Business Schools Push Careers In Fast-Growing Digital Economy
Breaking News: Technology
has radically altered the nature of employment, spurring business schools to
focus some of their education on digital transformation. Business schools are
launching programs dedicated to managing the digital transformation of
companies, illustrating power of the new digital economy in business.
Digital
technologies have radically altered the nature of employment and have opened up
new avenues for graduates to find jobs. The fast-growing digital economy is
poised to make up bigger chunk of the MBA recruitment market in 2015.
The
University of Oxford’s Saïd Business School became the latest school to launch
a digital-focused program this month. The new course – Oxford Polaris Digital
Academy – will educate executives across industries on how to succeed in the
digital transformation of their firms, and also to help assess the key
challenges facing international leaders in doing so. It is offered in
collaboration with Polaris Consulting & Services, the India-based digital
specialist consultancy.
Jitin
Goyal, CEO of Polaris, said that the program will bring together the unique
combination of the company's expertise and Oxford’s thought leadership. “We are
very excited about its potential,” he added.
This
era of digital transformation is affecting nearly all companies across multiple
sectors. Business is undergoing a sea change as a result of the influence of
new capabilities – in particular mobile, data analytics and cloud computing.
A
recent survey of business chiefs by Altimeter Group in a report with input from
Starbucks, Ford and Nestlé executives found that 88% of companies said they
were undergoing digital transformation – but only a quarter had strategies.
A 2013
survey Report by MIT Sloan School of Management in the US produced similar
findings. Andrew White, associate dean for executive education at Oxford Saïd,
said that executives on similar programs have gained greater self-awareness of
their leadership, creating energy and emotional commitment to drive change.
About
1.8 million people in the UK – or 6% of workers – are now employed in the
digital economy in jobs that did not exist two decades ago, according to PwC’s
2015 economic outlook, released this month. The number of people in
professional IT-related jobs rose 6.5% between 2012 and 2014, more than the
3.8% increase in total employment.
John
Hawksworth, chief economist at PwC, said that some leading digital companies
may not employ that many people directly. But he added: “Our analysis suggests
that they can have an important catalytic effect on the overall economic
performance of the cities and regions where they are located.”
Business
graduates are increasingly finding roles in digital enterprises. The management
consulting industry has been one of the largest areas of employment growth for
MBAs, driven by new digital service lines such as big data.
Accenture,
KPMG and Deloitte have all invested heavily in staff – Accenture Digital
employs about 28,000 people – to drive digital transformation. “Clients – they
want to know how to use technology to understand big data – even McKinsey is
building that capability – and that opens up opportunities for MBA students,”
said Conrad Chua, head of careers at Cambridge Judge Business School.
There
has also been increased demand for digital technologies in financial services,
with large banks including Barclays, HSBC and payments provider American
Express recruiting for their digital banking teams.
Gil
Yancey, executive director of careers at GWU School of Business, said: “Credit
card and consumer banking departments are experiencing increased demand for
digital technology skills.”
Financial
services groups are also embracing digital through the use of data analytics in
areas such as fixed income asset pricing. Stevens Institute of Technology, a
private research university, recently launched a course focused on this area.
This is
driving up employment demand. John DelSanto, senior managing director for
Accenture’s US financial services group, said: “Finding and accessing analytics
talent will require innovative sourcing strategies to bridge the gap between
supply and demand.”
Technology
companies that utilize digital – from Google and Microsoft to Apple and Amazon
– have been among the largest recruiters of business graduates, edging out
investment banks. Kyle Ewing, Google’s head of global staffing programs, said
that the group values all levels of education.
He
added: “MBAs find plenty of opportunities to do cool things that matter –
whether in product management, sales and finance, marketing, people operations
and everything in-between.” When it comes to MBA careers in the digital
economy, companies that use data often offer promising growth prospects.
Sal
Vella, vice president of cloud foundational services at IBM, said that all
industries are under increased pressure to extract new insights from data. He
added: “Critical to that effort is the development of business leaders who are
skilled in analytics.”
Eric
Young, assistant dean of Georgetown University’s MBA Career Center, said that
MBA students are increasingly interested in companies driven by tech and
innovation – “more than hundred-year-old companies where the perception might
be that the culture is stuffy, slow [and] old-fashioned”, he added.
The PwC
report said the proportion of workers in these new jobs in 2004 was a good
predictor of relative rates of regional UK jobs growth during the following 10
years to 2014. Stephanie Hyde, head of UK regions at PwC, added that
universities have a vital role in establishing successful digital hubs.
She
said: “Our research article notes that Stanford alumni have created around
40,000 companies and over five million jobs in the US. Leading UK universities
could be similarly dynamic catalysts for innovation and growth.”
The
Saïd Business School program is by invitation only, at the discretion of the
two organisations. Other leading business schools running executive programs
focused on digital transformation include HEC Paris in France and Canada’s
DeGroote School. Schools also offer MBA courses in digital transformation,
including Harvard Business School of the US, and Australia’s University of
Southern Queensland.
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Business Schools Push Careers In Fast-Growing Digital Economy
Reviewed by Anonymous
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August 03, 2015
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