Ashley Martin ā20, MBA ā21, unlike a lot of MBA students, didnāt launch her professional career, start a family or take a gap year before starting her Āé¶¹Ö±²„ studies.
That's because sheās had a plan for years.
āSince my senior year in high school, Iāve known what I wanted to do,ā Martin said.
And what she wanted to do was get a Āé¶¹Ö±²„ degree in business. Even her underĀé¶¹Ö±²„ degree in economics from Pacific was chosen with that in mind.
āOriginally I was going to get my bachelorās in business and then get my MBA, but I talked to one of my AP teachers, and she said āWhy donāt you get a degree in something around business, one of the side subjects?āā Martin said.
The MBA, she reasoned, would give her a broad view of the way business worked. So Martin, who picked Pacific partly for its softball program, decided to major in economics.
Shortly after completing her underĀé¶¹Ö±²„ degree, Martin went to work full time as an associate account manager at Montgomery & Graham, a Lake Oswego, Ore.,-based health insurance broker and consultant. She also jumped into Pacificās MBA program, which consists of roughly 15 months of intensive, every-other-weekend classes, with group projects and individual work filling the time in between.
The biggest surprise, Martin said, is how much teamwork takes place in business. In collaborating on MBA projects with diverse colleagues, all in different stages of life.
āItās really helped me develop my skills of how to communicate with my team members,ā she said.
āIāve always been very independent. I was āI want to do it my way. I want to get stuff done,āā she said. āI have a certain vision of how I wanted stuff done, so Iāve had a hard time asking for help.
āThe program has taught me that itās OK to ask for help. If they donāt do it the way you want, you guys work together on it,āā she said.
That willingness to ask for help has already helped her at her job at the insurance brokerage, where she had much to learn about health insurance. āNow I have no problem saying āHey, are you free? Can you help me?ā to my coworkers,ā Martin said.
Martinās father runs a heavy diesel equipment mechanic business near her southern Oregon home in Sutherlin. That helped her pick up some knowledge of business, though she knew her dadās business wasnāt meant for her.
But she did have the satisfaction recently of helping her parentsā small business obtain health insurance for its employees. They had been looking for health insurance for a couple of months. āIām like āHere you go,āā she said.
Martin is the first in her family to complete college. In high school, she thrived as a participant in Future Business Leaders of America, the program that helped convince her that she has a future in business. As an underĀé¶¹Ö±²„ at Pacific, she played softball for two years, took classes abroad, worked part-time, served in the Student Senate and was involved in her sorority Alpha Kappa Delta. The experience was made possible with the help of a variety of scholarships, including the John Fitzgerald ā71 Memorial Fund, the Henry F. Price Memorial Fund, the Bi-Mart Annual Scholarship Fund and the PCC Structurals Fund.
Continuing with Pacificās MBA program was both affordable and convenient, she said.
Living in Hillsboro, where the program has conducted both in-person and online classes, allowed her to be close enough to help care for an aging grandparent and to see her family. And it gave her time to work full time ā and remotely ā for Montgomery and Graham.
The healthcare management track in the MBA program, meanwhile, provides a unique niche.
She intends to get her health insurance license, which will let her directly sell and retain insurance policies in Oregon.
The pandemic has made studying for her MBA āa little rocky,ā she acknowledged, but itās been worth it. With her degree and specialization in health care management, āIām always going to have job opportunities.ā
Further, she said, sheās become close friends with her cohort of fellow students, jump-starting her career with a set of friendships with professionals in various industries and stages in their own lives.
āIāve developed some really good friendships that will last me long after the program,ā she said. āIf I was somewhere at 2 oāclock in the morning, I could call someone from my MBA class and I know theyād come and help me out.
āI didnāt know it would be as cohesive as it is.ā