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http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/chi-sat-retail-notebook-northwesmar29,0,1917128.story
Kellogg class examines value of fashion
MBA course teaches design's importance
INSIDE RETAILING
BY SANDRA M. JONES
March 29, 2008
Hold onto your Jimmy Choos. A fashion class is making its debut next week at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management.
The course, the first of its kind at the business school, will teach MBAs how to manage the fashion component necessary to launch and sustain a successful product, said Steven Fischer, the instructor who created the course.
There will be no talk of seams and fabrics here. Rather, students will learn how fashion can become an integral part of such mundane products as cell phones and pens.
"There's a fashion component to almost every product that we buy, and this drives consumer behavior," Fischer said.
Not long ago, it was outlandish to consider making a pink computer or a cobalt blue washing machine. Not anymore.
But for companies to compete at the fashion level, they have to introduce new products at twice the rate of their rivals, Fischer said. That leads to challenges on the management and the supply-chain side.
Language is another barrier.
"Management operates in a linear world, and designers and fashion people operate in a non-linear world," said Fischer. "Their ways of decision-making and problem-solving are quite different."
Nineteen MBAs will take part in the class called "Managing the Strategic Value of Fashion and Products." The course is part of the Segal Design Institute, which was created last year with funding from Crate & Barrel founders Gordon and Carole Segal.
Experts ranging from General Motors Corp.'s head of design to a Pantone Inc. color expert are slated to speak in the class.
When the Segal Design Institute was unveiled, visionary merchant and Kellogg MBA Gordon Segal said how much companies need graduates who have been exposed to principles of design.
"Design is probably the biggest competitive advantage the United States has in a rapidly changing and highly competitive world," he said at the time.
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