Graduating into a changed world with new challenges
The Class of 2009 is in a very rare moment, full of difficult challenges that few classes before them have faced.
One of the challenges will be finding new ways to do business. Many of the old ways are outdated and just don’t seem to work anymore. This class will have to work harder than any class before. There used to be a time when you graduated from Harvard with an MBA and you walked right into a job. But many have discovered it just isn’t that easy this year. This class is going to have to be more resourceful and perhaps create their own jobs. They will be expected to conduct business with integrity and be held to higher morals and ethics than ever before.
For the first time, Indian students have a majority representation among the foreign students at HBS. Out of the 900 students who graduated, 38 are from India or are of Indian origin. According to HBS faculty, more and more of these students want to return to India to work. Add to this, 15 percent of HBS’ faculty is Indian, making them the highest international representation after the US. Today, many of these professors teach cases based on frontline Indian companies like TCS, ITC e-choupal and ICICI Bank. In addition, the School has long considered India as a fundamental part of its global strategy. A decade ago HBS began developing cases in India focused on India-based companies, and in 2005 established the India Research Center in Mumbai. HBS also holds an India conference annually and invites business leaders from India to share their perspectives. The 2009 India Conference at the Harvard Business School was titled “The Indian Growth Story: Sleeping Elephant or Roaring Tiger” and some of the featured panellists included Indian business leaders such as R.S. Sodhi (Amul), Sunand Sharma (Alstom), Alok Agarwal (eValueserve), Sanjay Gupta (Dainik Jagran), Vikram Sakhuja (GroupM), Anil Chawla (DE Shaw) and Biswaranjan Sen (Unilever), to name a few.
So yes, of the 886 candidates for Masters of Business Administration, for us here in India, it’s good to know what they’re thinking.
Today of course, at the 358th commencement ceremony at Harvard, I doubt little was being thought of except the relief of graduation. “This is the world’s most expensive piece of paper,” remarked one alumnus (he was referring to the $150,000 price tag for the Harvard MBA diploma). But if the pomp and show of this morning is anything to go by, it might be a price worth paying!
I’ll say one thing for this school: It knows how to make its students feel good about themselves. Over 30,000 people attended the festivities at Harvard Yard in Cambridge, in front of the school’s famed Widener Library, the entire area ablaze with the reds, blues, greens and golds of the varied flags of the University.
Did I mention that Harvard graduates together? All 10 graduate schools, the entire undergraduate class and the extension schools gather on the wide lawns underneath the elm trees, seated amongst (but separate from) their families and friends. We started queuing up at 6 am, armed with doughnuts and coffees to keep us going, till finally seats were acquired. At precisely 9 am the commencement procession began with the graduating class, the alumni and the faculty all emerging from different corners in lively confusion, descending like a flock of iridescent birds to find their seats in the Yard, as the Harvard University Band played familiar college songs.