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Keller Williams Realty Case Study
now part of Stanford and Yale’s core MBA curriculum
Distinct cultural and economic models presented
as inherently intertwined
AUSTIN, TEXAS (July 11, 2007) — Keller Williams
Realty Inc., announced today that both the Stanford Graduate School
of Business and the Yale School of Management have added a Keller
Williams Realty Case Study to their core MBA curriculums.
Completed earlier this year by Brian Tayan, research associate with
the case writing office of the Stanford Graduate School of Business
and James N. Baron, Ph.D., formerly with Stanford, who since the
publication of the study has taken a professor of management
position at the Yale School of Management, the case study describes
the economic and cultural models that have led to the success of
Keller Williams Realty.
“Case studies are fundamentally teaching materials,” Tayan explains.
He adds that he anticipates that the most predominant impact of this
case study will be a realization among MBA students of the
“significant impact that culture can play in the strategy of an
organization.”
“This level of recognition from two such prestigious universities is
among the greatest honors that this company has ever received,”
emphasizes Mo Anderson, vice chairman, Keller Williams Realty. “It’s
a reflection of the combined talents and unique contributions of all
of our associates throughout North America.”
Anderson was on hand at Yale when the case study was first presented
to students at the Yale School of Management by Dr. Baron.
Baron noted, “One of the things I heard from several students was
how refreshing it was for them to hear the perspective of a highly
effective executive with a leadership style so different from the
formulaic one they encounter over and over throughout business
school.”
Having spent a considerable amount of time talking to associates and
interviewing top executives at Keller Williams Realty, Tayan notes
that the Keller Williams “business model and culture operate very
much in conjunction with each other. The company’s culture has not
been developed for the sake of it.”
Keller Williams Realty has become the fourth largest and fastest
growing real estate agency in North America by building a culture
that rewards its agents as partners through its profit sharing
program and by empowering its agents to fulfill the company mission
of ‘building careers worth having, business worth owning and lives
worth living.’
“The Keller Williams Realty case study should serve as a source of
pride for associates throughout the organization and a validation of
the way the company is proceeding,” Tayan says. Noting the distinct
business model and rapid growth of Keller Williams Realty, he adds,
“I’m surprised that more has not been written about it.”
News Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Ellen Marks
512/327-3070
emarks@kw.com
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