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End of Module 2a

Friday (28th) marked the end of Module 2a with three four-hour exams on consecutive days. The first four months at Ivey have certainly been transformational. I am glad that...

B-School | | Friday, 4 September 2009

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Week 19 at Ivey

In addition to the regular class/case work and job interview preparation, my responsibilities started to expand in terms of club-leaderships and senatorship. I’ve started to feel the pressure and...

B-School | | Friday, 4 September 2009

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Week 18 at Ivey

Monday started off with a strategy case on Hungarian wines and later a valuation case in finance. Afternoon, the MBA Association had organized a Q&A panel with Fall MBA...

B-School | | Friday, 4 September 2009

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Bad blog pitches- anyone else get these thrilling emails?

I am sure I am not the only one who has been targeted by well meaning MBA spam. I"m talking about the numerous new websites, test prep, case prep, admissions...

B-School | | Wednesday, 2 September 2009

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Forbes: Cass MBA 6th Best 1yr Program in the World

Forbes now ranks Cass Business School"s 1 year MBA #6 in the world right behind INSEAD, IMD, IE, Judge & Said - putting us ahead of the likes of SDA...

B-School | | Sunday, 9 August 2009

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Week 17 at Ivey

Get connected week ended up keeping me busy the entire week as opposed to my expectations of a long break from class work. Well deserved holiday: Civic holiday arrived on...

B-School | | Friday, 7 August 2009

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Week 14 at Ivey

Week 14 was the toughest week at Ivey thus far. In addition to the regular case studies, we had a finance quiz, an individual report assignment on evaluating the strategy...

B-School | | Friday, 7 August 2009

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Week 16 at Ivey: Get connected week

Get connected week has been more than productive exposing us to a variety of networking events and mock interview sessions. Following below is an outline of my get connected...

B-School | | Friday, 7 August 2009

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Week 12 at Ivey

Second week of module 2 started off with the e-Bay case building the foundational platform for strategic analysis. The consulting club has been conducting weekly case-interview clinics and on...

B-School | | Friday, 7 August 2009

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Week 13 at Ivey

Week 13 has been quite a busy week with tough cases and all three courses (Strategy, Finance and Accounting) seemed to relate to each other one way or the other....

B-School | | Friday, 7 August 2009

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Hello brave new world!

I moved to Hong Kong in mid-October ’08. It was quite a welcome move for a number of reasons not the least of them being the fact that October was...

B-School | | Friday, 7 August 2009

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Three Months After Completing My MBA

Three full months have passed since I completed my MBA at Queen"s University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. I find myself sitting at my in laws still without full-time employment. I...

B-School | | Sunday, 2 August 2009

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Sometimes I get homesick

I am a bit bitter this week because husband is in Boston Massachusetts seeing our old friends and I am stuck in Cambridge ENGLAND working. This bitterness was fueled by...

B-School | | Sunday, 2 August 2009

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Happy Three Years!!

So I thought I would pen my last post as MaybeMBA today to make an even three years of blogging. (Crazy, reading that first post all this time later.) But...

B-School | | TUSEDAY, 28 July 2009

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An MBA makes some music

So Chris Theo, my classmate on the Cass MBA and an avid blogger himself (including a co-writer on this blog) just made a song and shared it with the world.Just...

B-School | | TUSEDAY, 28 July 2009

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End of Module 2a
Friday, 04 September 2009 10:19

Friday (28th) marked the end of Module 2a with three four-hour exams on consecutive days. The first four months at Ivey have certainly been transformational. I am glad that I could comprehend the financial statements and business snippets in news that once made zero sense. I am amazed, having looked back into what we have learnt in this module. Here is a quick high-level review of learning from module 2.

Designing and Executing Strategies:

High-level orientation to what a General Manager"s does; competitive advantage; globalization; Traditional Manager vs. Cross enterprise manager; assessing performance of the organization(past, present and future measures in terms of profitability, financial position, market performance, organizational health etc) ; setting direction(mission, vision and values); strategy creation; implementing change; performance matrix(complacent organization vs. crisis vs. troubled organization vs. desired state); Collins and Porras vision framework; Strategy triangle(Foals, Value proposition; Product market focus and core activities); corporate strategy; Diamond E Framework(Strategy linkages to Management preferences, organization, resources and environment); strategic tension; various tools for environment analysis(Porter"s Five forces, Porter"s Industry value chain, Game theory, PEST and DPESTO, scenario planning, new economy models such as Disruptive Technologies, New economics of information, Unbundling and long tail, blue/red ocean strategies, Global industry models and stakeholder analysis); Business Environment Analysis Model(BEAM); Valuable-Rare-Inimitable-Organized(VRIO) analysis; Gap analysis; recycling obsolete strategies and re-instantiating new strategies; organizational capabilities, behavior, culture; Strategic choice and options; Strategic planning; leadership; implementing strategy and performance assessment.

Managing Financial Resources:

The finance course has particularly been an irresistible experience to me. Having come from a non-finance background, I had obvious troubles during the initial days. There were numerous topics fragmented across the entire course that originally didn’t make complete sense to me, however, towards the end of the course, all the bits and pieces came together as mergers and acquisitions; it all made sense. Thanks to Prof. Hatch’s well rounded teaching style in terms of news snippets, current trends, well guided case discussions, powerful lectures and his “Stay tuned” topics. I can’t believe the variety and depth of topics that we could cover in such a short period of time (8 weeks). Here’s a quick (yet long) overview of topics:

Roles and responsibilities of a financial manager; Different types of businesses (corporations, sole proprietorships, partnerships, etc); Examples of Capital investment decisions and financing decisions; Finance as a career option; organizational goals from finance perspective; ethics and management objectives; enabling managers to maximize the firm value and shareholder value; financial markets; financial intermediaries; financial institutions; business size-up(Business assessment framework; economy and industry analysis, firm analysis in terms of operations, marketing, human resources, technology and financial statements/ratios); types of banks; dividend policies; blended payments; burden coverage; sustainable growth in dividends; projecting financial statements; cash-budget method; sustainable growth rate model; Collateral Security, Bankruptcy and Reorganization; Sovereign Funds; Pension funds; leading economic indicators; interpreting earnings reports; debtor in finance processing; understanding the debt market; valuing bonds and stocks(bond characteristics, interest rates vs. bond prices, current yield vs. yield to maturity, bond rates of return, yield curve, corporate bonds and risks of default, dividend discount model, capital asset pricing model, price/earnings multiple approach, stocks and stock market, book value, adjusted book value, liquidation value, market value, growth stocks and income stocks, risk measurement and management(market risk premium, beta and alpha, cost of capital, criteria for evaluating risk - optimal capital are cost, risk, flexibility, control and timing ), Weighted average cost of capital, optimal capital structure, financing decisions, investment decisions(Discounted cash flow, price earnings and comparable analysis, value creation and value-based management, economic value added, free cash flow to the firm approach, free cash flow to equity approach); payout policies; credit management and collection; credit decisions; mergers and acquisitions(types – horizontal, vertical and conglomerate, synergies, evaluating mergers, leveraged buyouts, management buyouts), international financial management(currencies, exchange rates, spot/forward/futures rates, interest rates vs. exchange rates, hedging exchange risks, derivatives, call and put options, swaps); insider trading and control.

Accounting and Control for managers:

Non quantitative vs. quantitative information; overview of financial reporting, management accounting, management control and tax accounting; financial statements (balance sheets, income statements, statement of cash flows); accounting terms and definitions; sources and uses of cash; day to day cash flow management and sustainable growth rate; accounting practices(GAAP, IFRS, etc); accounting principles such as money management, entity, going concern, cost, dual aspect, accounting periods, conservatism, realization, matching, consistency and materiality; revenue recognition; timing of recognizing revenues(production method, installment method, collection method, bad debts, revenue adjustment vs. expense, monetary assets interest revenues, etc); assets and expenses decisions; financial ratio analysis ; long lived non-monetary assets and their amortization(depreciation techniques); cost behavior; variable, fixed, differential and full costs; cost-volume charts and interpretation; profit graphs; operating leverage; influence on costs; taxes; overhead; activity based costing; differential costs and analysis; contribution margin and analysis; return on investment analysis; management control(various phases; controllable/non controllable costs, goals vs. objectives; responsibility vs. full cost accounting, effectiveness vs. efficiency, transfer pricing, management control process, behavioral aspects of management control, responsibility centers, investment center issues, measures of performance, non-financial measures and balanced score card techniques)


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