Saturday, August 29, 2009
What Makes a Leader Great?
Friday, August 28, 2009
From Delhi to Winston-Salem
The following is a firsthand account by Rahul Goyal, a 23-year-old first- year MBA candidate who last month moved to North Carolina from New Delhi to attend Wake Forest University.
This is Rahul's perspective of Wake Forest, just weeks after he arrived in the United States. Rahul also provides some of his own background as he pursues his MBA in the Schools of Business. We look forward to including more of Rayul’s observations and viewpoints on the Wake Forest student blog.
I am an International student in the full-time MBA program at Wake Forest University’s Schools of Business ~ a highly reputable business program in the United States.
I have an undergraduate degree in chemistry from Hindu College in New Delhi. I began my professional career as a counselor among the quantitative aptitude faculty at IMS India Resources Pvt. Ltd., a private educational company. Here, I realized my interest in financial research, joining Capital IQ Information Systems Indian Pvt. Ltd., a division of Standard & Poor’s, as a research associate.
This is my first time in the United States and my experience in Winston-Salem, N.C., has been quite exciting and enriching. The city seems ideal for students and presents a very rich learning environment. The living expenses are low, people are pretty warm and, unlike the bigger cities around, the environment is very peaceful.
The University has a huge campus, and I was astonished to see the high-quality facilities that it offers the students. It’s easy to notice the congenial culture in the settings, as the administrative staff, faculty, and senior students are very friendly and easy to approach.
Before applying to MBA programs, I knew that I wanted to be a part of a school with small class sizes, excellent overall facilities, competitive faculty, high reputation and great corporate relations. Wake Forest University’s Schools of Business fit all of my expectations. I’ve already started realizing the value following a week of orientation programs.
Orientation was a great learning experience, and every day I feel reaffirmed in my decision to attend Wake Forest. I am more than 100% confident that my stay in this program is going to be very worthwhile for my career and for my overall self. I have a firm belief that Wake Forest will present great opportunities to help me progress in my chosen career path, and that the program will help me develop a holistic vision for my future course.
I am eager to share more about my experiences in the USA while providing a glimpse inside the MBA program that I know will reshape my life.
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Mentoring Female Business Leaders
The group is recruiting business leaders around the Triad serve as mentors to students who are entering the corporate world, nonprofit sector, and small business. Stay tuned because the group is planning an activity in coming weeks for those interested in volunteering. Male and female mentors are invited to participate.
Anyone interested in mentoring can contact: vaishali.shah@mba.wfu.edu
Thursday, August 20, 2009
Setting Expectations
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Sustainability: Corporate Duty or Government Domain?
What does sustainability mean to corporate
A simplified definition for sustainability draws a visual of building a bridge between the present and future, striving to find ways to meet current demand in a way that leaves ample resources for other generations.
While that may serve as a sound springboard for theoretical debate, it does very little to demonstrate precisely what conservation means to businesses. It fails to illuminate the steps companies are taking to improve the environment, find efficiencies, and rely less heavily on limited resources.
A forum hosted by the Charlotte 2010 Evening program at
Duke Energy represented a service provider that relies on energy consumption to make money. Profits clearly get pinched when the company revs up investment in renewable energy, or when customers made efforts to lower their energy use. External challenges are aplenty, particularly when it comes to groups upset over the impact that fossil fuels have on the environment.
Goodrich Corp. is closely linked to the aerospace industry, producing components for clients such as Boeing and Lockheed Martin. The company views sustainability efforts as a boon to profits. By producing more-efficient parts, they have the ability to help clients operate more competitively.
Throughout their presentations, representatives from both companies talked about the many challenges to promoting sustainability. Another chord that resonated from their remarks is that sustainability thrives in an environment where companies, and not the government, presses for improvement.
The debate over regulation is not new, although it has regained prominence as the Obama administration and Congress grapple over whether more intervention is needed in the financial services industry. To some intervention advocates, it unfortunately takes a dropped ball before the government realizes that it needs to pay closer attention to the juggler.
Tuesday night’s speakers presented the counterargument that companies are better motivated by their clients and a need to be more nimble and distinctive from their competitors. Another motivation for internal boundaries is to keep government out.
Harry Arnold, a vice president for enterprise technology at Goodrich, said one reason his company embraces sustainability efforts to avoid political pressure. “I’ll be blunt about that,” he told 50 attendees. (Another reason is that it helps the company recruit forward looking engineers.)
“We have been a self-regulated industry for the last 50 years,”
Globally, governments are taking a harder line.
Gregory Efthimiou, a communications manager at Duke, used his time to tout programs the company has espoused. “We are trying to balance reliability, affordability, and clean as we move to more sustainable system,” he said.
Duke created a Web site – www.shiningalight.com – that discusses the causes of climate change. The company is looking at distributed generation, which involves installing solar panels on clients’ roofs. Duke is also getting approval for the states it operates in make money when it helps customers use less energy via the Save-A-Watt program.
The company is also investing in carbon capture, albeit a tiny amount (roughly $17 million) compared to the $1 billion it is spending on wind energy. Efthimiou also expressed trepidation investing in nuclear power but said the company is evaluation ways to increase spending there as well.
“Duke has a huge bull's eye on our chest and we painted most of the circle,” Efthimiou conceded. There's no "silver bullet" to solve climate change, he added. "It will take everything we have to make the bridge to low-carbon future."
What do you think? Is more government involvement required to promote sustainability, or can companies self regulate themselves in a way that will improve circumstances for future generations?