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Business School

What a great evening!

Really enjoyed the night with my wife. Great cause, great entertainment, great networking, great organization!

The event was held at the House of Sweden, on the Potomac waterfront in Georgetown. There were celebratory speeches, acknowledgement of this year’s recipient of Distinguished Alumni Award, hors d’oeuvre, open bar (take a note, if you ever have to attend an event at this venue – no red wine is permitted, apparently for the sake of the floors),  and performances by current students and alumna.
I was really surprised and pleased by the quality of the band  that comprised GWSB MBA students. The guys were really amazing. My personal favorite was their rendition of the Beatles songs, though they had more in their repertoire, including American classics.

This reception reminded me about another event I attended with my wife in my first year of part-time program – MBA Gala. No contest here – Business Gives Back night was hands down a much more rewarding experience.

Other than enjoying the music and dancing, I was glad to catch up with a bunch of people I met before in my elective classes, as well as meet quite a few new faces – mostly the first-year full-time Global MBAs.

I even met the guy who almost dismantled me from the dubious position of being the oldest student in full-time and part-time MBA programs at GWSB ;-) . He is still a couple of years younger than me. But he nevertheless beat me in one regard – he started full-time program, not part-time, at the age just over 40. Kudos!

To learn more about the event, read this more official report on the evening, and my original post about it.

If there were one thing I personally could do differently – I should have skipped the after party at the nearby bar ;-) .

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I just bought two tickets for me and my wife to the 2-nd Annual Business Gives Back event that will take place this coming Saturday. If you are in the GWSB community and somehow missed multiple prompts and invitations to this event in the busyness of your days, you still have a chance to register and buy tickets online till tomorrow. Here are just a few highlights of this event from the invitation flyer and other promotional materials:

  • In line with the George Washington School of Business pillars: “Act Responsibly, Lead Passionately, Think Globally,” Business Gives Back is a student-led initiative celebrating a commitment to responsible business and social change.
  • Three student-led initiatives will be selected by a student panel to compete for the funds raised at the event. The initiatives showcased must be nascent nonprofits or community service groups founded or led by current GWSB students that, as a reflection of the GWSB pillars, make a positive impact within the D.C. and global communities.
  • An evening of music and fellowship recognizing community initiatives led by George Washington University School of Business students and alumni.
  • The evening will feature musical performances by current GWSB graduate students. Cocktails and refreshments will be served.
  • Remarks by Dean Guthrie and Dean Riddle

I hope to take a few pictures and have a brief report on the event afterwards. For me, in addition to supporting a good cause, it will be another opportunity to network with my fellow MBA, and undergrad students, as I acknowledged before the lack of such opportunities for part-time MBA students due to busy schedules.

See you there!

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Today was my first day of classes in the final term of part-time MBA program at George Washington University School of Business. I had two classes piggy-backed from 4.30 PM to 9.40 PM. I don’t have classes for the rest of the week in the first Spring Module, so it seems like a reasonable workload. But in the second module I will have two more classes added during the week. At that time it will be very much like taking  an equivalent of a full-time MBA student load for seven weeks. The only consolation is that by mid-May it will all be over – I will become one of about a hundred thousand freshly-minted MBAs graduating this year in the USA alone. Huge company!

The classes I had today are Organizational Processes and Change Management and Global Corporate Responsibility. Both are 3-credit classes full-term long. In my post Rate My Professors – Validated! I mentioned that all my electives for this final term I selected strictly on the ratings of professors at ratemyprofessor.com. Of course, I am interested in the subject matter itself. But if it was not for a good instructor I would choose different class of my interest. I also got additional endorsements from some of the classmates who had already taken these classes. My rationale was that for the final term, when I do have a choice, I wanted  to have the best professors I could get, so I could enjoy the classes and enjoy myself in those classes.

So far I am very happy about my choices. Though the classes will require quite a lot of work, I am OK with it, because both professors are very knowledgeable and well-qualified for their respective subjects. And what is even more important, they are very passionate about their subjects and seem to care a lot about students. Also, both classes were very engaging and interactive, inviting a lot of interactions between everyone in the classroom.

Aside from academics, I was glad to see and briefly chat with about five of my classmates from previous classes and other engagements, including a guy I met earlier through this blog. All in all, I am excited to be back on campus and am looking forward to a great Spring term ahead.

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This is the beginning of the final term in my quest for the MBA degree. And it is arguably going to be the most intense in terms of the study load. Up until now throughout my part-time MBA program at George Washington University School of Business I have had 7.5 credits in each of my full Spring/Fall terms.

This Spring term I am going to have a record of 9 credits. Taking 9 credits in Spring term will allow me to complete my graduation requirements. Theoretically I could take just my regular 7.5 credits in Spring, participate in graduation ceremony in May, and then take final 1.5 credits in Summer term. However, the choice of electives in Summer is relatively smaller, and I was concerned I would not be able to find appropriate elective class worth just 1.5 credits.

Another aspect of intensity is that I am going to have just two classes in my first module, and then four classes in the second module. So far, the most I had during one module was three classes. So it is going to be an interesting experience, I sure hope it is survivable :-) .

The classes I have registered for my final MBA term are:

  • Strategy Formulation and Implementation – MBA capstone course
  • Global Corporate Responsibility – selective which will cover my two  elective requirements: for international business, and sustainability

Electives:

  • Business Communications
  • Organizational Factors/Process of Change

As I said, the term seems to be quite intense, but I am ready to make this final push and finally get my MBA degree. I hope I will still find the time to keep you posted on my progress. One thing I am quite sure I will keep uploading my write-ups for business cases analyses on a weekly basis. This way I will have all the cases I have accumulated so far published by the end of the school year. I am planning to have business cases published once a week on Sundays, so keep checking the Business School Cases section regularly for new additions.

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MBA Winter Break Accomplishments

January 16, 2012

While the winter break in business schools around the world brought about a significant dip in traffic to my blog since mid-December, for me personally it was a very productive period in my MBA blogging. I mostly kept my promise to keep up with regular updates to this site and in the process I was [...]

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MBA Bubble to Burst?

January 11, 2012

The subtitle for this post could probably be How to manage your risks if MBA bubble to burst? // There is no question in my mind that the MBA degree and MBA education have been going through the significant changes in the last decade or so. The question I actually have is, are those changes [...]

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Conflict Management and Negotiations Resources

January 9, 2012

This class – Conflict Management and Negotiations, probably got the most of coverage of all my MBA classes in this blog. There were two reasons for this: first, it was a highly engaging and even entertaining class, which was of great interest to me personally; second, I kept a self-reflection journal which I had been [...]

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Negotiation – More on Importance of Preparation

January 7, 2012

I have already reflected on the Ridgecrest School Dispute Negotiation Simulation in my blog earlier. There were also couple of posts on the importance of preparation for negotiation: Negotiation Preparation – Do the Numbers and  Cover Your Butt – Prepare Your BATNA. This is the last post with my thoughts on the importance of preparation [...]

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Humor and Workplace Productivity

January 4, 2012

At the beginning of the Conflict Management and Negotiations classes last Fall MBA term at GWSB professor often had a short musical intermission with some comments, or a humorous YouTube video to set the positive tone for the lecture. At one point there was a brief comment about the humor and its effect on increasing [...]

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Labor Disputes – Unionized Dis-Unity

January 2, 2012

One of the assignments in my Conflict Management and Negotiations class was to prepare for discussion of the documentary Final Offer.  You can watch it online, if interested. A very suspenseful documentary about the labor negotiations between the Canadian section of the United Auto Workers (UAW) and GM in 1984. Even though the immediate objectives [...]

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Cover Your Butt – Prepare Your BATNA

December 30, 2011

In my past post I was reflecting on the importance of knowing your BATNA (Best Alternative to Negotiated Agreement) based on the car sale negotiation. The emphasis there was on remembering your BATNA in the process of negotiation. However, there was another negotiation case in my Conflict Management and Negotiations class at GWU School of [...]

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Negotiation Conflict and Interdependency – After Us, the Flood?

December 28, 2011

This saying was in the lecture slide for my Conflict Management and Negotiations class at GWSB MBA on the topic of inter-dependencies in the negotiations:  Leave a good name in case you return (Kenyan Folk Saying). When I read it I recalled a couple of other sayings which are similar, but have a bit different [...]

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Negotiation Preparation – Do the Numbers

December 26, 2011

Here is another extract from the self-reflection journal in the Conflict Management and Negotiations class at GWSB MBA program. Capital Mortgage Insurance A great case with multiple take home lessons. For me, the most important one was about the necessity of thorough preparation for negotiation. Specifically – analyzing the data with numbers. The Capital Mortgage [...]

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Used Car Sales Negotiation Exercise

December 24, 2011

This post is another extract from the self-reflection journal that I kept in my Conflict Management and Negotiations class at GWSB MBA program this past fall term. Used Car Sales Negotiation Exercise The Used Car Sales exercise was a very refreshing one and the most important lesson I took from it was: “Know Your BATNA [...]

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Conflict Management and Negotiations Styles

December 21, 2011

In my Conflict Management and Negotiation class in MBA program at GWSB this past Fall term one of the assignments (graded, too) was to keep a Self-reflection journal throughout the course. To quote the syllabus:  ” Participants should focus on how course lectures, discussions, self-assessments, exercises and assignments inform their personal and professional lives.  That [...]

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Flash Mob for Business School Marketing

December 19, 2011

Around this time two years ago I learned what the flash mob was. Even though it was not completely novel phenomenon at that time – it was such for me. In that post two years ago I made a passing remark on the great potential flash mobs held for marketing purposes. And it seems that [...]

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Business Schools on Winter Break

December 17, 2011

On Thursday I had my final exam in Macroeconomics. This officially marked closing of my Fall 2011 term of part-time MBA program at George Washington University School of  Business. I have five weeks of winter break ahead! Unlike this time last year I am not going to disappear from the blog for over three months. Pinky [...]

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Conflict Management and Negotiations Course Overview

December 11, 2011

The elective course on Conflict Management and Negotiations in my MBA program at GWU was a very interesting, and great educational experience. I greatly appreciated the case analyses from the textbook that we had in class, such as Capital Mortgage Insurance, or the Pacific Oil Co. cases among others. I had a few posts on [...]

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Rate My Professors – Validated!

December 3, 2011

In my last class on Conflict Management and Negotiations professor mentioned a recent article in the George Washington University newspaper about the research on the validity of ratings at ratemyprofessors.com co-authored by the associate professor of psychology at the University of Wisconsin at Eau Claire. Valid or not, I, and a few of the MBA [...]

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Economists Do It with Models – It’s More Fun That Way

November 26, 2011

In my recent post on Macroeconomics I quoted a joke from my Microeconomics professor that “Economists Do It with Models”. He never implied it was his joke, and mentioned that he had seen it on the t-shirts of Economics students at either MIT or University of Michigan. So I knew it was a widely circulated [...]

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Negotiation Simulation Role Playing – More Play, Less Role

November 20, 2011

This week in my part-time MBA class on Conflict Management and Negotiations we had an in-class presentations for the group negotiation simulation based on Ridgecrest School Dispute case. Essentially, the case is based on the dispute between the Board of Education and the Teachers Association (the teachers union) about the ways of closing the budget [...]

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Macroeconomics – Funny Joke of the Day

November 18, 2011

Just wanted to add another fun video to keep your interest in economics up and demonstrate that macroeconomics is not all that boring as the economists try to make it look to us – lay -men and -women. // I first saw this video about a year ago when I was taking my Financial Management [...]

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Macroeconomics Fun – Notes From the Classroom

November 12, 2011

Macroeconomics is one of the core classes I am taking right now – a little bit later in my MBA studies. The first part of Economics – Microeconomics – I took in my very first module when I just started my whole part-time MBA program journey back in fall 2009. // As everything with economics, [...]

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Consulting Club Networking Social at GWU

November 6, 2011

Just a couple days ago I was complaining about the lack of time and opportunities for part-time MBA students to network within the context of the business school. Apparently, having pumped myself up with discontent about this situation, I subconsciously was looking for opportunities to do something about it . // Over a week ago [...]

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Social Networking for Part-time MBA Students

November 3, 2011

This past weekend I had a negotiation simulation with my classmate in Conflict Management and Negotiations class. As I mentioned in the past, this class requires some of the negotiations to be held out of the class, so we had a scheduled appointment on campus on Sunday. We had allocated an hour for the whole [...]

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All-American Darling Netflix Fallout

October 24, 2011

Today I was looking at my business cases portfolio that I have prepared in the course of my part-time MBA studies at GWU School of Business and I noticed that I have not published any cases from my Marketing classes yet. So I found one of the sections I prepared for a group project on [...]

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Fall Mid-Term Breather at GWSB

October 21, 2011

On Wednesday I got done with the first module of the Fall term at GWSB part-time MBA program . In the last week I was scraping up to finalize two group project papers, two final in-class group presentations and a final exam  administered online. It was very taxing period, to say the least. I spent [...]

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Part-time MBA Blog – Two Year Anniversary

October 15, 2011

Another milestone in my blogging experience. Don’t have too much time to reflect on this now, but if you are interested in some background information on how this blog came to be, you can read the post I had a year ago on One Year Anniversary of this blog. // I would still like to [...]

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GWU School of Business – Ascent in Economist MBA Ranking 2011

October 14, 2011

Last time I had a post on George Washington University School of Business rise in Financial Times MBA ranking there was a lot of fanfare going around the school. I think I received at least 3 or 4 emails within a couple of days from different sections of the business school and university heralding the [...]

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Taking Care of Business – MBA Russian Way

October 11, 2011

Just stumbled upon an interesting article in Economist – School of the dark arts. It is about, if not the best, at least the most touted, Russian business school – Moscow School of Management SKOLKOVO. The school has been known since its founding in 2006 as a pet project of the Russian government and the [...]

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Risk Is Not a Dirty Word in Project Management

October 6, 2011

This first module of the Fall term at GWU School of business I am taking class on Risk Management for Projects. I am taking this class as a follow up to the one I took last Spring term – Introduction to Project Management. // One thing I was surprised to learn in the Risk Management [...]

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Competing on Analytics vs Intuitive Courage

September 29, 2011

I mentioned in an earlier post that I am taking a “Database and Web Analytics” elective class this first module of the fall term at GWSB MBA program. The required reading for this class is Competing on Analytics: The New Science of Winning – not exactly a textbook, but rather – a high view of [...]

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Why George Washington University School of Business?

September 27, 2011

The Businessweek online has recently placed a video interview with the dean of the George Washington University School of Business – Doug Guthrie,  who answers this question. The highlights of the GWU Business School approach to business education, as per dean’s interview, are the corporate social responsibility, sustainability, ethics and global perspective. These core elements [...]

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East Coast Earthquake – Risk Management Application

September 1, 2011

// This picture was used by my professor in the first on-campus class this year I had on Wednesday – Risk Management (for Projects). I cannot figure out the name of the cartoonist, but the date is very clear – 1990. This is a great illustration about some of the approaches to managing risk, arguably [...]

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Happy New MBA Year!

August 29, 2011

Today is the first day of my last year of part-time MBA program at GW School of Business (GWSB). Summer break, vacation are all history, and I did not even manage to put a short report on my Cancun vacation ;-( . Now it’s not likely I will have time for that. But before I [...]

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