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My First piece of published work

 

Funny thing he pointed at me to take his photo while he posed. FOR ME! **gloating is over**

 

Edit: I have been published before at Business Week

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Evening HDR photo of UNC Kenan-Flagler's McColl building.

Gls-nr institute of business management

TBS is one of the finest Business Institutions for business studies, management education and research in India. It offers B.com, MBA, BBA, MCA, BCA, Hotel Management And Tourism, Diploma In Banking and Finance and other educational courses. Times business School in Ahmedabad and Management Education Ahmedabad.

timesacademy.co.in/

Rethinking the MBA: Business Education at a Crossroads

 

Authors: Srikant M. Datar, David A. Garvin, and Patrick G. Cullen

 

Publication Date: April 22, 2010

 

Description: Business education is at crossroads. In the 1960s and 1970s, when leading firms wanted new hires with cutting-edge business insights and analytical skills, they would hire MBAs from top-tier business schools. No more. As HBS professors David Garvin, Srikant Datar, and Research Associate Patrick Cullen show, the rapidly changing world economy has made the status and role of business education highly uncertain. Many pressing concerns come to light: Financial and consulting firms, which in the past hired the large majority of MBAs from top-ranked programs, now increasingly have in-house programs, which advance people just as quickly as B-School, in their view; More and more, recruiters have come to value the screening process top schools use to pick students, and now prefer to recruit straight from a school's admission list; and, Deans, recruiters, and firms have come to feel that B-Schools are behind the curve on globalization, not giving students the kind of heightened cultural awareness and refined global outlook they need. Even with all the ostensible focus on leadership, stakeholders complain that MBAs often don't really understand the practice of leadership or have sufficient awareness of their impact on others. What's more, in recent years there have been several high-profile critiques of business schools from leading academics such as Warren Bennis, Henry Mintzberg, and Rakesh Khurana. The current financial and economic crisis has only heightened the focus on the role of business schools: Did the norms and values taught at top business schools somehow contribute to the meltdown? The authors give a comprehensive and authoritative account yet of the troubled state of business education today, and go well beyond this to provide a blueprint for the future

 

Author Bios: Srikant M. Datar is the Arthur Lowes Dickinson Professor of Business Administration at Harvard University. A graduate with distinction from the University of Bombay, he received gold medals upon graduation from the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, and the Institute of Cost and Works Accountants of India.

 

David A. Garvin is the C. Roland Christensen Professor of Business Administration at the Harvard Business School. He joined the Business School faculty in 1979 and has since then taught courses in leadership, general management, and operations in the MBA and Advanced Management programs, as well as serving as faculty chair of the School's Teaching and Learning Center.

 

Patrick Cullen is a Research Associate at Harvard Business School.

 

Srikant's HBS Page: drfd.hbs.edu/fit/public/facultyInfo.do?facInfo=ovr&fa...

 

David's HBS Page: drfd.hbs.edu/fit/public/facultyInfo.do?facInfo=ovr&fa...

 

Other works by these authors:

Cost Accounting

Learning in Action

Education for Judgment

Managing Quality

HBR Articles

 

Contact: publicity@hbr.org

 

 

Study Room #11 was built in our old lobby from when the entrance to Foster was from the Bank of America building. Since the ceiling was over 20 foot tall, voices echoed in it pretty badly. Over Spring Break acoustic soundproofing was added to eliminate the echo. The room also got a new larger light fixture, which quite a few students had requested. Finishing off the room today it got a nice new large round wood table and a few more chairs. We are nicknaming this room "The Boardroom" because it's by far our nicest looking study room and it seems great for meetings.

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Tuck School of Business.Hanover, N.H...2006 Rank: 11.Tuition and Fees: $91,905.Applicants Accepted: 16%.Pre-MBA/Post-MBA Pay in $ Thousands: 65.0/115.0.In Brief: Close-knit community, accessible faculty, and rural locale make Tuck special...Tuck Profile.Tuck on Business Exchange

Here's the business school tower that I thought would make a better newspaper building than the AA News one...

 

It's a weird combination of art deco and heroic soviet style. The U kind of messed it up by replacing the original aluminum-framed windows with cheesy bronze metal ones.

Proud to be giving back to my alma mater. Go Bears!

In the upper left is the graduate business school. In the upper right is the stadium and other athletic facilities. Along Bow Street and near Mount Auburn Street in the lower half is Adams House. The large square building in the right center is the Malkin Athletic Center. One block to the right (west) is Shay's Pub and Wine Bar on JFK Street, near the intersection with South Street and Eliot Street. This view is roughly to the south-west.

 

heraldoflight.wordpress.com/

The entrance to the new University of Michigan Business school building.

 

Ann Arbor, MI

What I Didn't Learn in Business School: How Strategy Works in the Real World

 

Authors: Jay Barney and Trish Gorman Clifford

 

Publication Date: October 12th, 2010

 

Description: Meet John Downs. He's a new MBA graduate who's landed a job with a strategy consultancy. His engagement team is on a mission: help HGS Inc., a specialty chemicals firm, define and execute a strategy for exploiting a textile technology the company developed.

 

John and his team deploy state-of-the-art strategy tools to analyze the attractiveness of potential markets for the technology. But they soon realize the tools don't help them grapple with the human side of strategy--including political forces swirling within HGS. Everyone involved in the engagement is biased and insecure, brilliant and hardworking, selfish and lazy, loyal and dedicated.

 

John and his cohorts aren't "real"--What I Didn't Learn in Business School is a business novel. But they're realistic: they're just like us. Their story reveals the limitations of strategy tools and demonstrates tactics for navigating the messy, human dynamics that can make or break a company's strategy efforts.

 

This engaging book uses the power of story to present potent lessons for anyone seeking to excel at strategy management. It's a compelling read--whether you're an MBA grad struggling to apply what you learned or in the fray and eager to see what MBAs get wrong when they land in the real world.

 

Author Bio:

Jay Barney is a professor of management at the Ohio State University's Fisher College of Business. He has published numerous articles in strategy and management journals, as well as five bestselling textbooks on strategy.

 

Trish Clifford is formerly the Director of Global Strategy Learning at McKinsey & Company, and now spends her time in private practice working with mid- and upper-level managers in a variety of companies to strengthen strategic capabilities through a tailored mix of consulting, workshops, experiential learning, asynchronous and classroom learning. She works throughout the US, Asia, and Europe.

 

Contact: publicity@hbr.org

Can u spot somebody who has been a IIM Alumni, ex investment banker who quit Goldman Sachs, an IAS Officer among the rest of the students. His magnanimous personality was commendable but at the same time he was so humble and down to earth.

Spring had begun to bloom at the Weeks Bridge.

 

The Weeks is a pedestrian-only bridge that spans the Charles River between Cambridge and Boston, or (if you prefer) between Harvard's "river house" dorm area (this side) and the "B" School (the Harvard Business School).

Photo taken for Justin's article in Business Week

 

Business Week Article

Looking across the Charles River from near the "B" School (Harvard Business School) campus. On the other side are Harvard dorms, Mather House (left) for undergrads and Peabody Terrace for grad students.

The Weeks Bridge is a pedestrian bridge that crosses the Charles from Harvard's residential area in Cambridge (left and center) to the Harvard Business School area in Boston (right).

Taken in 2007.

 

The Weeks Bridge is a pedestrian-only bridge that crosses the Charles River from Harvard's residential area in Cambridge (left and center) to its Harvard Business School area in Boston (right).

Where do you live:

Boston

 

Kids/Ages:

2 - Hadley (15) and Nate (12)

 

For fun these days I like to...

Cycle, hike, cook

 

A (funny/disturbing/great) memory:

The mystery of the missing manhole covers.

 

My Update:

I have been in the Boston area since 1996. Met my wife at bschool and married in 2000. 2 great kids. Working mostly at early-ish stage software companies trying to turn them into later stage software companies. I have had a very fortunate ride since 1988.

 

The ultimate 80's band name is: Platinum Blonde

White shirt, blue jeans. Oh wait, I'm wearing black shorts. Alas.

Centum U Mohali students attend a guest lecture on Automobile Industry by Harkamal Singh Mangat, Tata Motors

Looking upriver from the Weeks Bridge. The Harvard Business School is on the left (the Boston side) and Harvard's "houses" (dorms) are on the right (the Cambridge side). Straight ahead are the Anderson Bridge and the university's two boat houses, field house, and other athletic facilities.

While we are still waiting for their chairs, the Foster Library has 3 new group stations with 46" LED screens. Each station will sit up to 5 students and they are at a first come first served basis. They have power and VGA cables for your laptop and we have MAC adapters at the front Information Desk.

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The Women in Business Affinity provides a platform of engagement for our current business school students, alumni, and businesswomen from a variety of industries. This series aims to promote the excellence in and achievements of School of Management alumnae and the business community and to enhance the experience for our female students within business programs.

Taken and originally posted in 2005.

 

The pedestrians-only Weeks Bridge spans the Charles River from here on the Cambridge side of Harvard's campus to the Boston side (the further shore). The chimneys on the left are part of the "B" School -- the Harvard Business School -- on the Boston side. (Though it was weedy and in disrepair in 2005, the bridge has since been restored.)

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