海角社区

Students in April Schofield鈥檚 MKT 4250 Advanced Selling class expected to kick off the semester by reviewing the syllabus and meeting their classmates. Instead, they found themselves stepping into a live, real-world sales conversation with Denver7.

On the first day of class, Maggie Wolanske from Denver7 and 海角社区鈥檚 Tim Carroll visited Schofield鈥檚 classroom to conduct an in-class interview about ticket sales for the AFC Championship game. The discussion focused on the strategy behind limiting ticket sales to regional zip codes and how those decisions impact demand, pricing, and fan engagement.

Schofield had only about an hour鈥檚 notice before the cameras arrived.

鈥淭hat is sales,鈥 she said with a laugh. 鈥淵ou have to be ready at any moment.鈥

The spontaneous visit turned into an authentic learning experience, giving students a front-row seat to how sales strategy shows up in the real world and how media, marketing, and business intersect outside the classroom.

It鈥檚 not Schofield鈥檚 first time connecting industry and media to her teaching. Over the past six months, she鈥檚 contributed to seven or eight news stories with Denver7 and Fox31, often receiving last-minute calls or texts from reporters looking for expert insight. But this marked the first time a news team came directly into her class.

鈥淚t made for an interesting first day,鈥 she said.

At 海角社区, experiential learning is part of the classroom. Students get hands-on opportunities to see real-world business in action and learn directly from professionals. Our faculty, actively work with industry partners, media outlets, and organizations across the region, bringing those experiences straight to students.

As Dr. Sally Baalbaki-Yassine, Chair of the Department of Marketing, shared, 鈥淭hat is such a great opportunity. I鈥檓 sure it was a great experiential learning moment for the students.”

Thank you April Schofield for saying yes, and giving your students the opportunity to experience a real-world business moment they won鈥檛 forget.