Site icon PaGaLGuY

No plans to compete with Indian b-schools: HBS Dean Nitin Nohria

Nitin Nohria, Dean, Harvard Business SchoolHarvard Business School (HBS) has no plans to compete with Indian b-schools, but it would continue to help them build capacity to meet the local demand, said Harvard Business School Dean Prof Nitin Nohria in Mumbai on Tuesday.

“Last year, we distributed 429,000 case studies in India and are involved with 16 business schools to train their professors in becoming better teachers,” he told mediapersons during his Mumbai pit-stop of an 11-day world tour.

The IIT Bombay-educated Prof Nohria, who took over as Harvard’s new Dean earlier this month, is on an 11-day world tour of London, Mumbai, Hong Kong, Shanghai and San Francisco to meet HBS alumni and business leaders.

Speaking about HBS’ focus on India, he said that the 102-year old school has created 80 case studies on Indian businesses which were used widely across other business schools. The school will continue to do more research and establish a center to grow its Executive Development Programs in India, he added. Currently, HBS conducts these programs out of hotel premises in Indian cities.

Speaking at Assocham’s and the Piramal Group’s 13th JRD Tata Memorial Oration on ‘India and the Globalization of Business’ in South Mumbai in the evening, he narrated how last year several HBS students had chosen to complete their summer internships in India, rejecting offers in the US or Europe.

“When I joined HBS in 1988, nearly all of the case studies taught at the school were of American businesses. But last year, half the cases developed were international case studies,” he said.

In the insightful talk, the co-author and co-editor of 16 management books said that Indian companies will have to invest heavily in innovation in order to compete in the globalized world.

Edited excerpts from the talk

Prof Nohria’s intellectual interests center on human motivation, leadership, corporate transformation and accountability and sustainable economic and human performance.