By
Crystel Bailey MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Recent college graduates must compete for jobs, but
a new program may ease job-searching for those interested in
a career in furniture management. "Professionals
in furniture industries in Mississippi and North Carolina
realized that the management level was filled by older
employees. They wanted to attract younger business people to
the furniture industry by providing a program of study at
the college level," said Teressa Hooper, coordinator for the
Furniture Management Program at Mississippi State
University. By
providing classroom and cooperative education to future
furniture professionals, employers hope to get a better
quality employee who will take less time to train. Students
hope to get a head start in finding employment. Because
the furniture industry is so big, it might be surprising to
note that there are only a few schools in the nation that
offer a four- year furniture degree program. Prospective
students in Mississippi who wish to gain expertise in the
furniture industry do not have to travel out of state
because MSU is one of these schools. "Other
colleges in North Carolina offer certain aspects of
furniture business, but Mississippi State is the only school
that provides education in all areas of the furniture
industry along with the four-year business degree in
furniture management," Hooper said. Furniture
students at MSU can specialize in administrative management,
advertising, customer service, human resource management,
inventory control, production management, purchasing, sales
and transportation. Besides
taking business, furniture production and wood technology
classes, students gain knowledge in furniture management
through internships and co-ops in furniture companies
throughout the state and the rest of the country, and by
touring furniture facilities. "We
encourage our students to work at the Tupelo Furniture
Market in the spring and summer. Students also intern at
companies, such as Action-Lane Industries in Tupelo,
Franklin in Houston, Miskelly in Pearl and Gallery Furniture
in Houston, Texas," Hooper said. Chad
Mims, sales trainee at Franklin and a May graduate from MSU
with a bachelor's degree in business and an emphasis in
furniture management, said that working at the Tupelo
Furniture Markets and co-oping at Action-Lane Industries in
Pontotoc helped him in his classes and in getting a
job. "I
learned how furniture was made from beginning to end, from
assembling it together to shipping it out. When I got to my
furniture classes, I could relate to what they were teaching
me because I had learned about furniture in my co-ops," Mims
said. He said
touring furniture factories and co-oping enabled him to
communicate better during job interviews because he knew
first- hand about the furniture industry. "The
Furniture Management Program gave me an edge in getting my
job at Franklin. I made contacts before I interviewed, and I
got hired because of my experience," Mims said. For more
information about the Furniture Management Program, contact
Teressa Hooper at (662) 325-9082 or at thooper@cobilan.msstate.edu,
or visit the College of Business and Industry Web site at
www.cbi.msstate.edu. Released:
July 31, 2000
Family,
Youth & Consumer News
New Program May
Ease Job-Searching
Contact: Teressa Hooper, (662) 325-9082
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:50
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