ÐÓÊ®°Ëвè·ÖÏí

Skip to main content

MBA for Life program helped Andy Sloop MBA’00 develop a process management approach to sustainability

by Linda Lenhoff,

Andy Sloop MBA’00 has a lifelong interest in technology and sustainability, making him the perfect person to serve as Global Zero Waste & Circularity Director at Nike — a position he’s held for seven years.

Twenty years after earning his MBA through Willamette’s MBA for Life program, Sloop was able to take a Lean Six Sigma course with Professor of Operations Management and Information Systems Henry Bi. Bi’s course teaches a systematic, data-driven approach to continuously improve manufacturing and other processes, drive quality, and eliminate waste. The MBA for Life program enables MBA graduates to take select classes for free for life. Sloop passed the American Society for Quality’s Certified Six Sigma Green Belt exam at the end of that course, and highly values what he learned.

“I’d been wanting to do Lean Six Sigma for a while,” Sloop began. “It has very practical applications in my work.”

focuses on process excellence, Sloop explains. “Every process has variation in it, whether it’s ordering a cup of coffee at Starbucks, making a pair of shoes, or a medical procedure.”

Sloop leads the development and implementation of global strategies for reducing and recycling waste from all of Nike’s contract factories. The valuable process management skills Sloop received from Willamette were a perfect fit for his current role. “It definitely gave me language, mental models, concepts, and tools that I didn’t have before,” he said, adding that the strategy felt intuitive to him. “Now when I talk to people who have gone through similar training, we have a shared approach and language for improving processes and systems.”

A lot of what Sloop and his coworkers do, especially in a large, complex organization like Nike, is identify strategic opportunities to improve sustainability performance at scale, and then identify who can catalyze that change. Many such opportunities entail driving more consistent manufacturing process excellence. Sloop added that he “focuses on long-term systems improvement, not narrow, short-term wins.” Sloop maintains that “you can’t do sustainability alone — it’s inherently a team sport. You have to cultivate allies and be able to find alignment across stakeholders.”

Sloop values Willamette’s dual accreditation in business and public administration and believes it is a good program for people who are interested in working at the intersection of the public and private sectors.

“The Willamette MBA teaches fundamentals that are transferable and applicable in a lot of different contexts,” Sloop said. “You need to be able to apply management principles to a lot of different contexts when you’re working in sustainability.”

Photo Caption: Andy Sloop sits atop bales of textile scrap from footwear manufacturing while visiting a recycling facility in Vietnam in 2023.

Related Stories

View All
Willamette University

Students cultivate skills and advocate for change through summer fellowships

09.13.2024 | Jessica Rotter

WUPILP’s summer fellowships provide students with valuable experience in public interest law.

Willamette University

Willamette’s new students: thinkers, doers, and leaders poised to make an impact

09.05.2024 | Paul McKean

ÐÓÊ®°Ëвè·ÖÏí kicked off a new academic year with joy and energy across its five colleges, welcoming an accomplished and innovative group of future change makers to its campuses.

Willamette University

Lauren Carlson recognized as USA Today’s Oregon Woman of the Year

09.05.2024 | Sophie Cipolla

Willamette's Director of Health Services brings vision and drive to serve student health on the Salem campus.

ÐÓÊ®°Ëвè·ÖÏí

University Communications

Address
Waller Hall, Fourth Floor
ÐÓÊ®°Ëвè·ÖÏí
900 State Street
Salem Oregon 97301 U.S.A.