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Good as Gold
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Mike Gold brings a global perspective to his lectures to students in the Montana State University College of Business. Gold is a former international ad exec who shares real-world
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It is the late afternoon, that devil's triangle time of the
academic world, when the day wanes and so do students' attention.
Except in the classroom of Mike Gold, who is teaching a Montana
State University College of Business class on introduction to
global markets that includes students from 15 different majors.
Gold's 40 students are engaged in a spirited lecture about the
alphabet soup of contemporary global trade blocks. Students from
Mexico and Montana debate the merits of the North America Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA). A student from a small Western town
gives a presentation on the Association of Southeast Asia Nations
(ASEAN).
"I tell my students that if there is anything that is important
to learn how to do in the real world, it is to give a good
presentation," Gold says.
The real world, especially beyond the sheltering mountains of
Southwest Montana, is something Gold knows well. A former
president for the international advertising firm Saatchi &
Saatchi, and several other multi-national firms, Gold built an
international reputation as he managed accounts for such
companies as FedEx, and Pizza Hut. He's lived on three continents
and has definite opinions about why it is important to open
Montana students to the world.
"I have kids the same age as these students' so I think I can
relate to them," says Gold, who still calls himself a Londoner,
although his "West End" home is now in Gallatin Gateway.
"Hopefully they can learn from someone who has global experience
and has traveled to some 70 countries."
Learn they do.
"Mike Gold brings an extra-ordinary level of talent and
experience to the College of Business classroom," says Rich
Semenik, dean of the College of Business. "He spent 20 years with
the most prestigious global advertising agency in the world and
directed notable campaigns for Mars Candies and Heineken beer.
Our students are getting one of the best practitioners anyone
could hope to have as an instructor--anywhere in the world."
"Students adore Mike," says Susan Dana, assistant COB dean in
charge of academic affairs. "He has a hilarious sense of humor,
incomparable experience and demands a lot from his students. They
know they are incredibly lucky to be learning from Mike and
(they) work hard for him."
Gold might have retired to some tropical clime, rather in
Montana, were it not for what he calls "A City Slickers Moment."
Gold said that most of his life was spent in airports and on
international flights away from his wife and three children.
"But we had great vacations," Gold said. "We were living in L.A.
and visited a dude ranch in Montana. My wife, who is Welsh and
prefers mountains to skyscrapers, fell in love with Montana and
said, 'We could live here.' And that's how we came out."
The family moved to Gateway two years ago. Gold spent a year
fishing and golfing, until he ran into MSU business professor
Mike Reilly, who also lives in the outlying community. When
Reilly heard about Gold's work in London, San Francisco,
Auckland, New York and L.A , he suggested Gold consider teaching.
The idea appealed to Gold, who thought he could provide practical
advice to students.
"I immediately loved it," Gold recalls. He said when he first
started teaching a year ago he spent hours laboring over lesson
plans. While he's a bit more relaxed now, "my classes are very,
very structured. After all, I am English."
Gold also has a fine sense of how to involve students.
"Is admitting Turkey to the European Union a good or bad idea?"
He quizzes a student from Turkey about her opinion, asks for a
hand vote of students' opinions, all the while swigging from a
bottle of Gatorade.
In addition to the class on global markets, he teaches an
advanced course in advertising that includes senior marketing
majors as well as selected students from the MSU Graphics Arts
program. The end-result is a nation-wide advertising campaign and
competition. Last year, the MSU team was third in the region and
won the peer award for the best presentation. One student who
participated in the competition got an instant job offer from one
of the judges. The student's parents told Gold at graduation that
he had engaged their son when no other class had, and that Gold
had changed their son's life.
The experience also changed Gold's life. Prior to the
competition, he asked several representatives from local
advertising agencies to come and see the students present their
work at a dress rehearsal. Murray Steinman of Flying Horse
Communications, one of the participants, later asked Gold to be
the CEO of the company. Gold accepted as long as he still had
time to teach at MSU.
"I'm passionate about advertising and the fun is when you do a
great job, where ever you do it," Gold said. "Whether it's a
global ad for Heineken or a local ad for NorthWestern Energy, the
challenges of communication are similar, and that's what is
interesting."
Gold says his wife loves living in Montana and he has also found
life here rewarding.
"I'm teaching a subject I know inside-out and a subject I enjoy,"
he said. "I do it because I really want to make a difference,
somehow. And I think teaching is how I can do it."
By Carol Schmidt - MSU News Services
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