Networking between EMBAs from Cambridge, Oxford and London
Diana Henderson (EMBA 2016) jointly organised a networking event with students from Cambridge Judge Business School and three other UK business schools.
Why women should apply for an EMBA – a participant’s perspective
Vanessa Marcie (EMBA 2016) discusses why more women should apply for the Cambridge EMBA, drawing from her own experience of the programme so far.
Work-life balance and the EMBA
Lillian Zagoya-Lopez (EMBA 2016) has found it possible to study for her EMBA almost anywhere… at any time!
The silent power of leadership
Diana Henderson (EMBA 2016) writes about the importance of emotional intelligence as a leadership tool.
“This EMBA just keeps getting better and better”
Tom Martin and his Executive MBA “fellas” travelled to Kazakhstan to begin their Team Consulting Project, an important part of the EMBA.
Like students. Like bosses. Like comrades – the EMBA International Business Study Trip
Mena Thamburatnam enjoyed the International Business Trip to Silicon Valley in March, one that developed her skills and those of her “superhero” classmates.
The hidden face of the Côte d’Azur?
Vanessa Marcie (EMBA 2016) invited classmates to her native Côte d’Azur to discover a region of investment potential beyond tourism.
The world is not flat, but uphill – the EMBA International Business Study Trip
Lillian Zagoya (EMBA 2016) recollects her IBST to Silicon Valley alongside, amongst others, a “joyful entrepreneur from Hungary”, an “always smiley ex-captain of a Rugby team”.
People power and innovation – the EMBA International Business Study Trip
Brooke Bornick(EMBA 2016) returns from the Executive MBA International Business Study Trip to California, having experienced how innovation and people power lie at the heart of success in Silicon Valley.
“Let’s not send the police, let’s send HR” – the EMBA International Business Study Trip
Del Seymour, the founder of start-up Code Tenderloin, spared a day to show Cambridge Judge Executive MBA participants like Melissa Stringer what’s really important.