May 21, 2013

IBS Student Profile: Tom Stretton

Saving Earth One Business at a Time: How a Global Green MBA is Helping One Student Meet His Own Triple Bottom Line

International Business and Global Green MBA 2011
Home region/country:
Cheshire, Connecticut
Undergraduate education: B.S. Lehigh University, 2005
Previous work experience: Stantec Consulting (Oregon), Groundwater & Environmental Services, Inc. (Connecticut)
Clubs at Brandeis: Net Impact, European Business Club, Brandeis Consulting Club, International Marketing Club

“I honestly think the world is at a crossroads, and I want to be part of the force that moves it in a positive direction. IBS is teaching me about ‘the triple bottom line’ where companies can lessen their environmental impact, save money, and even produce some social good.”

Published: Sept. 1, 2010

WALTHAM, Mass. – Tom Stretton never imagined himself at business school. As a kid, he was a tinkerer who liked science and math. At Lehigh, he minored in philosophy and was involved in environmental causes on campus.

“I used to think of business as a greed-driven enterprise,” says Tom. “It was for people who were passionate about nothing but making a lot of money.”

But, after a few years as an environmental scientist at a commercial real estate firm, he decided he wanted more out of his professional life. He applied to IBS’s Global Green program, an MBA concentration that focuses on social responsibility and environmental issues. “I honestly think the world is at a crossroads,” he says, “and I want to be part of the force that moves it in a positive direction. IBS is teaching me about ‘the triple bottom line’ where companies can lessen their environmental impact, save money, and even produce some social good.”

Tom, who plans to spend a semester at the Copenhagen Business School, an institution renowned for green thinking, says he’s been inspired by many of the company and thought leaders who’ve visited IBS to speak about environmental issues. For instance, Jeffrey Hollender, president of Seventh Generation, the natural home products company, spoke in the fall, and Rajendra Sisodia, a co-author of Firms of Endearment and one of the leading figures of the conscious capitalism movement, also visited.

“I’ve noticed a real shift in business thinking,” he says. “It seemed as though more and more companies are adopting a values-driven model of doing business and trying to find that sweet spot where you can make a profit and better the environment. It tells me that there are going to be more opportunities in this area.”

In his spare time, Tom—who is first generation American and is in the process of obtaining his Irish citizenship—spends a lot of time working on projects and events for student-run clubs. He is a founding member of the European Business Club, and he is on the leadership team of the Brandeis chapter of Net Impact, an international group of MBA and graduate students who advocate that businesses work for the social good. He is also a member of the Brandeis Consulting Club, which is working on a project dealing with renewable energy.

“The clubs in general offer many great opportunities to get experience and pursue projects in areas that are not fully addressed in class,” he says. “They help you make what you want out your education, if you will.”

This profile was originally published by the Brandeis International Business School.

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