Tag Archives: school

2nd semester

The classes we’re now taking in our second semester are in a way a marked improvement on those we took in the first (which is understandable given that we needed to expand on a common knowledge base). With subjects such as Political Environment of Business, International Accounting and Reporting, Financial Management, Global Information Systems (which I don’t need to take as I’ve worked on that field before), Doing business in Latin America and China or International Marketing this seems to be a more fun period than the one before.

Mind the Gap (London trip review)

Parliament

The funniest part of London is that they all speak English (sort of). At least that’s the first thing that strikes you when you’re there after living in countries with other languages for so long (“oh my, all the ads shout at me directly”).

I have to say that the city looks in very good shape. Everything seems clean, fixed and properly maintained, besides being a beautiful place per se.

We visited JPMorgan, Mergermarket and Lloyd’s, besides attending a marketing workshop with Beaconbrands at the Anglo-Belgian Club. The visits were very well organised and we had plenty of time to explore the city. Even though I had been to London many times before, there were many places I didn’t know and enjoyed immensely.

Having visited many firms in the City, I realised one thing: City life is not for me. These guys have no life outside of the office, and no time for marriage or kids. Maybe if I were another kind of person, but I’m not; money is very important, but it’s definitely not everything in life. I’d rather have a chat with my significant other any day of the week, and twice on Sundays.

Another thing that really strikes you when you reach London is their different take to multiculturalism form what we’re used to in the Continent. In England policement are allowed to wear scarves or turbants, as long as their face is seen. There is many, many foreigners, but they’re, if not accepted, at least tolerated. The situation is not perfect, but I believe it fosters less marginalisation in general. The level of society acceptance is reflected in something that is obvious to Brits, but not very well understood anywhere else: the national food of England is not fish and chips, but curry.

The pictures from the trip are in Flickr, of course.

La estrategia del Tec de Monterrey

No fui al Encuentro Ex-a-Tec Europa este año (con eso de que no soy Ex-a-Tec pero amigo del Tec, Rangel dixit y además, ni tiempo tuve), pero me imagino que no han de haber cambiado demasiado su estrategia. Estaba checando mis notas del evento del año pasado y me dí cuenta de un “detallito”: ya se les quemó el agua en algunas cosas. En la estrategia del Tec hablaban de la economía del conocimiento, cuando durante los últimos 3 o 4 años se está hablando de la emergencia de una economía de la creatividad. ¿Se habrán dado cuenta, o el ITESM sigue siendo el Instituto Transformador de Estudiantes en Simples Máquinas?

FU Business School

I was talking with a guy who runs a biotech start up I met at the Creativity World Forum about the fact that he feels that he hasn’t heard enough in business literature and training about the failed cases in business, meaning all the companies that for some reason or another failed, and why. That’s why I propose the creation of a new paradigm in business education:

The Fuck Up Business School

At the FUB you don’t learn how to be an efficient business leader, you learn how to be an inefficient one. You study all the mistakes that previous companies have made so that you can innovate and make new ones. After all, trial and error is the best way to learn, so why don’t we leave the error part to previous attempts? 😉