Attend individual sessions that match your current needs and interests. Or
select three core courses and at least two electives to get the Smith miniMBA2.0
certificate.
Traveling from out of town? Now you can complete your miniMBA2.0
certificate in a consecutive two week period. Classes currently scheduled May 23
– June 3.
The Next Financial Crisis: The Innovations Driving Modern Finance
Length: 2 days
Panelist from the February 2011 Session: Chris Taylor (Pew)
Click for Description
[+/-]
The last 20 years have been characterized by a frenzy of innovation in financial
markets. Trained finance MBAs and even regulators, lobbyists, and lawyers working
in the markets have struggled to understand the variety of innovations—derivatives,
structured products, asset backed securities—and the changing nature of competition
across financial markets. Presently, there remain significant risks in a variety
of areas, such as government debt, energy markets (cap and trade), the banking system,
derivatives markets, etc. This course surveys the financial product landscape and
the macroeconomy to understand the causes of the recent financial crisis and to
articulate the fault line likely to lead to the next crisis. The central motivating
question for the course is “How can individuals and corporations mitigate, or even
leverage, the risks in the current financial environment to their advantage?”
Note: The course assumes familiarity
with basic finance concepts, such as NPV, portfolio diversification, and company
financial statements.
Faculty: Dr. Albert (Pete) Kyle
Strategy
Length: 2 days; June 2-3
Click for Description
[+/-]
Eighty percent of growth in the next year is projected to be outside the
developed world. Many international corporations now derive more than half their
profits outside their home markets. Reverse mergers and acquisitions, guerrilla
innovation, and other management trends originating in places like Brazil,
Russia, India, and China are gaining momentum around the globe. And governments
have dramatically expanded their share in the economy. What are the essential
strategy lessons and frameworks for this era? What are the key trends to know
what tools will help, what tools will help you anticipate and respond better to
strategic change in a dynamic world?
Faculty: Dr. Anil Gupta
Social Media Marketing
Length: 2 days; May 23-24
Panelist from the October 2010 Session: Shashi Bellamkonda (Director Social
Media, Network Solutions), Rohit Bhargava (SVP Ogilvy/Author), Teddy Goff
(AVP, Blue State Digital) and Peter LaMotte (President, GeniusRocket)
Click for Description
[+/-]
Marketing strategy has been revolutionized by the rise of social networks, real-time
tools like Twitter and Facebook, user-generated content (e.g., blogging) and a shift
in consumer attention to new media. Old paradigms of word of mouth marketing, viral
strategy, consumer targeting, brand and reputation management are being radically
altered for this business 2.0 phenomenon. The course will address key strategic
and tactical aspects of social media marketing, using examples and techniques from
corporations, election campaigns, and recent startups. The strategic themes focus
on the business case for using various social media approaches and examples of successes
and failures. The tactical aspects will introduce participants to the capabilities
and uses of individual technologies through case examples and hands-on exercises.
Faculty:
Dr. David Godes
Informatics: The Science of Analysis for Business & Social Intelligence
Length: 2 days; May 26-27
Panelist from the November 2010 Session: Chris Volinsky( Director, AT&T
Research), George Wood (Carton Donofrio)
Click for Description
[+/-]
Business Analytics is transforming decision-making at all levels and in all aspects
of business. Consumer data pervades all facets of life from transactions at the
retail store to web-surfing behaviors of individuals, to HR data on employees, and
to data about your movie preferences on Netflix. Companies are analyzing these “digital
footprints” to understand customer's needs and preferences, make recommendations
to customers based on their peers, transform business processes, and drive significant
operating leverage in their models. Prime examples of companies mastering analytics
include Google which analyzes terabytes of web data in real time, AT&T which scrutinizes
large telephone networks to detect fraud, or Netflix or Amazon which can predict
what kind of products/services a customer needs. This course will provide an appreciation
of data mining techniques and their application to complex business decision-making
scenarios. The course combines hands-on opportunities to understand core tools for
mining data and strategic approaches for building/maintaining competitive advantages
by using analytics. The tricky challenge of data privacy will also be addressed.
Faculty: Dr. Wolfgang Jank
Technology-led Business Model Disruption
Length: 1 day; May 31
Panelist from the February 2011 Session: Brian Bieron (Director, eBay),
Maria-Paz Barrientos, (Partner, IBM Global Business Services)
Click for Description
[+/-]
This course will help prepare executives to understand and embrace technology
strategies that transform their business in disruptive markets. Digital technologies
are a significant force in global markets. They impact companies and the competitive
forces they face. By embracing digital transformation, companies can unlock the
potential of information goods and network effects to increase profits. Companies
that ignore these transformations do so at their own peril because they may miss
windows of opportunities seized by their competitors. This course will help executives
understand how to recognize a transformation and help them know how and when to
act strategically.
Faculty: Dr. Joseph Bailey
Sustainability in Business: Assessing the Current
State of the Art
Length: 1 day; May 25
Panelists:
· Kyle Whitaker Manager, SustainAbility Inc.
· Elizabeth Seeger, Head of
Green Portfolio, KKR
Click for Description
[+/-]
Firms are increasingly confronted by issues of sustainability, whether
via demand side or social pressures (e.g., through changing consumer
preferences or pressure from NGOs), a quest for superior and sustained
performance or a need to comply with regulation. Sustainability issues
facing firms are multi-faceted and, in most cases, without clear strategic
solutions. Firms often must choose between sustainability and short term
profitability.
The goal of this course is to better understand the issues of
sustainability in several different contexts. We will discuss the tradeoffs
firms face in thinking about sustainability problems and areas where firms
are making high impact decisions about sustainability, specifically, green
design, manufacturing and architecture practices. Participants will gain
exposure to current and new thinking about sustainability and where
sustainability most closely aligns with new business opportunities.
Faculty: Dr.
Rachelle Sampson
Project Management 2.0
Length: 1 day; March 19
Click for Description
[+/-]
More and more organizations are recognizing that project management is a core
competency of everyone in their organization. Yet, the complexity of managing resources
across geographies, business units, and virtual teams often frustrate project outcomes.
This course provides a simple framework for organizing and managing project-like
work within your organization. Through interactive lectures and hands-on exercises
and simulations, gain the knowledge to improve your project management skills. Industry
practitioners will share worst-case horror stories and identify the common pitfalls
in project management.
Faculty: Bryan Palma
Building and Leading Global Virtual Teams for Success
Length: 1 day; TBD
Click for Description
[+/-]
Team-based work and virtual collaboration are quickly becoming the norms for
workplace interaction. In such environments, managers must master
interpersonal competencies, lead diverse individuals, and manage conflict
among team members. This course will address the confluence of
interpersonal, cross-cultural, and structural/design challenges faced by
today’s global virtual teams, and discuss strategies by which team leaders
can more effectively build and lead global virtual teams.
Faculty: Dr. Gilad Chen
& Dr. Paul Tesluk
The DNA of Corporate Valuation: Forensically Reading Financial Statements
Length: 1 day
Panelist from the December 2010: Session: Jeremy Perler (CFA, CPA,
Co-Director of Accounting Research, Risk Metrics Group), Carol McGee(Alston
+ Bird LLP)
Click for Description
[+/-]
Financial Statements are the scorecard for decisions taken by a firm and a critical
building block for corporate valuation. Understanding the impact of managerial choices
on financial outcomes, and vice versa, is a critical skill. However, for the novice,
financial statements feel like reading in a foreign language. This course will use
case studies, spreadsheets, and scenarios to improve familiarity with key financial
terms, ratios, and statement analysis techniques. The course also highlights accounting
tricks and shenanigans that have been used in recent years (e.g., WorldCom, Enron,
Tyco, etc.) to teach executives to read financial statements with a critical eye.
Faculty: Dr. Progyan Basu
Growth in Emerging Markets
Length: 1 days; June 1
Panelists:
· Jon Barney, The Avascent
Group
· Bob Rose, Director
Corporate Development, ITT Defense
Click for Description [+/-]
Emerging market countries such as China, India, Russia, and Brazil are
expected to be a major sources of global economic growth in the coming
years. This class will provide conceptual frameworks to analyze emerging
markets. There will be a focus on the strategic and public policy issues
associated with entering, investing, operating and managing emerging
markets.
Faculty: Leandro De Sa