Antrag’s thesis was recognised for its depth and detail, and the award was presented by Jan van den Herik, Director of Strategy & Innovation at KPMG. “Her thesis discusses the strengths and weaknesses of different business solutions and presents a best, optimal solution and innovative business model,” said Van den Herik. “The jury is very curious to know how Antrag’s recommendations were received by the management of PostNL.”
Runner-up Sjaak Heuvels (MSc Global Business and Stakeholder Management 2013) received a prize of €500 for his thesis Transitioning towards a bio-based and sustainable construction industry: The case of hemp-based application in the Dutch construction industry’.
“The jury found this piece of work very innovative and well researched, as the construction sector is one of the least sustainable industries with an enormous ecological footprint,” said Van den Herik.
Increasing number and breadth of sustainability-related theses at RSM
KPMG has sponsored the KPMG RSM Sustainability Master Thesis Award since 2006. The award honours work which combines academic excellence and business relevance in sustainability management. To qualify, thesis subjects must be related to social and ecological sustainability and each thesis must have achieved a mark of at least 8.5 during the thesis defence. Theses from the past academic year are reviewed; an internal RSM panel arrives at a shortlist of five theses chosen for a combination of academic excellence, socio-environmental impact, business relevance and originality. The shortlisted theses are then forwarded to the KPMG jury.
Of a total of 2,309 theses defended between September 2013 and August 2014 (the previous academic year), 57 met the combined criteria of academic quality (8.5 or higher mark) and sustainability relevance – up from 42 theses in 2014. “The numbers have gone up, but also the variety of Master programmes represented from academic year 2013-2014,” said Nadine Kooiker, Sustainable RSM Student Assistant who oversaw the internal process of shortlisting five theses from the original 57. “Traditionally students in the MSc Global Business and Stakeholder Management contribute the largest number of theses on sustainability issues, however students from other departments dedicated their theses to addressing environmental and societal challenges – this really demonstrates the importance that students – as future business leaders – attach to the topic,” she added.