It's coming to the end of the study trip to Budapest with the part-time Henley MBA group. It's been a very good programme of visits, presentations, activities and stories. Knowing the environment for so long (I do not say 'so well'), it is also interesting for me to reflect on what has changed and what has remained the same.
Of course, a lot of what I now see and experience in Budapest is another world when compared to the city I met first as a much younger man getting off the train from Vienna in March 1987. It was a place that seemed held back, where the wait for a phone line was sometimes measured in decades, the wait for a new car meant that your old car might be worth more that the one you had ordered, and when you went shopping, if you saw certain items, you bought them up! It was a place where superficial life was regulated by a system no-one trusted and no-one challenged, and life went on in a very European way underground. People relied on others to spread the word of the latest club or the location of the shop just opened that sold the goods just imported.
Now it is all very different. A regular European city, a little worn still, but just like its old self also.
We divided the week into time spent on visits to companies and organisations and time spent getting a broader perspective on life in Hungary (eating, drinking mainly, but also some culture). We began at the Central European University with an outstanding run-through of Hungarian history from Istvan Nagy. I remember meeting Istvan when he joined the MBA program in Budapest in 1993. A native of Transylvania, he now holds Hungarian citizenship and works as a top management consultant. I think we have grown grey around the temples together.
Among the companies we went to were an IBM HR shared service center, Videoton, a Hungarian-owned holding company for businesses in CEM and automotive parts, and Visteon, the struggling US automotive parts supplier. We also were guests at the Regional Environment Center (REC), which none of us could quite work out what it did. Finally, there was a small and rapidly growing contact center business called Photel, now part of Teleperformance. Photel was started by an old friend, Zsolt Lakatos, and managed by another, Odett Horvath. With the group packed into their one, small meeting room Odett gave an energetic presentation that outshone all others that week and won the hardened Henley MBAs! The other highlight of the week was, for me, the classical music concert at the magnificent (brand new) Palace of Arts building.
I do not feel the kind of nostalgia for Hungary that would call me back there. Mine is the kind that allows me to have many fond (and occasionally not so fond) memories that I like to relive when visiting. Seeing how much has changed, and knowing that I was one of the few western Europeans who lived there before all those changes, is enough.
Friday, March 23, 2007
Friday, March 16, 2007
World Wide Wait
Off next week for a week to Budapest with the Modular and evening MBA students as part of their international study trip. Budapest is where I spent 18 years from 1987 to 2005, so I am curious to see what has changed. I will try to blog whilst there.
I will be checking carefully also to monitor progress on the four international intakes recently started or about to start the MBA at Henley. As part of the Personal Development process, we are encouraging people to reflect in learning journals on thoughts and insights about their studies and their goals. It is very exciting to connect with members by reading their new posts, and I hope that we can get some energy going in the intakes and that those who are reluctant begin to see the benefits, not just of the power of writing for themselves but also of the feedback they receive from others.
Mind you, I'm learning a lot about the scope of the world wide web. Henley has students in Europe, where the IT infrastructure allows us to play with thoughts of 'synchronousity', in South Africa, New Zealand and Trinidad, the story is quite different.
I will be checking carefully also to monitor progress on the four international intakes recently started or about to start the MBA at Henley. As part of the Personal Development process, we are encouraging people to reflect in learning journals on thoughts and insights about their studies and their goals. It is very exciting to connect with members by reading their new posts, and I hope that we can get some energy going in the intakes and that those who are reluctant begin to see the benefits, not just of the power of writing for themselves but also of the feedback they receive from others.
Mind you, I'm learning a lot about the scope of the world wide web. Henley has students in Europe, where the IT infrastructure allows us to play with thoughts of 'synchronousity', in South Africa, New Zealand and Trinidad, the story is quite different.
Sunday, March 11, 2007
Poetry on the bus
Hope you won't mind, but here is a link to another school's web site - a smattering of pride in having a poem accepted for publication and inclusion as a poster on a Brookes Bus during March.
And now for something completely different
Last week we launched the first intakes on Henley's revised MBA curriculum. Preparation for this event - a blend of new module content, new elearning environment and desire to create a distinctive and life-changing experience - has been the most stressful work project I have ever been involved with. Some colleagues, long in service at the College, told me that Henley has the knack of 'making things right on the night', and despite some worrying moments during January and February, so it proved.
The first Dynamics of Management workshop, for students in our Danish, Finnish and Swedish network, was innovative, thought-provoking and just the right mix of discussion, presentation and provocation of self-awareness.
It was not what many of those coming to the programme were expecting, although we knew that would be the case and in fact welcomed and relished the challenge to their preconceptions.
The first Dynamics of Management workshop, for students in our Danish, Finnish and Swedish network, was innovative, thought-provoking and just the right mix of discussion, presentation and provocation of self-awareness.
It was not what many of those coming to the programme were expecting, although we knew that would be the case and in fact welcomed and relished the challenge to their preconceptions.
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