30+mba-第3部分
按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
the risks and responsibilities associated with each of those sources。 Debt;
equity; bonds; debentures; IPOs; private equity and business angels are
part of this area’s vocabulary; as is appraising capital investment decisions。
Marketing
The outward face of a business is addressed to its customers and its success
or failure is the measure of how well it performs in the marketplace。 Markets
have to be identified; product a。。ributes accessed; petitors understood
and advertising messages developed to reach chosen markets。 Marketing
is perhaps the discipline with the largest number of misunderstood and
misapplied business tools of all。
Operations
This discipline is concerned with how products and services are got ready
for market (production); delivered or executed; and the management information
system designed to track performance。
Organizational behaviour
Organizing; inspiring; motivating; rewarding and managing both individuals
and teams is the enduring challenge in organizations as they grow
and develop。 O。。en people are the defining advantage that one organization
has and can sustain over its petitors。
Personal development (and lifetime learning)
Techniques for improving career prospects are an increasingly important
aspect of MBA curricula。 This is hardly surprising; as the success of
6 The Thirty…Day MBA
acquiring MBA skills is measured; in part at least; by increases in salary
and improved job prospects and satisfaction。 Business schools offer some
of these topics during the programme but many form part of their repeat
business portfolio。 This area is one that should be constantly revisited and
in this book it appears as an appendix。
Quantitative and qualitative analysis
This is where it all began。 Fredrick Winslow Taylor; author of The Principles
of Scientific Management (1911); set out to ‘measure each and every task and
establish a system of work’。 The first person to have on his business card the
title ‘Consultant to Business’; he was the pioneer of the school of ‘ge。。ing at
the facts’。 This is also where many business schools started out。 Cranfield
School of Management was born out of the Work Study Department; itself
part of the School of Production。
Strategy
This is the unifying discipline; o。。en called business strategy。 It deals with
the core purpose of an enterprise and how it should respond to the challenges
of a fast…changing environment。 It centres not just on how strategy is
shaped; for example using Porter’s Five Forces; but on the recognition that
no organization can be truly great in the absence of shared goals; values
and a sense of purpose – a shared picture of the future of the enterprise。
WHERE CAN YOU GET MBA SKILLS AND
KNOWLEDGE?
The most obvious answer to this question is – at a business school。 There
you will find talented teachers (some!); eager; self…motivated; likeminded
students and a wealth of teaching resources; including books; journals;
case studies and library facilities。 In fact; for most people in most cases
this will be the wrong answer and; if pursued; will prove an extravagant
disappointment。
A brief history of business schools
The claim to being the world’s first business school is; like everything
else in business; hotly disputed。 The honour is usually said to rest with
Wharton; founded in 1881 by Joseph Wharton; a self…taught businessman。
A miner; he made his fortune through the American Nickel pany
and the Bethlehem Steel Corporation; later to bee the subject of the
Introduction 7
earliest business case studies。 The school is based in an urban campus at
Philadelphia’s University of Pennsylvania。
It wasn’t until 1900 that Tuck School of Business; part of Dartmouth
College; began conferring advanced degrees in management sciences。 In
1908 the Harvard Business School opened; with a faculty of 15 and some
80 students; and two years later it was offering a Management Masters programme。
By 1922 Harvard was running a doctoral programme pioneering
research into business methods。
Today; over a thousand business schools around the globe offer MBA
programmes; minting some 100;000 new graduates each year。 It wasn’t until
the late 1950s that the first business schools in the UK opened their doors –
with LBS (London Business School); Cranfield and the Manchester Business
School in the vanguard。 In mainland Europe it took a further two decades
for business schools to establish a niche in the market。 The harmonization
of university education in Europe; under the Bologna Accord due to be
fully implemented by 2010; has already created some 300 new management
master’s degrees。 It is unlikely that the quality of education delivered will
keep pace with the rise in quantity。
But despite these impressive numbers; they represent barely a drop in
the management ocean。 For every manager or executive with an MBA there
are over 200 with no formal business qualification。 That an MBA from one
of the top business schools delivers value to most of those who take it and
to the organizations for which they work is beyond reasonable doubt。 One
of the measures any self…respecting business school boasts is the salary rise
its alumni achieve in the three years a。。er graduation; typically between 50
and 70 per cent。
However; Shanghai Jiao Tong University’s Antai College of Economics &
Management (ACEM); where the average MBA could expect a salary hike
of 177 per cent over three years; is a whole lot different from those ing
out of Vlerick Leuven Gent who ne。。ed just 50 per cent (according to the FT
Business Schools top 100 Ranking; 2008)。 Outside of the top 100 business
schools; many graduates will see no hike in pay and even perhaps find it
hard to get a job。
So could and should everyone put up the £100;000 or so required in
fees and salary forgone; muster the appropriate GMAT score and take an
MBA at a top school? It takes a brave person to give up a job and bee a
student; perhaps only a few years into their career; with unpaid loans and
mortgages looming large。
Luckily you don’t have to make that decision – you can have your cake
and eat it。 You certainly need MBA knowledge if you are dissatisfied with
your progress; but you don’t need to go to a business school to get it。
8 The Thirty…Day MBA
WHY YOU PROBABLY SHOULDN’T GO TO
BUSINESS SCHOOL
What follows will probably limit my prospects of teaching in business
schools and none of it detracts from the great work that many schools do。
It’s just that their approach is that of ‘one size fits all’ and; contrary to their
mantra that the customer is king; in business schools it is the professors
that are the focal point; just as in a hospital the consultant is ‘God’。 In short;
many business schools do a great job; it’s just that for many people and for
much of the time they do the wrong job。 The good ones are at the cu。。ing
edge of knowledge and if you do want to see what is taught there and listen
or watch their star faculty teach; you can do so for free – just follow the links
in each chapter。 The poor business schools; and that is the vast majority;
have their faculty teach from the books wri。。en by the best; so you may as
well consider cu。。ing out the middleman in the process; with li。。le loss in
knowledge and a great saving in cost and time。
Business school limitations
Let’s look a bit more closely at what goes on in a business school。 Anything
from 25 to around 2;000 students; in Harvard’s case; are assembled in one
place at one time to cover the core disciplines that make up a Master of
Business Administration degree。 But the faculty decides what is actually
taught within those disciplines and how it is taught。 Their decision will
be based on their own research preferences and; as they set and mark the
exams; they have an enormous amount of freedom over what they teach。
For example; in one well…regarded business school the strategy ponent
of the course prises a series of disjointed lectures entitled ‘Socialist uses
of workers’; ‘Kloinko for a glance’ (the authors’ sole imperative is explaine