The MGS Blog

Thursday, April 30, 2015

Finalists in Deloitte Top Tech Challenge 2015

Smurfit MSc Students Finalists in Deloitte Top Tech Challenge

Smurfit MSc Students Finalists in Deloitte Top Tech Challenge
Pushpendra, Tanvita, and Ajay
UCD Michael Smurfit Graduate Business School Masters students Pushpendra Singh, Tanvita Srivastava, and Ajay Singh Rajput reached the final round of the Deloitte Ireland Top Tech Challenge 2015. (link)
The team at the #TopTechTalent final.
  • Pushpendra Singh (MSc Strategic Management & Planning programme)
  • Tanvita Srivastava (MSc iBusiness - Innovation through ICT programme)
  • Ajay Singh Rajput (MSc iBusiness - Innovation through ICT programme)

Saturday, April 25, 2015

Exercise: It's important to talk about Ethics because...

Ethics discussion keywords
Goal: To explore the meaning of ethics within and between organisations.
Preparatory reading (optional): 
  • Carr, Albert (1968). Is business bluffing ethical? Harvard Business Review, Jan.8Feb, 143, 155. 
  • Kavanagh, Donncha (2011) 'Work and play in management studies: A Kleinian analysis'. Ephemera: Theory & Politics in Organization, 11 (4), 336–356

Exercise workshop/debrief

Steps:
  1. Write the following keywords on the board. This can be done in advance or as an 'icebreaker' with the class. For instance, ask the class why we have included the concept of 'GAME'.
    • Ethics
    • Responsibility
    • Moral
    • Ethos
    • Play
    • Regulation
    • Rules
    • Safe
    • Values
    • Winners
    • What matters?
    • Game
    • Sustainable
    • Interests
    • Self-interests
    • Power
    • Barriers
    • Welfare
    • "it's important to talk about ethics because..."
  2. After this ask groups to discuss further and to create their own response to the opening sentence "It's important to talk about Ethics because..."
  3. Visit each table to ensure the discussions commence, encourage and highlight. Allow 5' to 10' for this phase.
  4. Give a 2' warning that each group must debrief to the rest of the class. Groups may present one or two different positions, possibly contrasting.
  5. Groups state to the rest of the class their interpretation and reasoning. Allow wider discussion. The lecturer can interject and 'characterise'. The tone will shift between serious and playful.
Notes:
After the discussion ask groups or individuals if they are willing to be photographed for the "Let's talk about ethics" initiative. Volunteers will need to sign the 'Photography Release Form'.

Indeed some of this year's class did elect to take part in the "Let's talk about ethics" initiative at UCD launched by President of Ireland Michael D. Higgins (link). Slideshow below.

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

But where is the innovation?

"How P&G Tripled Its Innovation Success Rate" by Bruce Brown and Scott Anthony (2011)

This article by Brown & Anthony (2011) illustrates for me one of the difficulties of seeking to identify a strong link between innovation and outsourcing. All of P&G's efforts towards innovation appear to be corporate internalisations of one kind or another and not outsourcing at all.

Likewise the TedTalk by Nirmalya Kumar titled "India's invisible innovation" drills into the common criticism that the net impact of outsourcing to India has not resulted in innovation from India.

A more pessimistic reading of the outsourcing literature might see it as rather devoid of product or service innovation at all. In fact it might appear, if innovation is occurring at all then it seems to take place at the inter-firm competitive level, the level of markets, organisational forms, and business models.

Friday, April 10, 2015

Story telling presentations

You only have 5 minutes to present.
Think like a TedTalk presenter.
Some strategies that may or may not work for you...
  • Focus on story telling for the presentation.
  • Perhaps focus on illustrating your key findings in some memorable and distinctive way.
  • Perhaps try fewer slides
  • Perhaps put some of the text into your speech rather than on the slides.
  • Perhaps focus on your key findings; they may relate to the case data or they may relate to the method you employed, or you may wish to cover both.

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Globalisation, changing trade, industry, purchasing

Speculating on the future of globalisation shifting to localisation. Shawn Donnan, FT. (link)