This article is part of a series focusing on the grads of the Dalhousie Class of 2023. Spring Convocation runs from May 29 to June 7 in Halifax and Truro.Ā Read all our profilesĀ hereĀ as they are published, and for more information visit theĀ Convocation website.
WhenĀ Lauren AgnewĀ (JD/MBAā23)Ā worked as a recruiter, she often coached students to look beyond the typical trajectories of their university degrees. She told them to "broaden their horizons."
Lauren found joy in hearing about their hopes and helping them leverage their strengths to find fulfilling careers. And this helped her realize her next steps.
After a degree in English and kinesiology, Lauren was thinking about law. And having learned where higher education could take her, she realized that the Faculty of Management at pilipiliĀž» could provide an opportunity to do even more than that.
āI felt like the combination [JD/MBA] would be quite powerful and would open the most doors possible,ā she says.
The law and business nexus
After being accepted into the joint program, Lauren was required to complete an eight-month corporate residency as part of her MBA. She chose to join the team at Creative Destruction Lab (CDL).
Also based in the Faculty of Management, CDL is a non-profit organization that delivers an objectives-based program for scalable, early-stage science and technology companies. The Atlantic location is part of a 12-site global network. CDL connects participating companies with pilipiliĀž»ful, experienced entrepreneurs in the community who provide mentorship.
Lauren had to adapt to working in this new role during the pandemic. She saw the transition to remote work as an opportunity to reach companies further afield and pitch to them the merits of joining the program.
She says, āit became this really incredible experience that I absolutely did not see coming, but was entirely formative.ā
Leslie McNabb-Kyritsis, the director of CDL Atlantic, was impressed from her first interview with Lauren. āI can remember distinctly thinking āWow, she's got a lot to offerā,ā says McNabb-Kyritsis.
Working in a fast-paced environment on a small team, Leslie admired her time-management skills and unflappable attitude. Even after Laurenās residency was over, Leslie brought her back to her CDL team. āI really saw her blossom and become more vocal over the course of her time with us,ā she says.
For Lauren, seeing first-hand how businesses grow sparked an interest in how she could be involved in that process as a lawyer. She says, āit really changed the way I was looking at my degree.ā
MBA frames legal career
Lauren has appreciated the diversity of backgrounds within her MBA class and how sheās learned to work with classmates with different strengths. She jokes: āI don't think I knew how bad I was at math until I saw how good other people were.ā
She feels her biggest area of growth while earning her degree has been developing āa broader sort of adaptability. Whether that's dealing with people who are coming from different places or finding a way to weave together a unique group of people.ā
As she graduates this June and prepares to article as a lawyer, Lauren hopes to eventually work in the intersection of law and business. She believes her MBA will give her an advantage in that world.
āI'm realizing that the MBA is absolutely foundational and has given me a lot of the people skills,ā she says, adding, āI think it's framed my legal career and oriented it in a more corporate way.ā