BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – During the pandemic, more than 360 small businesses and public organizations in Indiana in 52 counties across Indiana – half of them owned by women – have been helped through a no-cost assistant program by the Indiana University Kelley School of Business.
Working in partnership with the Indiana Economic Development Corporation and the Indiana Small Business Development Centers, the Kelley HOPE Digital Project also provided a valuable and meaningful experience for more than 230 current and prospective students and alumni at a time when COVID-19 led to shortened or cancelled summer internships.
Since May, more than 27,000 hours have been spent on projects for 364 organizations. Students signed up for unpaid, volunteer internships. The Kelley School was able to award eligible students with scholarships, recognizing their learning and growth with the work they did for the Kelley HOPE Digital Project.
The aim of the program was to help small businesses and community organizations struggling with the economic impact of stay-at-home advisories and other restrictions to establish or increase their online presence and boost their digital capabilities. Each project was done by teams of students led by a second-year student or an alumnus of Kelley’s Kelley’s Master of Science in Information Systems (MSIS) program.
In each instance, the goal was to quickly solve a technology problem or to provide companies with new digital capability. Kelley faculty members Keith Dayton, Alan Dennis and Bipin Prabhakar provided strategic guidance and mentorship to the student and alumni leaders of the initiative. (more…)