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Hamilton Winters named Grand Champion of the Ole Miss Speakers Edge

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Ole Miss held their Speaker’s Edge Competition January 13-15. Over 115 MBA and Masters of Accountancy students competed in three categories (Marketplace Pitch, Informative Communication, and Ethical Dilemma). The students performed in front of business executives and industry leaders from all over the country. Hamilton was named Grand Champion of the entire competition!
An amazing accomplishment!

We are proud of YOU!!!

Hamilton is the son of Stephen and Sandie Barnes Winters.  His grandparents are Joe and Joyce Barnes of Magee.

The Speaker’s Edge Competition is unlike any other speech event in the country, challenging Ole Miss students to express ideas, knowledge and understanding clearly and effectively. Started by Ole Miss alumni, the Speaker’s Edge Competition brings industry professionals. retirees, working alumni and students together, requiring students to adapt their messages to different audiences and different situations. Ole Miss students spend a week and a half working with world-class communication coaches, discovering the strengths and weaknesses of their own personal style. The program culminates in a two-day competition, where students present three different presentations for a series of judges. A Speaker’s Edge Champion is named for the student performing the best in all three events. The spoken word remains a critical skill in any industry. Speaker’s Edge has become a hallmark of the Ole Miss MBA Program here on campus and we are proud to be joined by students within the Accounting Graduate Program and roll out  Speaker’s Edge for Undergraduate students.

The Marketplace Pitch (4-6 minutes): The Marketplace of ideas is alive and well at Ole Miss. Students present their best ideas for product/service development or a course of action. As rising professionals, students research, develop, and “pitch” their ideas to a real or hypothetical audience of their choice, exercising the centuries old art of persuasion.

Informative Communication (4-6 minutes): Whether it is communicating complex or highly technical information to a non-technical audience or training a process or procedure, speaking to inform is the most common form of on-the-job communication. Students showcase their ability to truly inform an audience.

Ethical Dilemmas: Knowledge and expertise are only as good as how they are exercised in the world. Students receive a case citing a dilemma of ethics within a business setting. Students will have 30 minutes to prepare a 5-7 minute response addressing the ethical dilemma.

Goals

 

About Speaker’s Edge

The Speaker’s Edge Competition is unlike any other speech event in the country, challenging Ole Miss students to express ideas, knowledge and understanding clearly and effectively. Started by Ole Miss alumni, the Speaker’s Edge Competition brings industry professionals. retirees, working alumni and students together, requiring students to adapt their messages to different audiences and different situations. Ole Miss students spend a week and a half working with world-class communication coaches, discovering the strengths and weaknesses of their own personal style. The program culminates in a two-day competition, where students present three different presentations for a series of judges. A Speaker’s Edge Champion is named for the student performing the best in all three events. The spoken word remains a critical skill in any industry. Speaker’s Edge has become a hallmark of the Ole Miss MBA Program here on campus and we are proud to be joined by students within the Accounting Graduate Program and roll out  Speaker’s Edge for Undergraduate students.

The Marketplace Pitch (4-6 minutes): The Marketplace of ideas is alive and well at Ole Miss. Students present their best ideas for product/service development or a course of action. As rising professionals, students research, develop, and “pitch” their ideas to a real or hypothetical audience of their choice, exercising the centuries old art of persuasion.

Informative Communication (4-6 minutes): Whether it is communicating complex or highly technical information to a non-technical audience or training a process or procedure, speaking to inform is the most common form of on-the-job communication. Students showcase their ability to truly inform an audience.

Ethical Dilemmas: Knowledge and expertise are only as good as how they are exercised in the world. Students receive a case citing a dilemma of ethics within a business setting. Students will have 30 minutes to prepare a 5-7 minute response addressing the ethical dilemma.

Goals

Core Values

The Student Experience: Early preparation is offered in the fall semester and a point person is available to answer questions and guide the students through the process.  While this is a competition, winning is not the final assessment of their growth and mastery of necessary presentation concepts.  Their personal sense of accomplishment – the actual feedback from coaches, judges and peers – all factor into the assessment.  Ultimately, win, lose, or draw, their experience overall is the value of this program.

The Alumni Experience: In 2014 over sixty judges attended the two-day event. Typically, judges become invested in the students’ growth; and the event reception allows for a more informal, but far more impactful learning experience for judges and students alike.  We have heavy personal involvement from many of these judges and alumni.

 

 

 

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