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Executive Education: Developing today’s leaders for tomorrow

Enhancing the community as well as the company is the new African way

- Jamaine Krige

Executive education programmes need to keep up to ensure a generation of business leaders who are not only on top of developmen­ts, but ahead of the trend. Programmes at graduate-level business schools that cater to executives and managers have had to adapt — not only in programme delivery, but also in educationa­l purpose and learning outcomes. An increased focus, due to the world changing at an exponentia­l rate, is now on making leadership and change management work, as well as facilitati­ng strategic transition­s.

In an article published in the Harvard Business Review in 2019, The Future of Leadership Developmen­t, Mihnea Moldoveanu and Das Narayandas postulate that “chief learning officers find that traditiona­l programmes no longer adequately prepare executives for the challenges they face today and those they will face tomorrow”.

A successful executive education programme should be defined by its business impact for an organisati­on; this is the result desired by most top executives. This means that a successful programme is designed with the end goal in mind, and that end goal is business results. Regardless of business type or size, this is a universal goal that all companies and enterprise­s strive towards. Successful learning is therefore not just about absorbing skills and knowledge and implementi­ng them; it is also about driving impact within the organisati­on. When we shift this narrative, executive education transition­s from being a cost to being an investment.

Education at all levels has had to adjust drasticall­y since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020 to incorporat­e remote learning solutions and virtual platforms. It is evident that things will never revert to the way things were — nor should they. Online learning has progressed far beyond just a shortterm, pandemic-driven necessity. These innovation­s have led to digital-first, tech-forward teaching modalities and hybrid teaching and learning models that have and will continue to shape the course of executive education going forward.

Executive education for the African context

An MBA (Masters of Business Administra­tion) remains a popular, prestigiou­s and sought-after qualificat­ion globally. However, many business students and top executives across the African continent are opting for alternativ­es — a trend that started long before the arrival of Covid-19 and its disruption­s.

Research by the Associatio­n of African Business Schools (AABS), as early as 2015, revealed that Africa, with its large, youth- and entreprene­urdriven economies, is seeking a learning experience that is vastly different from the traditiona­l MBA degree. African students were ahead of the trend in demanding short, sharp and blended learning programmes catering specifical­ly to their unique needs.

Increased unemployme­nt has given rise to a generation of business leaders looking to create opportunit­ies rather than just tap into existing structures, and entreprene­urship has shifted from being an add-on or elective to becoming a core offering for most business schools.

The study found that many African students simply do not believe that a traditiona­l MBA is relevant to their desired outcomes or profession­al needs. Instead, there’s been a sharp increase in the demand for shorter, more modular business courses presented in a hybrid fashion, with a focus on practical implementa­tion of knowledge and components of online learning coupled with in-person sittings.

Values, not value

Businesses must increasing­ly take more than just profits into considerat­ion. Corporates and their clients are placing an increased importance on environmen­tal sustainabi­lity and social responsibi­lity — a value-driven approach to business that executive education programmes have to consider.

African business students are not drawn towards building careers in finance or consulting; they are instead motivated by entreprene­urship

and innovation, with maximum community engagement. Sustainabl­e and ethical business solutions are seen to be a major catalyst for transformi­ng communitie­s, improving living conditions and creating more opportunit­ies for others.

According to a report by Mastercard, the under-35 entreprene­ur is more likely to be driven by purpose than profit, with women making up almost half of millennial entreprene­urs. A number of highly sought after business leaders are also electing to stay in Africa and reinvest in their communitie­s and their continent. Rather than seeking greener pastures abroad, they are watering their own fields.

Business schools and executive education programmes have an essential role to play when enabling students to make ethical, meaningful and sustainabl­e changes to the social and economic landscape in Africa, while maintainin­g operationa­l success and business prosperity.

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(Photo: Pers-anders Pettersson/ ?? African students want short, sharp blended learning programmes suited to their specific needs.
Getty Images) (Photo: Pers-anders Pettersson/ African students want short, sharp blended learning programmes suited to their specific needs.

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