Who’s got time to do an MBA. Not me… that’s for sure.
Don’t get me wrong. There are plenty of great people out there with great skills. Some of these people even have MBAs.
I can see the need to reskill and upskill. Especially in this weird economy. However, I haven’t got time for another qualification. And I don’t want a divorce.
Google it. MBA often correlates with divorce. It’s a real thing.
What I really need though is some new ideas. And some new tools that allow me to move forward in uncertain times.
And not everyone cares as much about degrees and qualifications as they used to.
I decided all of this at Christmas time this year. Christmas is always a great time for introspection.
And by introspection I mean the general disillusionment and existential distress that follows too much eating, drinking and time with relatives.
But what I realised is that the best way forward for me was to look at building myself my own MBA.
And not really an MBA at all. A kind of DIY non-MBA, MBA. So I put a very fuzzy plan in place earlier this year.
What I needed, I decided, was some new inputs… a combination of things that made sense to me.
I’m sure research would suggest that eclectic approaches lead to incoherence. However, while this might be true for groups, eclecticism works on an individual level.
In other words, my choices for my DIY non-MBA, MBA don’t need to make sense to anyone except me. And I can choose them intuitively if I want to or let one thing lead to another.
So that’s what I’m doing.
Everything around me seems to be changing anyway. And rapidly. If I know one thing is true, it’s that I need to adapt to this pace of change and change too.
I also know that the toolset that I’ve been using for the last 10 years is no longer enough. At least that’s my perception.
I mean… I’m sure that I can get by on my existing toolset. But I’m no longer sure that I want to. I’m looking forward to the change and disruption that lies ahead.
Well, kinda.
What I’ve seen though, when I gaze into my crystal ball, is a mixture of opportunities and problems that I want to understand better. But I feel like I don’t have the tools to analyse them or manage them.
So here’s what I did. I had a look at what I’m interested in personally and professionally. And then I booked myself into a series of short courses over the last six months.
Three were with the Executive Education programme at the University of Auckland’s Business School. I already had a relationship with Auckland because I’ve studied and worked there.
The three courses I’ve undertaken so far have been excellent and I’ve blogged about two of them.
One I wrote about extensively. This was Service Design Thinking.
- There’s a summary here.
- Or you can just jump straight to the course outline here.
Then a few months later I picked another one. This time it was about Critical Thinking.
- If you’re interested in my “takeaways”, there’s another summary here.
- And the course outline is here.
The one I haven’t blogged about yet was Project Management which I’ve just completed. I’ve got a lot to say about this in future posts.
- I don’t have my notes collated yet, but you can check out the course outline here.
One nice thing about these two-day workshops is that they keep the disruption of my life to a minimum. Each of these has been a two-day intensive in Auckland.
This timeframe is about right for me. I love Auckland, but too long and the traffic gets to me.
I’m going to write more about this soon, but the short version, for now, is that I got a lot out of the Project Management course.
It was just an introduction. And I don’t have any real desire to become a project manager.
However, I think the future of work – for myself, anyway – is projects. I know this is true for me for the last 12 months. And it certainly looks that way for the immediate future.
And managing projects is really hard.
I struggle to manage my own time and projects, let alone projects involving others. But I feel that I’ve got a basic toolset now to make sense of my own and others’ projects.
So… watch this space for more on projects and project management.
And if you’re good at maths, you’ll realise that I’ve only accounted for three of the four short courses so far in my DIY non-MBA, MBA.
The other one feels a bit weird to write about here. But in the interests of full disclosure, I did a weekend course on sandal making at Shoe School in Wellington.
Before you judge me, there is a connection to all the other stuff I’m interested in. But I’ll have to leave that to another day.
In the mean time, check out the sandal workshop gallery here. If you see some black ostrich leather men’s scuffs. They’re mine. I designed them, cut them out by hand, then stitched and glued them together.
So much fun.
You are the best! Black Ostrich sandals so fabulous 🙂
Haha thanks… kinda Kanye West meets “just hanging at the mall”… thanks Robyn.