Team Oculus Go
4596 – 002 – Spring 2019
Professor MC Martin
Connect and innovate with an elite information systems program
The goals of the project were to test four different ETL tools and compare them based on a scorecard our team created. The purpose was to rank each ETL tool used, based on two different use cases we created. I learned a lot about the ETL process and how data can be cleaned and standardized through these tools. The project URL: http://project.mis.temple.edu/etlteam2/
Three Temple AIS student teams took home awards at the annual Student Chapter Leadership Conference in April, hosted at Temple University. All three teams placed in the Alexion Analytics Challenge, competing with 16 Universities across the country including Arizona State University, Florida International University, and the University of Bridgeport.
Faculty adviser Jeremy Shafer was delighted with the performance of the Temple chapter, “I am proud of the high-quality work from our students. It is exciting to have three winning teams from Temple!”
The Alexion Challenge awarded prizes for both analysis and graphics. The winning Temple teams were:
The Temple AIS Student Chapter as a whole also took home two awards. The first was for Outstanding Communication and the second was for Outstanding Fiscal Responsibility.
In addition, Professor Steven Sclarow received the AIS Student Chapter Volunteer of the Year Award for his work coordinating the competition tracks for the conference.
“I am honored to have received this award,” Sclarow said, “It was a pleasure collaborating with AIS to facilitate the 10th anniversary conference.”
The goal of this project was to earn an industry recognized certification in Project Management. Which, is a great way of distinguishing yourself as a business professional who has clearly demonstrated knowledge of Project Management and has shown the initiative to focus time and energy on this subject outside of the classroom. This goal was achieved by taking the Comptia Project + exam. Having a Project Management Certification demonstrates that you are passionate about this area which is in great demand in industry and can make you stand-out when applying for internships and jobs, which gives you a significant competitive advantage.
My exam results were a 791 out of 900, which is a passing score. Honestly the test was harder than I expected but I learned a lot about project management from it. Specifically about the importance of deliverables and what the key information that needs to be included in project deliverables are. I hope to use my experience with this exam to assist me in my attempts at earning higher level certifications in the future.

On April 11-13, Temple MIS hosted the 10th Annual Association for Information Systems Student Chapter Leadership Conference. Over 180 students and faculty attendees from 33 schools participated in the conference. AIS student chapter leaders and members convened in Philadelphia to exchange best practices, network with students from other chapters and engage with industry experts on cutting-edge topics. Chapter members also competed in four competition tracks in topics such as analytics, AI and blockchain.
Temple was the founding University for AIS student chapters,” says Jeremy Shafer, Temple AIS student chapter adviser. “The first conference was held at Temple in 2010, and we were excited to bring it back to Temple for the 10th anniversary.”
The conference had a full agenda, with nine workshops and panels organized and led by students in topics such as chapter leadership, women in IT, location analytics and ethical hacking. Industry leaders from AmerisourceBergen, NBCUniversal, Alexion and Capgemini spoke to the student and faculty attendees about cutting-edge information technology topics. The conference also featured two keynotes: George Llado, chief information officer and senior vice president of Alexion, and Douglas Robinson, vice president of AmerisourceBergen.
“Bringing the conference back to Temple allowed us to show what we’ve accomplished as a chapter at a national level,” says Justin Kish, MIS ’19, Temple AIS chapter president. Temple AIS Officers Vice President Cara Evans, MIS ’19, and Director of Professional Development Ami Parekh, MIS ’19, coordinated a team of over 50 student volunteers, who greeted and guided attendees around campus.
The members of Temple AIS truly showed their dedication to the organization,” says Parekh, “The enthusiasm of our student volunteers made the conference a memorable experience for everyone.”
Matthew Nelson, executive director of AIS and Matti Rossi, past president of AIS, attended the conference. Nelson was impressed with the quality of the conference. “The quality of the competitions, the professionalism of the students and the enthusiasm and networking between students and universities is at the heart of AIS’ mission.”
“The 10th AIS Student Leadership conference demonstrated once again the liveliness of our student chapters and the health of the information systems field. AIS is very grateful for the support of Temple and the Fox School of Business and Department of Management Information Systems for organizing this year’s event,” says Rossi.
Back in 2006, JaeHwuen Jung, assistant professor of Management Information Systems, had something in his back pocket few other people had access to at the time. As an IT application architect at the largest telecom company in South Korea, he had a smartphone with unlimited data.
Almost immediately, he saw the future. “I knew this was going to change the way people shopped, did business, and lived their lives.” It changed his behavior, says Jung. For example, he became a comparison shopper, checking out the items he wanted in a bricks-and-mortar store but making the purchase online, for the lowest price.
After almost seven years in that job, what he saw inspired him to earn a Ph.D. in MIS. Today, he researches the impact of new channels and digital platforms on consumer behavior.
Jung’s paper “Love Unshackled: Identifying the Effect of Mobile App Adoption in Online Dating,” published in MIS Quarterly in March 2019, explores the impact of one such channel—mobile apps—for those in search of romantic partners. His paper shows that accessing dating apps via mobile phone results in users not only increasing their access but also getting better matches than they would have using a desktop version alone.
Why? It all has to do with the way a mobile device affects behavior. “As we rarely share our mobile phone and use it in more private places such as bathroom, it feels more private than a computer,” says Jung. So when people use a dating app on their phones, they are honest, more impulsive, and less inhibited. All these things add up to more time spent using the app and better matches.
Jung’s new research looks at how to optimize the referral program. He’s testing different referral incentive designs and learning surprising things. “If the company rewards the existing customer, there’s some guilt involved because they get something and the friend they are referring doesn’t,” he explains. But if the friend benefits, people are willing to make more referrals, and to closer friends.
In the classroom, Jung teaches data analytics to MIS majors and minors. He shows how businesses can efficiently store and retrieve data as well as how to analyze increasingly complex datasets. “Today, companies can track user locations. They know more about user behavior. With all this data comes marketing opportunities,” he says.
Bryce Buffaloe, MIS ’10, is a product manager with Google. “The job is like being the CEO of your own product,” says the Management Information Systems program graduate. And it’s hard to imagine a more exciting place for that kind of work than Google, whose past products have transformed the business world and our everyday lives.
Buffaloe recently added product manager to his responsibilities at Google, where he is also a Swarm engineer. Among other things, he works closely with current and potential clients to tackle their business problems with technology-based solutions. “Often they didn’t know the technology they needed, and I would be able to come back to them with tools that met their needs,” says Buffaloe. “A lot of business goals can be achieved using Google cloud.”
Before coming on board with Google in 2017, his career path took him to The United States Attorney’s office, where he worked on litigation support database management, and to Accenture, an information and technology services company in the San Francisco Bay area. “All my work has to do with data and application development. It’s just at Google, I have different tools to solve problems,” he says.
At first glance, the path from Temple to The U.S. Attorney’s office to Silicon Valley might not be obvious, but Buffaloe says the skills he honed at Temple work to unite his resume. He started studying to become a civil engineer before eventually transferring to the Fox School. There, Buffaloe connected with an academic advisor who helped him see that his interest was squarely at the intersection of computers and business–MIS.
By graduation, I was very well prepared for the real world. My teachers all brought the industry into the classroom,” he says.
One issue he’s working on now is a serious one with far-reaching implications: The opioid crisis. “It’s a complex problem, but it’s a problem that has a lot of data points. There are socio-economic areas, there are patterns to how people get help and how they get drugs,” says Buffaloe. There’s a large amount of anonymized data that, if it can be properly analyzed, can potentially make a major impact.
Google analyzes the datasets to, among other things, identify specific neighborhoods where there’s no local center or outreach for opioid users or at-risk populations. “It’s similar to the problem of food deserts. People may not be getting help because there’s nothing near them,” he says. But soon, thanks to projects like these, help could be on the way.
Clare Perretta, MS ’17, didn’t know what she wanted next in her career when she enrolled in the MS in Digital Innovation and Marketing program, but she had a hunch that the program would get her there. “I had been a writer and editor for years, but I was always drawn to marketing,” she recalls.
While she was a student, she worked full time as a communications specialist at NextGen Healthcare. Her colleagues in digital marketing turned her on to the magic of metrics, including Google Analytics. Making decisions based on data—not opinions—appealed to her, and she knew she needed more education to hone that expertise.
Professor Steven Sclarow’s Process Improvement class sparked a passion for project management. As part of that class, Perretta created a document that details every step a project goes through from idea to implementation at NextGen. After sharing it with a new NextGen vice president, the marketing department started using it as official reference material.
Another invaluable part of the program for Perretta was the network she joined. In fact, her social media instructor, Kimberly Jaindl, recently tapped Perretta to fill a new role of brand communications representative on her team at Lockheed Martin.
During the program, I learned what I want to be doing—more strategy and operations-level work—and now that’s exactly what I’m doing,” she says.
In his career before enrolling in the program, Anthony M. Pizzuto, MS ’18, had done a little bit of everything in the world of online marketing. “I worked with production teams, I’ve led creative teams, I’ve done coding and merchandising,” he says.
Pizzuto has served as the head of digital experience for Victoria’s Secret PINK brand, where he led the development of their app and oversaw user engagement. He’s also worked as the director of marketing for Prudential Financial.
What he learned in the program goes deeper than digital. “I learned to understand who the customer really is,” he says.
Since earning his degree, he has taken on a new role as head of brand marketing for Days Inn, owned by Wyndham Hotels & Resorts. Now he applies the principles of user experience he learned at Temple on a larger scale, overseeing a global marketing strategy that is both online and offline, including legacy formats like billboards and radio.
“I understand now that guiding a customer through a journey is the same whether it’s in the physical world or the virtual world. And that divide is getting smaller every day,” he says.
“Technology changes every three months, but the principles I learned at Temple can always be extrapolated to the bigger picture.”
Professor Detmar Straub had eight articles published or accepted for publication over the 2018-2019 academic year. These papers cover a wide range of topics, including health IT, knowledge management, outsourcing and two-sided platforms. This research will appear in the top journals in the discipline, such as MIS Quarterly, Information Systems Research, the Journal of Management Information Systems and the Journal of the Association of Information Systems.
According to an annual analysis produced by the University of Arizona, Straub has a cumulative h-index of 70, designating him as one of the most productive and most cited researchers in the field of MIS. The h-index is an author-level metric that attempts to measure both the productivity and citation impact of the publications of a scientist or scholar.
A partial list of Straub’s recently published and forthcoming work is below:
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