Dean's Message

Breaking clouds, shining through

To the good that marked the end of 2008, and to the start of a bright 2009, there is indeed, much to toast to at the Business School. Despite the economic gloom, we have continued to renew our solidarity and extend our influence in the business world and beyond over the past two months.

In the international arena, we are proud to have become Asia’s first full member of CEMS—a certain testament of our rigorous pursuit of excellence at the Business School. We also mark our newly launched NUS-HEC Paris Double Degree MBA as a further extension of our School’s growing, worldwide reach. In tandem with our pursuit of quality, I am also proud that our School has been ranked third Best Business School in the Far Eastern Asia, and has received the highest accredited “Five Palmes” award by Eduniversal.

On the business community front, we celebrated the launch of the Governance and Transparency Index (GTI) as an update to the existing, widely used Corporate Transparency Index. On the social community front, I am pleased to commend Assoc Prof Albert Teo as recipient of the National Healthcare Group Distinguished Contributor Award 2008.

We are also proud of our alumni for their continued contributions. November’s alumni-organised NUS Business School Golf Challenge 2008 raised a commendable $360,000 for our school and new Centre for Social Entrepreneurship and Philanthropy. Charity continues with two of our alumni, Mr Hsieh Fu Hua and Mr Chew Hua Seng having recently set up their own foundations for the needy.

Lastly, our students’ and faculty performances have not left us short of honour either. Research finesse has been once again exemplified with a host of international honours won, and at the first ever International Case Competition on Strategic Value of IT Management, our students beat competing top business schools to clinch an impressive First Runner Up.

Here is toasting to a better, brighter year ahead. Let’s keep the good news coming!

Prof Bernard Yeung
Dean and Stephen Riady Distinguished Professor of Finance
NUS Business School

School News

NUS Business School: Asia's first full CEMS academic member

Our School has been ratified as a full academic member of the esteemed CEMS (previously known as Community of European Management Schools and International Companies).

CEMS picks the best school in each representative country for inclusion in its global initiative, making our School the first in Singapore and Asia to be awarded such honours.

A strategic alliance of leading business schools and multinational companies, CEMS is known for its stringent assessments for quality and rigour of a school’s Master's in Management programme. Furthermore, schools need to be associate members first, before a full CEMS Academic Membership can be considered.

As a full academic member of CEMS, we will be able to offer and conduct the highly prestigious CEMS Master in International Management (CEMS MIM) at our campus from August 2009. Graduating students from this programme will be awarded both a CEMS MIM and a Masters of Science in Management [MSc(Mgt)].

Previously a CEMS associate academic member, we are one of six schools in 2008 to be recognised as a full academic member. Spanning four continents, these schools are all top-rated institutions of business, economics and management.

The ratification coincided with the CEMS 20th anniversary celebrations from 27-29 December 2008 The event was attended by over 2,500 members of the CEMS community, comprising of international students, alumni, academic members and corporate partners. The deans of 25 top business schools and universities were also present.

NUS Business School gains global recognition by Eduniversal

Our School is proud to have been awarded the highest 5 Palmes Award from Eduniversal.

Every year, only the top 100 Universal Business Schools with major international influence are awarded this honour.

In regional rankings done by Eduniversal, we also came in third best for the Far Eastern Asia region.

The School of Business and Management at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology came in first, while Tsinghua University’s School of Economics and Management came in second.

Eduniversal 2008 rankings are determined by a scientific committee with an established global mapping system that categorises academic institutions according to their universality and international reputation.

In esteeming an institution’s value, aspects such as accreditation, partnering networks and participation in international academic associations are evaluated. Along with such quantitative initiatives, Deans from Eduniversal’s list of top 1,000 business schools are also required to log in by vote, other academic institutions they deem worthy of recommendation.

By such criteria, universities are awarded 1 to 5 Eduniversal Palmes as indicative of each institution’s overall reputation. The award ceremony was held on 4-5 November 2008 in La Sorbonne, Paris.

Teeing off to greater heights: alumni raise funds again

Nothing seemed to stand in the way of raising funds for their beloved alma mater. Not even a financial tsunami. From months of careful planning to sponsoring prizes and even buying golf flights, the NUS Business School Alumni Association rose to the challenge and made Golf Challenge 2008 a roaring success.

Held on 19 November at the Laguna National Golf & Country Club, the event cum dinner was graced by Dr Vivian Balakrishnan, Minister for Community Development, Youth and Sports.

Spearheaded by NUS Business School Alumni Association (NUSBSAA) and co-organised by the School’s Mandarin Alumni and MBA Alumni, the annual event initiated just last year demonstrated the tenacious support of the School’s alumni, partners and associates.

As the good night deepened with friendships renewed and new contacts made, the event’s worthy cause was not forgotten. A sum total of $360,000 was raised, with half from dollar-for-dollar Government matching. All funds will support the NUS Business School’s Building Excellence Campaign and Centre for Social Entrepreneurship and Philanthropy (CSEP).

Mr Simon Phua, a long-time golf enthusiast and Chairman of the Golf Challenge Fund-raising Committee said, “I am very encouraged by the increased number of sponsors in cash and kind this year... especially since the economy has slid into a recession.”

NUS unveils new Double Degree MBA with HEC Paris

NUS Business School and HEC Paris School of Management (HEC Paris) have introduced a new Double Degree Masters in Business Administration (MBA) Programme. This initiative builds on the schools’ 10-year collaboration in graduate student exchange and faculty cooperation.

Designed to provide solid business training and international exposure, the new NUS-HEC Paris Double Degree MBA builds on both institution’s excellence in management education. By offering students rigorous schooling in global business, the programme aims to produce business leaders with an in-depth knowledge and expertise in both European and Asian markets. The programme also seeks to propel students into the institutional and alumni networks of both schools, as well as the business communities in Singapore and Europe.

Prof Bernard Yeung, Dean of NUS Business School, stressed the importance of such intellectual and cultural assimilation. “The global business community is fast becoming more integrated. Because of this, there is a strong demand for individuals who are cross-culturally trained and who possess the necessary managerial skills and personalities needed to lead global businesses. With the NUS–HEC Paris Double Degree MBA, students will be given the best of education and experiences in Asia and Europe.”

Commencing in August 2009 at NUS Business School, the two-year double degree MBA programme requires students to undertake their first year core modules at NUS Business School, and continue with the second year optional modules at HEC Paris. The programme at HEC Paris commences in September 2009.

For more info on the programme, click here to visit the programme’s website.

CGFRC launches new Governance and Transparency Index

The Corporate Governance and Financial Reporting Centre (CGFRC) launched the Governance and Transparency Index (GTI) on 26 November, in collaboration with The Business Times.

Replacing the earlier Corporate Transparency Index (CTI), the new CPA Australia-sponsored GTI assesses companies on their corporate governance disclosure and practices, as well as the timeliness, accessibility and transparency of their financial results announcements.

The earlier version of the CTI, published annually by The Business Times since 2000, had only assessed the financial transparency of companies based on their annual announcements.

While companies will be awarded points for following the recommendations of the Code of Corporate Governance, the GTI will go much further than assessing whether companies are merely “ticking the right boxes.” Under the new Index, companies also stand to suffer significant point deduction for poor or highly questionable corporate governance practices.

The first issue of the GTI will be published in The Business Times in the first quarter of 2009. It will cover all companies which release their annual reports between January-December 2008. For subsequent issues, the index will be published bi-annually and the time periods covered will be from January to June and July to December.

Mr Alvin Tay, editor for The Business Times, expressed delight in working with CGFRC for GTI. “This new index will provide a more holistic measure of the efforts of companies in improving governance and transparency in order to enhance long-term shareholder value.”

SMEs need return to basics to emerge stronger; say experts

Industry experts are urging Singapore’s Small & Medium Enterprises (SMEs) to focus on their core businesses to pull through the economic downturn. This advice was reiterated on 12 December as panel experts addressed the topic “Global Financial Crisis: Challenges and Opportunities for SMEs” to a full house of about 200 alumni, academics, students and members of the public.

“The direct impact on SMEs is the disappearance of working capital, and we are facing an economic winter Singapore is unfamiliar with” explained Dean Prof Bernard Yeung. Vice Dean Assoc Prof Ho Yew Kee advised companies that the best way of riding out the liquidity crisis was to “go back to the three golden rules of business: cash is King; live today to be a millionaire tomorrow; and, follow the 80/20 principle.”

Panellists laid out 8 crucial issues necessary to emerge successfully from these difficult times. This discussion was followed by a lively Q&A session where participants raised queries on the level of Government support available, the need for bankers to support SMEs and share risks with the Government to release credit lines, and the opportunities available for intellectual capital-based firms.

Other panel members included Mr Wilson Chia, Regional Head of Consumer Banking, South East Asia, Standard Chartered Bank; and Mr S Sivanesan, Partner, Corporate Practice, Rodyk & Davidson LLP.

Jointly hosted by NUS Business School and TiE Singapore, the event was part of a larger initiative by both parties to sustain entrepreneurship and contribute back to community. The School’s recent 12 essay collaboration with the Straits Times on the financial crisis was also distributed to all present.

Islamic Finance expected to grow further despite downturn

Islamic Finance looks set to grow further as investors search for alternative structures after the recent collapse of colossal financial institutions of the West, observed Ms Hari Bhambra, Senior Partner of Praesidium LLP, a leading regulatory and client advisory firm based in Dubai.

On 11 December, at a lecture titled “Potential growth in Islamic Finance amidst the current economic crisis”, Ms Bhambra addressed a packed house of more than 200 finance professionals, enthusiasts and academics at the NUS Shaw Foundation Alumni House Auditorium.

Ms Bhambra noted that many financial institutions in Singapore already support Syariah-compliant funds around the world as custodians.

With an existing sound infrastructure, Singapore could further capitalise on this wave of renewed interest in Islamic Finance by making its operating environment for such funds more conducive. This way, Singapore would be well-poised to further attract more of such funds, said Ms Bhambra.

When asked by a member of the audience if Islamic Finance could have lessened or even prevented the current financial crisis, Ms Bhambra replied this would have depended on how the principles of Islamic Finance were applied. “Islamic finance is not going to rescue us totally from what has happened,” she stressed, “but if you are unhappy with the conventional system, you might be inclined to now consider an alternative that seems more secure.”

The event was co-hosted by Saw Centre for Financial Studies and Securities & Investment Institute.

CSEP’s forum on enterprise “not just about profits and losses”

On 20 November, a full house packed the “Entrepreneurship with a Social Lens” forum held at the Hon Sui Sen Auditorium at NUS Business School.

Co-organised by the NUS Business School Alumni Association and the Centre for Social Entrepreneurship and Philanthropy (CSEP), the forum was held in conjunction with Global Entrepreneurship Week. It was held specifically for junior college students who filled close to half the audience.

“We targeted them specifically, because we wanted to show them how profit oriented businesses can also have a social slant. At the same time, we also wanted to introduce our BBA course, in the hope it would interest them,” said Mr Eddy Chong, Senior Manager at the CSEP.

As Prof Bernard Yeung, Dean of the NUS Business School, welcomed all in his opening address, he elaborated on the motivations of CSEP. “CSEP aims to further research in social entrepreneurship and address social problems in an innovative manner. It also provides our students with the opportunity to raise awareness on behalf of marginalised communities in society.”

Similarly, guest-of-honour Mr Stanley Tan, Chairman of National Volunteer & Philanthropy Centre emphasised the importance of the social enterprise, stressing that such initiative “levels the playing field” in a world that needs care.

Needless to say, many students walked away inspired by the forum. This included first year Victoria Junior College student Choi Siew Fong. “It’s given me another choice in my career. Especially after finding out more about CSEP, I do feel motivated to work for a social enterprise.”

Immanuel Tan, a third year student at the NUS Business School similarly shared that the forum gave him “a great opportunity to meet members of the alumni with similar dreams and visions.” As someone who dreamed to work in the sector, Immanuel called the value systems imparted by the speakers “very inspiring.”

General Management Programme celebrates graduation of 80th cohort-intake

Celebrating the mark of its 80th General Management Programme (Chinese) intake, the NUS Business School Office of Executive Education co-organised a Mandarin public forum entitled “The Impact of the Global Financial Crisis on Asia” with Saw Centre for Financial Studies on 3 November at Orchard Hotel.

Attended by more than 150 students, alumni, faculty members and members of the public, speakers touched on the genesis of the financial crisis, considered its impact on Asia and discussed how Asian markets and enterprises should respond.

Panel speakers included Prof Duan Jin-chuan, Cycle and Carriage Professor of Finance, NUS Business School and Director of Risk Management Institute; Assoc Prof Chen Renbao, Department of Finance and Academic Director, Asia-Pacific Executive MBA (Chinese) Programme NUS Business School; and Mr Lai Ah Keow, President of Yokogawa Electric Asia Pte Ltd.

Four days later on 7 November, 31 participants graduated from the Chinese programme’s 80th intake.

Business School welcomes visiting Vietnamese business leaders

On 9 November the Office of Executive Education hosted delegates from Vietnam’s Leading Business Club (LBC) for a forum titled “Enterprise Risk Management”.

An organisation for preeminent Vietnamese enterprises, many of LBC’s delegates were CEOs and Presidents of major investment banks and other large local companies—such as Kinh Do Corporation (a multi-business conglomerate) and Pho-24 (a famous franchise chain of Vietnamese noodles with 65 restaurants in the region).
In previous meetings, representatives of LBC had expressed interest in learning how Singapore rode out economic downturns. Delegates desired to evaluate and possibly assimilate similar strategies for their own companies.

“Companies in Vietnam face more competition now with globalisation. To combat this, we need to improve our quality and capacity. But monitoring this quality of growth is a problem…we need to learn about risk management in these fast-changing times,” explained Mdm Pham Chi Lan, Former Executive Vice President of Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

At the “Enterprise Risk Management” forum, speaker Dr Er Jwee Ping focused on how risk could be managed holistically. Dr Er is Adjunct Assoc Prof at Department of Accounting of NUS Business School and Programme Director of Asian Risk Management Institute.

CGFRC conducts knowledge outreach programmes

Over the span of ten weeks, Corporate Governance and Financial Reporting Centre (CGFRC) conducted training sessions for business journalists of the Business Times, Straits Times and Lianhe Zaobao. An initiative jump-started by The Business Times, the programme saw Assoc Profs Mak Yuen Teen, Lan Luh Luh and Ho Yew Kee covering topics such as corporate governance, accounting, finance, corporate securities and corporate law. The weekly three-hour sessions were conducted from 25 September to 27 November.

From September to December, the CGFRC also collaborated with Institute of Certified Public Accountants (ICPAS) on a research project entitled “Quality of Audit Committees in Singapore.” Initiated by the Institute’s Corporate Governance Committee, findings of the project will be released to the media and shared with regulatory bodies like Singapore Exchange and Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS).

Executive MBA welcomes new module with SME focus

A new module aimed to impart skills necessary to manage Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) has been developed exclusively for Executive MBA candidates.

Titled “Integrated Small Business Module” (ISBM), this progressive module will position and encourage students to face and solve a wide range of problems from a managerial perspective. This module aims to stay relevant to today’s fast-changing, competitive, knowledge-based global economy, as companies are forced to deal with uncertainty on a regular basis.

Students will be encouraged to develop and apply a method and framework to solving problems across a wide range of situations—including change management, product and service innovation, opening new markets, management decisions, investment decisions, risk analysis, leadership, communication, group problem solving, estimation and calculation, allocation of scarce resources, marketing and operations management.

New compulsory module on Career Planning and Management

To secure an internship and subsequently a good job offer, it is crucial that students are well-informed of job market trends and able to differentiate themselves with qualities that recruiters are looking for.

BSF1001 aims to equip students with essential career skills for a smooth transition from classroom to the boardroom. They will learn strategies critical to job success, such as resume writing, interviewing skills, networking techniques and business etiquette. Students will get to understand their strengths and motivations towards work; prepare a resume; work on their positioning statement and participate in mock interviews through assignment-based assessments.

Since its inception by BIZ Career Services in 2007, almost 2,000 students have benefitted from this class. By showing how various career skills can be applied in a corporate setting, this course aims to motivate students to actively manage their career. This module will be initiated for all freshmen starting Semester 1 of AY08/09.

Faculty awarded NHG Distinguished Contributor Award 2008

Assoc Prof Albert Teo, director of Centre for Social Entrepreneurship & Philanthropy (CSEP) and Deputy Director of University Scholars Programme (USP), has received the NHG Distinguished Contributor Award 2008.

This award recognises his contributions and efforts in providing exceptional goodwill to the National Healthcare Group as a volunteer with the Patient Care Centre (PCC) at the Communicable Disease Centre (CDC), under Tan Tock Seng Hospital.

To date, Assoc Prof Teo has volunteered with CDC for eight years as a therapy masseuse and befriender to HIV/AIDS patients.

Dean, Prof Bernard Yeung commended Assoc Prof Teo. Prof Yeung stated he was glad to know that faculty members contributed back to community beyond academia. “I know this will inspire more individuals to follow suit.”

NUS Business School welcomes distinguished Visiting Professors

We are honoured to have Prof Zhang Hanqin—prominent scientist and Vice-President of the Chinese Society of Operations Research—join the Business School as a visiting fellow with the Department of Decision Sciences.

Having received his PhD in operations research from Chinese Academy of Science, Beijing, China, Prof Zhang was the Director of Operations Research Division at the Institute of Applied Mathematics in Chinese Academy of Science. He also received the Academic Excellence Award from the Year 2003’s 100-Talents Programme.

He also has been on the editorial board of a series of international journals such as European Journal of Operational Research and IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control.

We are also honoured to have had Prof Kannan Srinivasan, H.J. Heinz II Professor of Management, Marketing and Information Systems at Carnegie Mellon University, as the NUS Dean’s Visiting Professor to the Business School’s Department of Marketing.
Prof Kannan received his PhD from UCLA in 1986. His teaching and research interests are entry deterrence, marketing/manufacturing interface, asymmetric information models of strategic behaviour, dynamic brand choice models, purchase incidence models, and structural models.

A prolific scholar and recognised researcher, he has contributed numerous articles to leading academic journals. Prof Kannan visited from 21 November to 16 December.

International accolades won, research excellence applauded

20th Asian Pacific Conference on International Accounting Issues

Our faculty members – Assoc Prof Ho Yew Kee and Assoc Prof Lam Swee Sum – took home the Vernon Zimmerman Best Paper Award at the 20th Asian Pacific Conference on International Accounting Issues. Held in Paris from 9-12 November 2008, their winning paper titled "Are Earnings Surprises Related to Earnings Restatements?" was co-authored with their undergraduate student Low Kek Seng.

Initiated in 1989, the Asian Pacific Conference on International Accounting Issues is one of the most recognised and respected accounting conferences in the world. Specialising in international accounting issues in Asian Pacific countries, the annual conference provides a pivotal platform for both academics and practitioners to trade, update and enhance their understanding of regional accounting issues.

ANZAM Conference 2008


Assoc Prof Jane Lu
Assoc Prof Jane Lu has won the ANZAM Strategic Management Stream Award at the recent Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management (ANZAM) Conference 2008. Held on 4 December at the University of Auckland Business School, she took top prize with her paper titled "When is Fast Good? – Speed of Foreign Expansion and Firm Performance." Her co-authors were Ruihua Jiang (Oakland University) and Gracy Yang (University of Sydney).

ANZAM is the primary professional body for management educators, researchers and practitioners in Australia and New Zealand. The body boasts about 500 individual members and 50 institutional members representing most Australian and New Zealand universities, and also members from other countries.

2008 FMA Annual Meeting

Our PhD Finance student Li Yan came in tops, winning the Best Disseratation Proposal Award at the recent 2008 Management Association International (FMA) Annual Meeting. With guidance from her supervisor, Assoc Prof Anand Srinivasan, she topped the Best Dissertation Proposal in Financial Markets category with her winning paper titled "Lending Relationships During Borrower Distress and Bankruptcy." The event was sponsored by Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.

Established in 1970, FMA is the recognised global leader in developing and disseminating knowledge in financial decision making among academics and practitioners. With 2008 marking a record number of outstanding conference submissions, Li Yan's win is indeed but testimony of her exceptionally stellar research.


Assoc Prof Nitin Pangarkar

Asia Academy of Management Conference

Assoc Prof Nitin Pangarkar from Department of Business Policy clinched the Best Paper Award for Doctoral Student at the 6th Asia Academy of Management Conference. The paper was co-authored with graduate student, Wu Jie. Their research was titled "Competition, Collaboration, and Innovation: An Integrative View.”



Assoc Prof Wu Pei Chuan

Asst Prof Wu Pei Chuan from the Department of Management & Organisation won the Best Paper Award for her paper titled "The Impact of Technological Positioning on Multinational Corporations’ Implementation of High-Involvement Human Resource Practices” at the 6th Asia Academy of Management Conference. The paper was co-authored with Ang Siah Hwee, PhD alumni and current senior lecturer at the University of Auckland.

Held from 14-16 December 2008 by the Taiwan Academy of Management , this year’s conference in Taipei was themed 'The New Faces of Asian Management'. Discussion pivoted around management phenomena and practices evolving from diversified countries. Useful insights to the field of management studies and the development of management theories were also discussed.

Outstanding Educators Award 2008

Our Faculty Teaching Excellence Committee has announced 2008’s winners of the Outstanding Educator Award.

In addition to impressive teaching ratings, the following winners have demonstrated sustained excellence and dedication in pedagogical developments.

Faculty Winners:

 
 

 

Department Winners:

Student News

NUS clinches global award for Strategic Value of IT Management

At the first ever CA International Case Competition on Strategic Value of IT Management, our MBA students Richard Rubnan Pact Que and Neha Gupta, together with a School of Computing (SoC) student did the NUS Business School proud by coming in first runner up.

Held in Las Vegas on the 16 and 17 November and organised by the Association for Information Systems (AIS) and Oakland University's School of Business Administration, the thrilling two day competition saw the best brains from top MBA and MIS programmes locked head to head with excellent presentations all round.

Connie Smallwood, senior director of University Relations at CA emphasised the significance of the winning team’s contributions in an official press release saying, “We were incredibly pleased with the quality of work and dedication demonstrated by the winning students from Indiana University and by all of the participants. As the need for skilled IT professionals continues to rise and IT systems become increasingly more complex, the outstanding efforts exhibited by the students will be well received in today’s business environment.”

Indeed, the NUS MBA team won admiration from both judges and audience after delivering an excellent, painstakingly-thorough presentation. Team members themselves were no strangers to competition, particularly Neha Gupta, who was also part of the champion team at the IIMPact Business Plan Challenge 2008.

President's Graduate Fellowship

Kong Qinxia (PhD student, Decision Sciences) and Lee Wendong (PhD student, Management & Organisation) both received the NUS President's Graduate Fellowship (PGF) on 10 November. Kong’s Fellowship will be tenable from 12 January 2009 to 7 January 2011, while Lee’s Fellowship will be tenable from 12 January 2009 to 3 August 2012.

NUS MBA badminton tournament: a smashing success

On 2 November, the NUS MBA Badminton Tournament saw more than 40 full-time and part-time MBA students sweating it out amid great fun and laughter. Held at NUS Multi-Purpose Sports Hall 5, the inaugural event was a success filled with banter and good sportsmanship. The organising committee hopes to open up the tournament to other local varsity students next year.

MBA Club Investiture changes guard

MBA Club Investiture night, held on 19 Nov at CR-A Dining Room, was a time to thank the outgoing office and appoint a new mantle of leadership for the NUS MBA Club.

The new cabinet of the MBA Club Student Council 2009 is as follows:

President : K. Srininvasa Vardhan

Director, Program Development : Saurabh Kaushik
Director, Student Activities (Semester 2: 2008-09) : Jeeranan Wongwanich
Director, Career Services : Claire Tan Shu Juan
Director, Media, Communication & PR : Denitsa Ivanova
Director, Finance & Administration (Semester 2: 2008-09) : Hnin Phyu Phyu Aung
Director, Finance & Administration (Semester 1: 2009-10) : Kirti Chopra
President, KM Club : Rahul Venuraj
President, Sports Club : Bilal Salim

School bids MBA exchange students goodbye at farewell luncheon

On 20 November, MBA exchange students from around the world said their goodbyes to their Singaporean counterparts at a farewell luncheon held at the SUN Bistro Café, NUS Staff Club. Spanning countries across the world like Australia, Canada, China, Denmark, France, India, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Norway, Spain and USA, they marked the third batch to have completed the NUS MBA student exchange programme.

Needless to say, the event was occasion for many to reminisce their time in Singapore. Underlying these shared experiences was the welcome and warmth many experienced from staff and students at NUS Business School. Many students expressed appreciation for the helping hands, the events organised by the Student Development Unit, and even the catered snacks for evening classes.

As the afternoon wore on with students sharing laughter and travelling experiences, it was evident that the NUS MBA exchange programme meant more than just the school, the stint or the honourable association. For many, it also meant taking home a little bit of Singapore in their hearts.

Past meets present at MBA networking events

It was an especially busy month of November for MBA students and alumni, with NUS Business School Career Services organising a series of events to facilitate networking and interaction between alumni and current students.

On 5 November, 17 alumni and 27 students networked in snug settings at the Pump Room in Clarke Quay. A week later, on 13 November, 20 alumni members and 20 students bonded over drinks and finger food at the St James Power Station Gallery Bar. Shortly after on 18 November, 35 alumni members and 17 students chilled and exchanged contacts at the Loof.

“This was something that was necessary,” remarked Mr Foo Yuk Meng, Senior Associate Director, Career Services, NUS Business School. “Our alumni are a very important part of the school. We want to recognise members of the alumni who want to share with the current students.”

This sentiment was equally shared by Mr Goh Koon Eng (MBA 1994), Managing Director and General Manager of Manufacturing at Chevron Ornite Pte Ltd. Calling such occasions “meaningful interactions”, he lauded the NUS Business School for creating such platforms of connection between students and alumni.

Canadian national Ms Alexandra Rutherford (MBA 2008), a consultant with Hewitt Associates Pte Ltd, also enjoyed the engaging conversations with fellow alumni members she met at the Loof.

Current MBA students also welcomed the series of events with open arms

Reuben Tirtawidjaja who will be graduating from the MBA Programme this December, explained over drinks at St James, “This is a great chance for me to extend my network while relaxing and getting to know new friends.”

Lie Lina Violita, another MBA student also shared how she enjoys such events. “It gives us an opportunity to network with people we don’t usually get to interact with in school every day.”

Alumni News

NUS Business School launches Taiwan Alumni Chapter

On 13 December, the Business School held the inaugural investiture of the Taiwan Alumni Chapter at the Shangri-la Far Eastern Plaza Hotel, Taipei.

Dean, Prof Bernard Yeung recalled how the idea of forming a Taiwan Alumni Chapter had originated back in 2004. For its initiation to date, Prof Yeung commended all office bearing alumni for their dedication, emphasizing how such alumni were “our front line” and “best resource for our School.”

Guest-of-Honour His Excellency Mr Vincent Siew, Vice-President of Taiwan, emphasised how education was central in boosting any economy. He highlighted that educating citizens was a common thread in all thriving economies, as it addressed four economic fundamentals. These four tenets were developing and attracting local and foreign intellectual capital, instilling integrity, encouraging innovation, and lastly tapping on the integrative synergy of multiple talents.

Mr Siew also used this opportunity to recount his own personal memories of Singapore, recalling his visits to the city state both in the 1960s, and more recently as a visiting Taiwanese academic to the NUS Business School.

The newly-launched Taiwan Alumni Chapter aims to bring interaction between alumni from Singapore and Taiwan to greater heights. Such possibilities include increasing academic exchange initiatives and joint community service projects. Business alumni in Taiwan are encouraged to participate in such drives, such the EMBA Summit Forum held earlier that afternoon led by Prof Duan Jinchuan and Prof Chen Songnan of National Chengchi University.

During the launch, office-bearers of the Chapter took an oath of service allegiance to the alumni community and received certificates from Dean, Prof Yeung.

Click here to view video.

Robert Walters - NUSBSA CEO breakfast talk

The Robert Walter-NUS Business School CEO Breakfast Talk on 24 October saw Mr Andrew Chan (MBA 1981), Managing Director and Chief Administrative Officer of Merrill Lynch’s Global Wealth Management, Pacific Rim, speaking on “Hiring & Retaining Talent: The Best of The Next Generation.”

Organised by NUS Business School Alumni and Robert Walters, the talk held at the Swissotel Stamford was one instalment of a year-round series. It was attended by over 80 alumni, faculty, students and members of the public.

Mr Chan, who has 27 years of experience in the finance and banking sector, shared three main myths about Gen-Y (people born in the ‘80s and ‘90s).

“’It is not true that they are needy and do not respect authority,” clarified the alumnus. “Contrary to popular belief, high performing Gen-Ys demonstrate tremendous respect for leaders, but every ounce of this loyalty and respect must be earned.”

“Gen-Y’s have more choices, are more vocal and pay higher attention to work-life balance and the cost of living,” added Mr Chan.

When asked what strategies employers could adopt to hire and retain talent, Mr Chan advised that companies “be as transparent as possible.” He ended the session sharing that leadership was one that could “embrace change and add value.”

Young BBA alumni reunion

The spirit of Mexican joy was in the air as alumni of classes 1998 to 2008 walked into Margarita’s @ Dempsey Hill on 14 November.

As a soft launch for the NUSBSA Youth Wing—an initiative by recent BBA graduates aiming to engage younger alumni—Assoc Prof Quek Ser Aik, Vice-Dean of Undergraduate Studies at NUS Business School, opened the event with a short speech encouraging alumni to maintain strong connections with one another and their alma mater.

Amidst catching up with old friends and making new ones, alumni were entertained with games like treasure hunt and super bingo. During the lucky draw, several alumni even struck it rich with spanking new iPod Touch devices.

“This is a wonderful platform for alumni to connect with one another,” said Don Chen Jia Qing (BBA Hons 2008), Chairman of the event’s organising committee.

Other than members of the alumni, current students were also invited to the event.

One of them was Shao Hong Chang, a BBA student whose interest in the event came from the chance “to interact with people who are experienced in their fields of specialisation. It is a great chance for me to learn.”

The event ended in three toasts: first to NUS, secondly to the NUS Business School and lastly to the BBA Alumni.

Sixteenth CEO unplugged session

The 16th installment of CEO Unplugged saw a large turnout of about 300 industry members, aspiring entrepreneurs, alumni, students and members of the public at Toa Payoh HDB Hub Auditorium on 18 November 2008.

Organised by NUS Entrepreneurship Society and supported by NUS Enterprise and NUS Business School Alumni Association (NUSBSA), the event was held in conjunction with the Global Entrepreneurship Week, and became for the first time, part of Start-Up@Singapore 2009.

For this installment, two prominent speakers, Ms Claire Chiang, Senior Vice President of Banyan Tree Holdings, and Mr William Lim, CEO of Old Chang Kee, were invited to share their wealth of knowledge and personal experiences.

During the forum, both speakers talked about their growing up days and how their companies grew to each its current status. Ms Chiang shared it was simple time spent with her husband in Hong Kong’s Lamma Island that “gave us the inspiration to start our company, Banyan Tree Holdings.”

For Mr Lim, his journey with Old Chang Kee began after he returned from Perth, Australia. Expressing his love for his company’s top product, his cheeky confession “I eat a curry puff every day!” brought laughs from the audience.

The evening ended with a networking dinner that saw both CEOs interacting with the audience.

NUS Business School Alumni set up charitable foundations

Singapore Exchange (SGX) Chief Executive Officer Mr Hsieh Fu Hua and Raffles Education Corporation’s founder Mr Chew Hua Seng have recently set up charitable foundations to help the needy and disadvantaged.

In late 2008, Mr Hsieh registered Binjai Tree, a privately run charitable foundation focusing on disadvantaged communities in Singapore. While little is known about the low-key philanthropist, Mr Hsieh has always actively supported charitable causes—notably spear-heading the SGX's annual fund-raiser, Bull Charge, which has raised over $12 million to date.

Mr Chew has similarly committed himself to the needy, pledging an astonishing $100 million to the Chew Hua Seng Foundation, a charity that provides for underprivileged youths to unlock their potential in school and beyond. This initiative marks a far cry from Mr Chew’s own insurance-selling days, a step he had to take to support himself through university. A son of a Teochew speaking fisherman, Mr Chew is today best known as the Founder, Chairman and CEO of Raffles Education Corp – the largest private education provider in Asia. The Chew Hua Seng Foundation aims to be a philanthropic channel for Raffles Education Corp and its CEO, Mr Chew himself. The Foundation was incorporated in November 2007 and was officially launched in September 2008.

The Business School is proud of both alumnus for carrying on the School’s ethos of contributing back to community. We commend Mr Hsieh and Mr Chew for their efforts, and wish them all the best in their philanthropic endeavours.

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