabriele took his first job in research at Beltone Financial, a leading Egyptian investment bank, where he was one of two non-Arabic members of an award-winning 20-person team. He left the country in the wake of the Egyptian revolution to join Intesa Sanpaolo, Italy’s largest bank, as part of its first management program. During his tenure as an analyst, he achieved an early promotion and was relocated to Hong Kong as a manager to support the set-up of the bank’s first global-markets platform in Asia. There he developed the commercial strategy for Greenfield accounts and supported the Sales team through its launch and implementation, becoming the youngest expatriate in that position in the branch’s history. Subsequently, he was relocated to the bank’s headquarters in Milan, to start up the newly created Healthcare Coverage team. In his free time, Gabriele enjoys playing the piano with his jazz band, creating new recipes in the kitchen, skiing, and scuba diving. He speaks Italian and French and plans to improve on his basic Mandarin. At Wharton/Lauder, Gabriele seeks to learn as much as possible from his classmates, believing that unique ideas can blossom only in a diverse environment. Lauder Focus: Global Program PUSHPAK PUJARI Pushpak was born in Rourkela, a small town in eastern India. His father’s work took him to different parts of the country, with their diverse cultures and religions. As a result, Pushpak grew up in a multicultural environment and spoke five different Indian languages. His first international experience was a summer research internship at the University of New Mexico, where his work with people from all over the world sparked his passion to explore various cultures and work with people from completely different cultural backgrounds. After majoring in Electrical Engineering at the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, Pushpak pursued cross-cultural experiences centered on technology in Japan, where he worked at Sony Corporation for four years, designing digital camera systems and providing professional imaging solutions. During his time there, he developed a specialization in display and touch-based technologies and gained valuable international management skills by working with various global Sony units and leading teams to integrate touchscreen tech into a flagship camera model. Prior to that, he formulated the technology strategy and product roadmap for touch-based devices and helped revise the line-up of all of Sony’s camera lines. Realizing that the language barriers and alienation the international employees faced kept them from contributing optimally, Pushpak was inspired to work with the Global Human Resources division to develop a buddy program and a business-training curriculum to help these employees make new friends and adjust to their new work environment. Also, following his passion for low-cost and high-tech devices, he was one of the core members of the Sony Reverse Innovation Committee, which focused on developing products to bring health and education innovations to emerging economies. Pushpak’s long-term goal is to build healthier communities by developing low-cost healthcare and wellness devices that will transform the lives of millions around the world. In his spare time, Pushpak enjoys reading and travelling. He is an avid photography enthusiast and loves to experiment with various styles and settings. He eagerly awaits winter opportunities to go skiing. He also enjoys hiking and has scaled Mt. Fuji multiple times. Lauder Focus: Global Program JAMES RANDALL James was born and raised in Melbourne, Australia. During high school, he began learning Mandarin Chinese and participated in an exchange in Wuxi, China. The experiences and challenges of attending a Chinese school and living with a local family sparked his passion for learning about other languages and cultures. James attended Bond University in Australia, studying on the Australia Day Scholarship. He was actively involved in student life, including the surfing club and playing the cello in the school’s string quartet. He continued to seek out international adventures and spent time at both Uppsala University in Sweden and the University of Texas Law School in Austin. He graduated in 2009 with a Bachelor of Law with Honors and a Bachelor of Business. After graduation, he moved to Beijing for a year to further his Chinese studies at Tsinghua University. James sought a career with opportunities to develop business skills across a range of industries and to work internationally. He joined L.E.K. Consulting in 2011 and returned to his hometown of Melbourne. He worked on many types of projects, including corporate and business-unit strategy cases and due diligence work. In Australia, he gained experience in industries as varied as agriculture, superannuation, fast-moving consumer goods, electricity transmission, retail, digital media, and aviation. Some of his more significant projects included assessing a joint-venture opportunity for two listed Australian food companies and providing support during negotiations for several large financial-services contracts. In 2013, James took a sabbatical to continue studying Chinese at Beijing Language and Culture University. Following that, he moved to Shanghai to work in L.E.K. Consulting’s Life Science practice, where he advised global pharmaceutical and medical-device companies. He also led training sessions for the Asia region and enjoyed various culinary, cultural, and sporting activities with his colleagues. In his spare time, James is an avid skier and surfer and loves to play tennis. He is also an accomplished cellist and has toured internationally with the Chamber Strings of Melbourne. As a Leonard Lauder Fellow, James is excited about continuing to study Chinese and learning about East Asian political, cultural, and economic issues. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese ALLEGRA RICHARDS Allegra was born in New York and grew up in Switzerland and Russia. Living abroad for over 15 years fueled her eagerness to explore other cultures, languages, and ways of thinking. Allegra returned to the U.S. to attend Harvard College, where she studied English and Visual and Environmental Studies. She explored the American expatriate condition in her senior honors thesis, which focused on the written works of Henry James and Edith Wharton and on the paintings of John Singer Sargent. In addition, she wrote for both The Harvard Crimson and The Harvard Independent, directed and produced theatrical productions, managed the international students’ society, and was a coxswain on the intramural crew team. She was awarded the Thomas H. Wood Prize for the most promising undergraduate journalist. After graduation, Allegra returned to expatriate life, this time as a reporter for the Associated Press in Rome. But writing about current events wasn’t enough. Allegra wanted to get closer to the action, so she accepted a position at the White House as the sole intern for the President’s speechwriting team and then worked in foreign policy for the U.S. government. More recently, she worked as a Senior Consultant at Booz Allen Hamilton, where she advised senior government leaders on technology. Allegra aims to merge her interests in foreign policy, geopolitics, and business with the ultimate goal of working in both industry and government during her career. At Wharton/ Lauder, she looks forward to developing practical ways to manage across cultural boundaries and to contribute to global institutions. She also hopes to improve her French, develop her Arabic, and forge close relationships with classmates who share her international frame of mind. In her spare time, Allegra loves oil painting, travelling, yoga, and tennis. She speaks fluent French and Italian, as well as conversational Russian, Spanish, and Swahili. Lauder Focus: Western Europe and French TYPHAINE ROBERT While born in Paris, Typhaine spent very little time in France, as she moved to London at age 3. Living in a bilingual environment led to her strong interest in cross-cultural experiences, especially after she added a third language, Spanish, through her studies. While she was a teenager, her family relocated to Geneva, Switzerland, where she focused on her dream of becoming a top internationally competitive tennis player. After earning her French baccalaureate, Typhaine returned to the U.K. to study discrete mathematics at the University of Warwick. There she developed strong logical reasoning skills and an appreciation for elegant solutions. During her university summers, she discovered trading by interning at Commerzbank and BNP Paribas. After graduation, she was offered a position as a trader at Commerzbank. After spending three years in the theoretical world of mathematics, she chose the most tangible asset of all, commodities. Over the course of four years at Commerzbank, Typhaine was given sole responsibility for the agricultural trading books, managing both the established structured products book and the brand new corporate hedging book. As she traded wheat grown in France and sold in Egypt, corn processed to run U.S. cars, and soybeans from Brazil used to feed Chinese pigs, she developed a new global perspective. Through her fascination for the sugar and coffee industries, she accumulated knowledge about the Brazilian economy, political environment, and weather. This experience piqued her curiosity, leading her to want to better understand the country, culture, and language. In 2013, Typhaine got her first taste of the world of startups when she met 1995 Lauder alumna and serial entrepreneur Christine Bourron. She became involved in Christine’s latest business, Pi-eX Ltd., as it was developing a new innovative platform to trade financial products based on fine art. This new adventure inspired Typhaine to plan to work after Wharton/Lauder in an environment that values entrepreneurship and leadership. Outside the office, Typhaine’s love for the Swiss and French Alps means that most of her holidays are spent hiking, snow-shoeing, and skiing. However, she is also an avid scuba diver, and spent a month diving in Thailand after graduation. She looks forward to Lauder’s Culture Quest, as her knack for crazy adventures started at age 18 with a 36-hour charity hitchhike through five countries, from Warwick, England, to Prague, in the Czech Republic. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese MONICA SCHEID Monica was born and raised in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. She began to learn Spanish in high school and quickly became fascinated with travelling to different parts of the world, learning new languages, and building relationships with individuals from around the globe. She participated in several exchange trips in Central America during high school before enrolling in the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. At Georgetown, Monica focused her studies on the intersection of economics and politics, analyzing the impact of public policy on economic development, trade, and finance. She lived abroad for a year in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where she attended the University of Buenos Aires and took courses on Latin American economic and social development, comparative politics, and MERCOSUR, the South American trading bloc. In her spare time, she enjoyed learning how to tango and salsa. She also served on the steering committee of the Carroll Round, an annual international economics conference hosted by Georgetown, and interned at the U.S. Department of Commerce’s International Trade Administration, where she identified new trade opportunities in emerging markets, focusing primarily on Brazil. After graduation, Monica joined Accenture’s Management Consulting practice. As a member of the Communications, Media, & Technology industry group, she worked with the leading cable and communications companies in the U.S. During her first two years, with two teammates she drove $25 million in annual cost savings for a cable client through strategic sourcing opportunities; she independently worked with Senior Vice President-level clients to develop a scalable, repeatable upsell model for their small and medium business channels; and she jointly designed new product concepts for a $70 billion company that were ultimately developed for market trial. She also ran the management consulting new joiner program for Accenture’s Washington, D.C., office. She was promoted to consultant in under two years and relocated to the Chicago office. Most recently, she managed the redesign of an internal sales application for a leading cable company and worked to define the customer-care integration strategy for the merger of two industry-leading clients. Outside work, for the last three years Monica served as a résumé and interview coach for KIPP charter-school students. In addition, she co-led a 30-person committee supporting the education and employment needs of members of Catholic Charities’ Refugee Resettlement Program in Chicago. She also enjoys running and is an avid home cook and baker. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Spanish NIDHI SHAH Nidhi hopes to solve India’s sanitation problems and cares deeply about issues affecting women worldwide. It all began with her birth to Gujarati parents in New Jersey. She then grew up in the bustling city of Bombay, India, learning Hindi and Marathi through her early schooling. She celebrated her eleventh birthday and beyond back in New Jersey and now considers both places home. A tinkerer from a young age, with strong support from her widowed mother, Nidhi attended an engineering high school where, for her senior design project, she invented and programmed an automatic home window. She also organized the collection of used bicycles with Pedals for Progress and donated them to people whose primary mode of transport was a two-wheeler. Nidhi went on to pursue a degree in chemical engineering at Columbia University, after spending a year at Rutgers. During her time at Columbia, she had the unique opportunity to study abroad for a semester at University College London, where she discovered her inner foodie and also volunteered as a mentor for inner-city youth. After graduation in 2011, Nidhi joined Koch Modular Process Systems as a process engineer. She designed portable chemical separation factories for many different industries and learned a great deal about American manufacturing. In early 2014, she started up a plant she had designed. She was the youngest person and only female on a team of 20. Seeking greater challenges and hoping to make a more meaningful contribution to the world, Nidhi then explored local and state politics, volunteering her time to help Cory Booker get elected to the U.S. Senate. She then began volunteering with Toilets for People, an organization that is addressing the global sanitation problem. Armed with these experiences and a newfound passion, she plans to create her own for-profit venture to tackle sanitation issues in India. At Wharton/Lauder, she will hone her Hindi language skills and cultural acumen in support of this larger goal. In her spare time, Nidhi mentors female engineers to help them find their ideal career paths. When she wants to relax, she relies on a few different activities, from watching Netflix with her husband to eating out (especially Thai food) and working out (she’s working on doing a strict pull-up). Lauder Focus: South Asia and Hindi STEPHEN SNYDER Stephen was born and raised in New York City. Growing up in a multiethnic metropolis with family, friends, classmates, and mentors from dozens of countries around the world fostered his interest in learning foreign languages and interacting with other cultures. Stephen earned a Bachelor of Arts with Highest Honors and High Distinction from the University of Michigan in 2010. In a class of over 400, he was one of four recipients of the William Jennings Bryan Prize from the Political Science Department for demonstrating the most promise in the field. He also received the James M. Gartenberg Memorial Scholarship and served four years as chairman of the alumni association committee that grants this award to incoming students from New York City. In addition, he remains an ardent fan of Michigan football and basketball. While in college, Stephen travelled frequently, including nine months studying in Paris, two months intensively learning Azerbaijani in Baku with the U.S. State Department Critical Language Scholarship Program, a month interning in the Canadian House of Commons in Ottawa, and academic tours of Iceland and Greece. After graduation, Stephen joined the boutique emerging-markets-focused strategy consulting and intelligence firm Ergo in New York. During his four years there, he managed teams of in-house analysts and overseas subject-matter experts to produce ground-level insights about pressing competitive intelligence, regulatory analysis, market landscaping, and due diligence challenges for C-suite audiences at leading private equity, law, agriculture, and energy firms. As a speaker of French, he regularly covered francophone markets, particularly Algeria, about which he authored in-depth profiles of the 50 most influential leaders in the country. He also served as the point person for numerous key initiatives within the firm, such as launching joint ventures and spin-off firms, developing new products, streamlining standard operating procedures, and creating multiple quantitative benchmarking indices. Stephen speaks fluent French, intermediate Spanish, and conversational Modern Greek and Azerbaijani. He is passionate about bicycling, travel, the culture of the former Soviet Union, seltzer, and exploring Brooklyn. Lauder Focus: Europe and French FRANCISCO RODOLFO TABOADA Francisco was born and raised in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in a Spanish-Italian family. His early exposure to multicultural backgrounds sparked his passion to explore new languages and territories. Francisco attended the Universidad Católica Argentina, where he studied Economics and graduated magna cum laude. Discovering a particular interest in finance, he served as a teaching assistant both at his university and in introductory finance courses at the Universidad de Buenos Aires. After graduation, Francisco joined Prefinex, a financial advisory firm that specializes in M&A transactions across Latin America, with a particular focus on Brazil. He participated in deals in the food & beverage, auto-parts, and energy sectors. Travels to Minas Gerais and São Paulo enabled him to develop his Portuguese skills and connect with a culture he has always found fascinating. Francisco then took on an Analyst position at Compass Lexecon within its International Arbitration group. There, he explored the economic consulting world while combining his economics background with his financial work experience. He participated in over 15 arbitration cases by developing damage valuation models and leading research projects in the oil & gas, utilities, and mining industries in Latin America and Eastern Europe. With the goal of refocusing on finance and deepening his interaction with Latin America, Francisco joined the Buenos Aires office of KBR Group, a boutique investment bank headquartered in Frankfurt, Germany, and specialized in M&A and financing alternatives through innovative structures. His work entailed onsite project development in Brazil, Chile, Peru, Venezuela, Colombia, and Argentina, covering the oil & gas, petrochemical, and renewable-energy industries. Francisco contributed directly to KBR’s growth and institutionalization on both the execution and origination sides: He pursued initiatives that accounted for 20% of the Buenos Aires office’s revenue and led the recruiting processes for the Bogotá and Buenos Aires offices. These outcomes led to his becoming the youngest Associate across the bank’s 11 offices. Francisco’s interaction with Latin America extends beyond the professional realm: He has been an active member of TECHO, a Latin-American NGO that provides housing solutions for underprivileged families. He has also participated in a government-backed national housing project in Venezuela, serving as a financial advisor to assess the program’s economic sustainability. Francisco speaks Spanish, English, fluent Portuguese, and conversational Italian. In his free time, he loves travelling and exploring cultures through their food, cooking, and playing soccer and tennis. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese SUMIKO TAKU Sumiko was born in China’s rural Shandong Province, about ten hours away by train from its provincial capital of Qingdao. She moved to Japan at age 2 and later to Vancouver, Canada, at age 14. These relocations gave her a sense of multiculturalism at an early age and provided her with the motivation to explore the world. While attending the University of Toronto, Sumiko participated in an exchange program at the University of Sussex, one of the most international universities in the U.K. Her interactions with international students from all over gave her an appreciation for the European and Latin American cultures. During college, Sumiko interned with Morgan Stanley’s Equity Sales and Trading team. Her fascination for dynamic financial markets eventually led her to join Barclays after graduation in 2011. There, she worked in sales to launch fixed-income and mutual-fund products for the Japanese retail market. She first worked on a project to market a strategy for iPath, Barclays’ Exchange Traded Note, which was newly launched in Japan the year she joined the firm. The following year, she transitioned to a team to market secondary fixed-income securities, covering primarily emerging-market products. She strategized the marketing scheme with major Japanese security houses and private banks’ product teams and successfully launched several new asset classes, growing the market size in Japan to $1.5 billion. Sumiko is an enthusiastic traveller, having visited more than 25 countries to date. Her hobbies include Bikram Yoga, collecting kimonos, cooking, and photography. At Lauder/Wharton, Sumiko plans to deepen her understanding of the Chinese culture and business environment. She expects to pursue impact investing focused on emerging markets after graduation. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese NAGA TAN Born to Indonesian and Singaporean parents, Naga grew up in Singapore with a keen interest in cross-cultural issues. Witnessing the destruction and chaos of the 1998 race riots in Indonesia, during which his own relatives’ lives were threatened, only served to heighten his sensitivity to the nuances of different cultures and the overriding need for mutual respect. Naga spent two years serving in the Singapore Air Force, rising to the rank of Lieutenant. As an Air Defense Artillery Officer, he was involved in several joint exercises with the Royal Thai Air Force and helped his battalion attain the highest levels of competence and readiness in its annual assessment. After completing his National Service, he moved to the U.K. to study at the London School of Economics (LSE). While at the LSE, Naga co-founded an Economics Conference, served as vice president of the Finance Society, and furthered his interest in international affairs by working as a research assistant at the Department of International Relations. He also undertook summer internships in the hedge fund strategies group at Goldman Sachs and the public markets division at GIC, one of the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds. During his senior year, he worked part-time at Halcyon Asset Management, a multi-strategy hedge fund with approximately $12 billion in assets under management, analyzing European merger arbitrage opportunities with the investment team. After graduating with first-class honors, Naga joined Morgan Stanley as an Analyst on the European fixed-income trading desk. During his two and a half years there, he was responsible for fulfilling the firm’s primary dealer obligations in weekly euro governments’ Treasury-Bill auctions, as well as trading in secondary markets. He was also given sole responsibility for managing a $4 billion Credit and Emerging Market Repo trading book and successfully drove a 20% year-on-year increase in trading revenue for the desk. Naga’s love of outdoor challenges has led him to climb Mount Kilimanjaro, abseil down sea cliffs in Wales, scale several 13,000-foot peaks in the Alps, and complete Ironman triathlons in the heart of the Austrian and Swiss countrysides. He is also an avid cyclist and basketball fan, and loves Sichuan cuisine despite a sensitivity to spicy food. At Wharton/Lauder, Naga aims to attain full business proficiency in Mandarin while developing a deeper understanding of the political and historical undercurrents that shape today’s global business environment. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese SOPHIE THOMPSON Sophie grew up in Greenwich, Connecticut, gaining early international exposure while visiting her father’s family in the U.K. and on trips through Western Europe and Latin America. These travels sparked her interest in foreign languages and international relations, leading her to enroll at Middlebury College. There, she majored in International Politics and Economics, with a focus in French, and spent a semester in Paris studying at the Sorbonne. After graduating in 2009, Sophie attended the Tuck Business Bridge Program to broaden her knowledge of business fundamentals prior to joining Management Systems International, a consulting firm specializing in international development. There, she worked on economic development projects in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Mali but soon sought out a paralegal role with the Royal Bank of Scotland to supplement her economics knowledge with legal experience to better effect change. She saw how the success of developed and developing economies hinged on the robustness of their financial systems and, as a result, sought a deeper understanding of international capital markets and financial models. This led Sophie to join Bloomberg LP in 2011 as a fixed-income analyst in the Analytics department, where she assisted Bloomberg’s clientele in market-related questions in English, French, and Spanish. In 2012, she transitioned to sales and account management, maintaining and growing Bloomberg’s client base in Quebec and Ontario and, most recently, managing the fixed-income relationship for UBS in New York City. In her spare time, Sophie enjoys playing field hockey, soccer, and tennis; dancing; and sampling food and wine from around the world. She also maintains an active role with Middlebury College’s alumni association. At Wharton/Lauder, Sophie hopes to broaden her international business expertise and later secure a position in strategy consulting in Africa and Latin America. Lauder Focus: Europe and French EMILY TUNG Emily was born in São Paulo, Brazil, to Chinese-Taiwanese parents. Growing up, she spoke Mandarin at home and Portuguese in school. When she was twelve, her family moved to a suburb near Los Angeles, California, with a large Hispanic population. This prompted her to simultaneously learn English and Spanish, which fueled her passion for languages and her desire to explore the world. Her multicultural upbringing helped her adapt quickly to the U.S. and develop a unique global perspective. At UC Berkeley, Emily studied Business Administration, with a concentration in Global Management, and followed her Latin roots by taking up a Spanish minor and studying Hispanic literature. Curious about her Asian heritage, she also studied abroad in Hong Kong and pursued a fellowship in India with the TATA Group’s Sustainability team. On campus, she was involved in social-impact extracurricular activities. She served as an instructor for a student-led microfinance class and coordinator for Oakland Chinatown’s Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program, an IRS-sponsored initiative offering free tax counseling in low-income communities. After graduation, Emily spent two years with Accenture Management Consulting in New York City, working on corporate strategy and operational efficiency projects in the Financial Services, Pharmaceutical, Nonprofit, and Telecommunication industries. Her experience in the private sector, coupled with her passion for social impact, then led her to join the Strategy team at the NYC Economic Development Corporation, the city’s primary engine for economic growth. There she worked on building public-private partnerships that furthered Mayor De Blasio’s economic development agenda. She won a company-wide competition, ”NYC’s Next Big Idea,” and was awarded $100,000 to help develop and implement her idea – the creation of New York City’s first commercial vertical farm, an innovative way to grow fresh produce and support the city’s food security. In her spare time, Emily is active in her community as a Junior Board member of Upwardly Global, a nonprofit that helps highly skilled immigrants advance their economic mobility. She also enjoys sports and travelling and recently combined them by going with Coca Cola to the World Cup in Brazil. At Wharton/Lauder, Emily hopes to build on her global citizenship and learn about multi-sector solutions that address critical challenges that emerging markets face. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese JOSHUA L. VAN DYKE Josh was born and raised in a multicultural suburb of Detroit, Michigan. Travelling internationally from a young age, he developed a keen interest in foreign cultures. Following three semesters abroad as an undergraduate, his interest developed into a passion for immersion in foreign languages, cultures, and environments. In 2004, he launched his career in East Asia, where he lived for the last decade. Josh attended the Honors College of Michigan State University, where he earned a B.A. in Finance. He studied abroad in Australia and was awarded the Freeman Asia Scholarship to study in Thailand. His fascination with East Asian languages, foods, and cultures compelled him to return to that region. After graduation, he joined a local investment bank where he began his career by helping Thai corporate clients recover from the effects of the Asian financial crisis by restructuring debts and recapitalizing balance sheets. Keen on developing his career in the broader region, Josh moved to Hong Kong and Singapore, joining BNP Paribas and Deutsche Bank, where he was instrumental in executing investment-banking transactions across capital structures, industries, and geographies. In 2008, a senior banker who had been a mentor established Sprint Capital Partners, a private equity firm focused on investing in the mining, energy, and utilities sectors. Josh was recruited to the new firm, where his first principal investment deal involved researching and bidding to acquire a distressed portfolio of water-treatment plants located in ten cities across China. Inspired by China’s tremendous growth and dynamism, Josh convinced his supervisor to sponsor him to attend Tsinghua University while working part-time. He moved to Beijing not knowing a single word of Chinese and, after two years of intensive studies, progressed to an advanced level. During this time, he also conducted research on China-themed investments. In 2011, Josh returned to Hong Kong, where he managed a small team of analysts and worked on all aspects of deal-sourcing, research, negotiation, and execution – while also collaborating with portfolio-company executives to implement value-creation initiatives. His experience led him to investments in emerging markets as varied as Kazakhstan, Pakistan, and Egypt. He also used his Chinese language skills professionally in liaising with co-investors based in China. In his spare time, Josh enjoys reading and actively investing in deep-value opportunities across public markets. He also enjoys hiking, travel, water sports, photography, and tennis. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese AROON VIJAYKAR Aroon was born in Fremont, California, and moved with his family to Bangalore, India, as a six-year-old. Living there served to acquaint him with the land of his ancestors in addition to planting a seed of interest in the challenges of development. This fostered his passion for working to alleviate poverty. Already speaking English and Marathi at home, he became trilingual, as he learned Hindi during five years of elementary school. He found great value in being able to engage with a much wider range of people in India, thanks to this proficiency. Back in California after elementary school, Aroon pursued his passion for languages by studying Spanish language and literature for seven years and earning a Bank of America Achievement Award in Spanish, awarded annually to high school seniors in California. He also found an outlet for his interest in global issues by competing in the Foreign Extemporaneous Speaking category of High School Speech & Debate, placing sixth in the state championships in 2006. Crafting arguments on questions of international political and economic relevance inspired him to major in Economics at UC Berkeley. Outside the classroom, he explored his passion for the performing arts. He performed across the U.S. and in China with the UC Men’s Octet, the school’s flagship a cappella group, and led Berkeley Dil Se, a South Asian a cappella group. After graduation, Aroon moved across the Bay Bridge to join Monitor Group, a strategy consulting firm, in San Francisco. There, he worked on commercial-strategy projects across industries, including technology, pharmaceuticals, industrials, and aerospace & defense. But after two years in the commercial practice, he wanted to work on problems that he cared about more deeply. Thus, he moved to Mumbai to join Monitor Inclusive Markets (MIM), a unit of Monitor that developed market-based solutions to poverty. While at MIM and then at FSG, a social-impact advisory firm, he travelled to remote corners of India to study low-income customers and design business models and ecosystem interventions that would enable socially beneficial industries like sanitation, reproductive health, and early-childhood education to scale up. Going forward, Aroon is interested in building and growing businesses that serve low-income customers in India, likely in the energy sector, in hopes of addressing India’s electrification imperative. Lauder Focus: South Asia and Hindi STEPHANIE VON STAA TOLEDO Stephanie is international by both birth and nature. She was born in São Paulo, Brazil, to a German mother and a Brazilian father. As an infant, she moved with her parents and younger sibling to Miami, Florida, before settling down at age 5 on a farm in the southern Brazilian countryside, very close to a Dutch colony. At age 14, she moved 300 miles from home to attend a better high school. Her decision culminated in her admission, at age 17, to FGV-EAESP, the prestigious training ground for business leaders in Brazil. During her time in college, Stephanie was a captain of the soccer team, a teaching assistant for Strategic Management, and a volunteer at the school’s Social Project of Adult Literacy. In 2008 she spent a semester at the Universidad Salamanca, focusing her studies on social sciences. She also worked as an intern at leading international corporations, including Moody’s and BNP Paribas, and at the renewable-energy startup ERSA (now known as CPF Renováveis). In 2010, Stephanie graduated with a major in Corporate Finance and began her career at Accenture’s Finance & Performance consulting branch. Shortly after, she was invited to rejoin BNP Paribas, this time as an M&A analyst. She provided advisory services on M&A transactions in several industries with cross-border elements. Two years later, Stephanie embarked on a 9-month journey around the globe, seeking ways to promote inclusive economic development. This interval marked her transition from investment banking to entrepreneurship. In January 2014, she joined Tricae, one of Rocket Internet’s most promising ventures in Latin America. Growing up between a strict German education and a more relaxed Brazilian environment gave Stephanie an early appreciation for cultural differences and the courage to overcome language barriers. Today, she speaks native Portuguese, is fluent in German and English, and has advanced skills in Spanish and Dutch. At Wharton/Lauder, Stephanie plans to broaden her understanding of management, deepen her knowledge of global leadership issues, and focus her studies on innovative business models and early-stage investment mechanisms. Very curious and active, Stephanie loves going out for a run, visiting museums and exhibits, and meeting up with friends. She is also a passionate traveller and yoga practitioner. Lauder Focus: Western Europe and German RAY WANG Ray was born in Lanzhou, China. At age 6, he moved to Belgium, where he learned Flemish. At age 20, he moved to Cleveland, Ohio. He attended Yale University, where he studied economics and history while also completing a pre-medical curriculum. After graduation, instead of going to medical school, Ray joined the Detroit, Michigan, office of the Boston Consulting Group (BCG). There, he worked in a variety of industries – in particular, medical devices, consumer goods, industrial goods, and pharmaceuticals. After three years, Ray left BCG and joined Schooner Capital, a family-investment office based in Boston, Massachusetts. Managing the fortunes of one Boston-based family, Schooner invests in startups in the U.S. and in companies within emerging and frontier markets. During his two years there, Ray started and co-led the firm’s public equities portfolio in emerging and frontier markets. He visited over 200 companies in more than 20 countries. His first investment for the firm was in Zimbabwe. In his spare time, Ray loves to run, play golf, and ski. Having grown up in several countries, he caught the travel bug early. He is also active in community service and has worked for development organizations in Ghana and inner-city Detroit. At Wharton/Lauder, Ray plans to expand his understanding of the Chinese economy and society. In the long term, he looks forward to building a career as a value investor in the emerging and frontier markets. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese RUIHENG WANG Ruiheng was born in Harbin China, recognized as the Icy City for its well-known winter tourism. In high school, she volunteered as a tour guide for international students visiting her hometown. This experience ignited her curiosity about foreign languages and sharing values with people from around the world. She now speaks fluent English, Chinese, and Japanese. Ruiheng chose to matriculate in China’s top pharmaceutical engineering program at Tianjin University to learn how to apply engineering principles to solve problems in the pharmaceutical industry. While developing quantitative and analytical skills, she found her passion for organizing and planning. As vice president of the Student Union, she directed the welcoming party for 400 first-year students. Ruiheng earned her Master’s degree in Chemical Engineering at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. Recognizing what technology could contribute to the development of new pharmacy products, she learned that business skills were also vital for delivering these new products to end users. At Toshiba in Japan, Ruiheng connected cutting-edge technologies with the market and earned recognition as a market expert on Chinese electronics. She identified opportunities in different market segments, from consumer appliances to clean energy, and created strategies to promote Toshiba’s memory-semiconductor devices in China. Later, Ruiheng honed her entrepreneurial skills by incubating Smart Grid, a new semiconductor business unit, for Toshiba. As the strategist and marketer, she launched business-feasibility studies for Smart Grid and planned semiconductor products to help solve Japan’s energy crisis after the 2011 nuclear disaster. She enjoyed discovering unmet market needs and transforming technologies into useful products that help people. As the leader of a new business-development project at Toshiba, she created a car-to-pedestrian system to protect people, which led to a collaboration with a well-known automobile company to create a smart-traffic system for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Ruiheng is passionate about snowboarding and scuba diving, and friends count on her to organize trips and recommend cuisines that add new flavors everyone can enjoy. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Japanese JOHN WITHERS John was born and raised in London, U.K. From a young age, he travelled around Europe, the Far East, and the U.S., spending long summers in Massachusetts with his Italian grandparents and two younger brothers. After his family moved to Singapore when John was eight years old, he became fascinated with cultural diversity, especially in East and Southeast Asia, which set him on his path to the Lauder program and beyond. Back at secondary school in the U.K., John discovered a passion for business while playing a key role in the operations of the student-run Young Enterprise company Ellipsis. Whether designing marketing materials, writing policies, or selling student-manufactured flashlights, he loved experiencing how diverse people, activities, and structures integrate to form an effective organization. After completing his A-levels in advanced mathematics, physics, and Italian, he moved to Williamstown, Massachusetts, to attend Williams College. He made the most of an interdisciplinary curriculum, taking classes in dance, algebra, English, and history while majoring in Economics and Chinese. In 2007, he founded a mixed martial arts club that is still going strong and, in his senior year, became co-president of Sankofa, a step team with an African heritage. After graduation, John continued to pursue his interest in interdisciplinary solutions by joining J.P. Morgan Private Bank in New York City as part of an internal consulting team. There, he worked across the technology, risk, legal, sales, and other divisions to deliver new systems, processes, and control frameworks. Before his program ended, he was invited to London to develop operating models that addressed the evolving regulatory environment, influencing over $15 million in investment over two years. Most recently, he was promoted to vice president and took on a product-management role where he was able to develop his own team and coordinate the private bank’s first global product launch, raising over $1.3 billion in assets to date. At Wharton/Lauder, John plans to “level up” his Mandarin proficiency; evolve his technical knowledge base; improve his soft skills; and understand how his experiences in product, operational, and organization change apply to those in other industries. In his free time John enjoys challenging his physical and mental coordination. Whether via martial arts, dance, or juggling, he loves to move. He also enjoys reading, listening to the people he meets, and playing games. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese WILSON WONG Born in Hong Kong, Wilson moved to Vancouver, Canada, at age 6 and grew up speaking Cantonese at home. The city’s multicultural makeup and diverse culinary offerings inspired his passion for exploring different cultures and languages from a young age. In high school, he studied French, Latin, and Mandarin Chinese. Wilson attended Columbia University, graduating Phi Beta Kappa and magna cum laude, with a double major in Economics and Political Science. His thesis examined domestic and transnational Internet activism surrounding health issues within China and situated its role in the broader development of the country’s civil society. During his time at Columbia, he continued his Mandarin studies and served as editor-in-chief of the Columbia East Asia Review, a multidisciplinary academic journal of undergraduate research on East and Southeast Asia. A summer internship with a social entrepreneurial business incubator in Shanghai solidified his interest in a professional future in East Asia. After graduation, Wilson moved to Hong Kong and joined the Manager Trainee program at the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, the territory’s de facto central bank. He strengthened his business Cantonese and cross-cultural management skills while working within the organization’s Monetary Operations and Economic Research divisions. As a Manager within the Market Development division, he handled a diverse portfolio of initiatives to enhance Hong Kong’s competitiveness as an international financial center and hub for offshore RMB business. He directed the development of CNH HIBOR, the world’s first interest-rate benchmark for pricing RMB loans and financial products situated outside mainland China. He also spearheaded a public-private joint assessment of Hong Kong’s corporate treasury environment, distilling the findings into policy and legislative recommendations currently being adopted by the Hong Kong government. In 2013, Wilson joined his family business, which develops residential property within mainland China. In addition to working in a general management role, he focused on professionalizing the enterprise’s management practices and transforming its work culture in preparation for its future expansion. In his spare time, Wilson enjoys travelling, wandering around museums, and trying new foods. At Wharton/Lauder, he looks forward to building his Mandarin skills and deepening his understanding of business practices within China and other emerging economies. Lauder Focus: East Asia and Mandarin Chinese IVY WU Ivy was born and raised in Wuhan, one of China’s major transportation hubs as well as an intersection of different cultures, where she cultivated a curiosity about people’s different cultural backgrounds at an early age. In pursuit of more international opportunities, Ivy went to Hong Kong for her undergraduate studies. She attended the Chinese University of Hong Kong on a full merit-based scholarship, with a major in Quantitative Finance and a minor in French. While there, she took every opportunity to experience different cultures: She visited Taiwan and France during summer programs, ventured on a backpacking trip in Tibet, and studied abroad for a year in the U.S. After graduation, Ivy joined a rotational program in the finance function with Ferrero, a multinational chocolate & confectionery company. She worked in France and Italy as a financial controller, first for commercial entities and then for industrial entities. With no previous knowledge of Italian, she learned the language in just three months. Most recently, she was based in Luxembourg, the firm’s headquarters, to work for the Emerging Area. She participated in the long-term strategic planning process, working closely with the CFO and product managers to evaluate the profitability of various innovation projects. By engaging with a variety of cultures and witnessing business strategies in different markets, Ivy has realized that consumer behaviors are a manifestation of their respective cultures. At Wharton/Lauder, she aims to leverage her language skills and international experiences to broaden cross-cultural perspectives and gain further insights into global business issues, eventually preparing herself to be a global business leader. In her spare time, Ivy enjoys learning different kinds of dance, such as contemporary, jazz and salsa. She also enjoys yoga and jogging. Lauder Focus: Global Program JUNGHA YI JungHa was born in Seoul, Korea, and moved to Beijing, China, when she was ten, not knowing that she would spend over 15 years there. She developed her interest in the global community during her studies at an international elementary school, interacting daily with students from more than 20 countries. This passion subsequently encouraged her to participate in an exchange program at UCLA, to establish the U.S.-China Business Association at Peking University, and to backpack across nine countries. JungHa attended Peking University, majoring in Finance and Marketing. After graduation, she joined Deutsche Bank (DB) Singapore as an analyst. There, she provided a wide range of capital-raising and treasury solutions for Fortune 500 multinationals. After two years, she joined Deutsche Bank Beijing as the only non-Chinese member, covering Chinese state-owned-enterprise (SOE) clients to deliver sophisticated financing solutions. Over the course of a year, she developed five new SOE client relationships and closed numerous financing transactions, including the bank’s first leveraged finance transaction in the gaming sector. Wanting to have a deeper impact on the growth trajectories of companies, JungHa joined HAO Capital, one of the leading Chinese private equity funds, focusing on investment opportunities in China’s healthcare and consumer markets. Her key achievements included establishing a medical-device joint venture with TCL Group, structuring a joint investment in a top Chinese education company with Baidu.com, and leading investment in the environmental-solution provider LP Amina. In each case, she played an active role in defining the strategic directions and guided the companies in expanding overseas at the board level. For example, she was a core member of the corporate development team at TCL Healthcare, working closely with senior executives to evaluate and acquire targets in the U.S., Europe, and North East Asian countries. After graduating from Wharton/Lauder, she plans to follow her passion for the investment industry and leverage her skill sets toward conducting cross-border M&A transactions to grow and invest in pan-Asian companies. JungHa speaks fluent Mandarin, Korean, and English. She is also the deputy CFO of her family business, for which she led the acquisition of a local competitor and established credit lines for a number of CAPEX projects. She enjoys reading and swimming and appreciates contemporary arts and musicals. Lauder Focus: Global Program LORENZO ZAVALA CARVAJAL Lorenzo was born in Madrid, Spain, and raised in several countries in North and South America, developing an early passion for Latin American countries, cross-cultural experiences, and learning languages, as well as a strong commitment to social causes. As a business major at Lancaster University, in the U.K., and at Universidad Pontificia de Comillas – ICADE, in Madrid, Spain, Lorenzo developed a strong interest in finance and banking, which led him to intern at Lehman Brothers’ investment-banking division in London, and then join Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BAML) as a full-time investmentbanking analyst after graduation. He spent four years at BAML, first in Madrid and then in London, where he worked on some of the corporate transactions that helped shape the current Spanish and Latin American economic landscapes. Driven by his strong commitment to social causes, Lorenzo left BAML in early 2013 to join a local NGO in northwestern Cambodia, where he not only managed existing humanitarian programs and their respective teams, but also launched projects and initiatives that tackle all types of newly identified needs. For example, he worked to ensure that mentally disabled children living in remote villages receive adequate and regular treatment by establishing a joint venture with a specialized hospital in Phnom Penh, and that NGO staff are trained regularly on how to manage teams and the NGO efficiently. During his time in Cambodia, Lorenzo had his first social entrepreneurship experience, co-leading the creation of a textile school and production center employing more than 200 people with physical disabilities or in dire need. He realized that establishing a financially sustainable and socially impactful company is possible and, most importantly, that this company can and must compete effectively with “non-social” industry players. This experience motivated Lorenzo to combine both his financial and his social entrepreneurial backgrounds by working as an associate for the largest impact-investing fund in Spain, where he was responsible for investing the fund’s assets in Spanish social enterprises. Lorenzo enjoys travelling and outdoor sports, including biking, skiing, and playing soccer and tennis. He is passionate about photography and music and looks forward to forming bands with other music-loving Lauderites. Lauder Focus: Latin America and Portuguese UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA Non-Discrimination Policy Statement The University of Pennsylvania values diversity and seeks talented students, faculty and staff from diverse backgrounds. The University of Pennsylvania does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, religion, creed, national or ethnic origin, citizenship status, age, disability, veteran status or any other legally protected class status in the administration of its admissions, financial aid, educational or athletic programs, or other University-administered programs or in its employment practices. Questions or complaints regarding this policy should be directed to the Executive Director of the Office of Affirmative Action and Equal Opportunity Programs, Sansom Place East, 3600 Chestnut Street, Suite 228, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6106; or (215) 898-6993 (Voice) or (215) 898-7803 (TDD).