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Top Ten List: Executive MBA Learnings about China Today

The China trip is over, and we’re home tired but transformed. You can’t study and travel in China and feel otherwise. The world never looks as big nor China as overwhelming again. 

China is an amazing country where you taste the pace of change and development – and it is both exhilarating and exhausting.  Anything is possible; but the efforts required to navigate the culture, infrastructure, and realities of the country’s transition daunting. Recognizing all this at the core of one’s being is the purpose of the Executive MBA residency and the power of experiential learning. Translating that into executive judgment and rules for informed action comes with time and reflection. Students have been journaling to facilitate the process. I’ve been doing my own.

Below, my Top Ten list of what I hope students experienced in China. There are important learnings  embedded in each for their careers, leadership effectiveness, and global citizenship. 

1. If they were energized by the pace of action, the palpable excitement of our distinguished speakers (Chinese and ex-pats), and the sense of infinite (and prosperous) possibility, they learned something important about China today.

2. If they were exhausted by the pace of the action; the daily multi-layer challenges business and life require; the amount of information – sometimes conflicting – and planning needed to inform simple actions; and how plans changed, speakers cancelled, substitutes came, and traffic and government policies altered schedules despite high levels of planning, they learned something important about China today.

3. If they felt confused and awkward in knowing what rules (cultural, social, political, economic, ethical, governmental) applied when, they learned something important about China today.

4. If they were frustrated by a slow, erratic internet in a well-wired nation where cell phones work in  subways, in deserts and on mountains, along the Great Wall, and in the highest of skyscrapers, they learned something important about China today.

5. If they were surprised that Shanghai could differ so markedly and in so many ways from Beijing and both cities from Tianjin and the country side (and how different a 5 star hotel in each could be), they learned something important about China today.

6. If they were surprised (or shocked) by differing industry standards, safety measures, pollution levels, and technologies, they learned something important about China today.

7. If they experienced the predilection for luxury brands and shopping as the national pastime among China’s rapidly rising affluent — and were intrigued by their own feelings of winning through their wiles in the shops and markets, they learned something important about China today.

8. If they saw a blind eye turned so as to turn a profit, they learned something important about China today.

9. If they heard every speaker – whatever their assigned topic – touch on the importance of talent development and new HR policies to attract, retrain, and train China’s young, eager, and mobile workforce, they learned something important about China today. 

10. If they felt they learned a lot about China through this residency, but now feel how little they really know about this rising economic and political giant, they learned something important about China today,  about the demands of global leadership, and about the role of lifelong learning for leadership effectiveness.

BONUS:  The Bloch Executive MBA on a company visit to Lights Medical Manufacture Co., Ltd. in Tianjin pictured with the company’s founders, Dr. Li Shaobo and Ms. Wang Jinping, and senior leadership. (Photo compliments of Lights Medical.) 

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Day 2: Enhanced Executive Presence

On Sunday morning China time, my favorite part of our hotel in Shanghai. the breakfast buffet.  There are stations with multi-cultural selections and chefs: Chinese, American, Japanese, Muslim, Eastern and Western European, plus things like an omelet bar, cereal bar, fresh fruit bar, and more.  Food is plentiful and freshly made – hand-pulled Muslim noodles (see below) in a tasty broth are nice for jet lagged stomachs.  I prefer the sushi and tropical fruit.

Student fears of going hungry are allayed. No one will starve!  Quite the contrary. We’ll continue the Bloch Executive MBA tradition of eating our way to enhanced executive presence, now taking it to the global level.

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Our other plans for today:

We’ll begin our exploration of Shanghai with a walk from the hotel to the Yu Yuan Garden which dates back to the Ming Dynasty in the 1500’s. That will be followed by a Chinese tea tasting at a nearby tea house from the same era.

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Our travels through local neighborhoods to the ancient Garden that is still very popular with local folks – and our encounters with a few of the 1.3 billion fake Rolex salespeople working the streets in the shops’ area surrounding the Garden – provide a vivid picture of the contrasts between old and new that live side-by-side in China today.

 

 

We’ll then board a bus and tour the city, with a stop at the Jade Buddha temple. The temple is also a working Buddhist monastery – interesting in a country where politics has long controlled religion, eh?

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There will be shopping in the afternoon for those still rarin’ to go – and a chance to practice our negotiation skills. Not for the faint of heart!  We’ve got out notes for how to play out this enjoyable and everyday theater of market economics. I’m looking for a special kind of jacket for my son.  

We’ll end the evening with a welcome dinner on the Bund. Our pre-dinner speaker is local historian Peter Hibbard, author of the Odyssey Guide to Shanghai, Bund Shanghai, and others to provide a local perspective on Shanghai, past and present.

The Bund is the historic old colonial banking area that borders the Huangpu River running through the city.

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It is also the best place to view the skyscrapers of modern Shanghai by night that are located across the river. Clear weather provides a breathtaking view.

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Day 1: Hello Shanghai

The Bloch Executive MBA Class of 2011 has arrived in Shanghai: left on Friday morning from Kansas City and arrived in Shanghai Saturday, thanks to the International dateline and time zone differences.

The Pudong Airport is sleek and modern – and an immediate reminder that this is not your grandfather’s or grandmother’s China.   

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Our hotel is pretty glamorous and contemporary, too. It’s allayed the fears of weary EMBA travelers who really weren’t sure what they’d find half-way around the world. (Take a peak at the link, family and friends, in case your loved ones complain about how hard we worked them in the classroom while abroad!  True, the schedule is packed come Monday morning, but they are not roughing it in the hutong!)

Shanghai is a happening place, and I love its energy and cosmopolitan feel.

The architecture is extraordinary by day, and even more so at night. Shanghai is one of the great skyscraper cities of the modern era, and with all the current construction is on track to claim the title of the world’s #1 skyscraper town.  Simply amazing!

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After unpacking – and resisting the desire for a nap that would totally blow our ability to adjust to the 13 hour time difference – we’ll venture out for a light supper before turning in early.

Jet lag is a reality, and everyone is feeling it to some degree.