MBA
in Australia
A Few Reasons Why
It is becoming increasingly easy to answer the question: 'Why
study an MBA?' The answer to the question 'Why study an MBA in
Australia?' has been an easy one to answer for more than two decades.
Why study
an MBA?
If you have
an undergraduate degree in any field, have at least two years
of managerial, professional or equivalent experience and wish
to make the very best investment you can make in your future career
success, study leading to the award of a Master of Business Administration
(MBA) is for you.
Why?
Look around
you!
Globalisation
continues apace, national borders are eroding around the world,
international competitive pressures are increasing, industrial
re-structuring continues within the giant North American trade
bloc, the Euro will soon provide a renewed fillip to industrial
reform within Euroland, and Asia, the wounded tiger, will recover
its lost vitality over time.
These dramatic
changes in long-term world economic prospects are placing an increasing
premium upon those who possess a deep knowledge of, and associated
skills pertinent to, what it takes to achieve organisational success
in a highly competitive world. I use the words 'organisational
success' advisedly - the usefulness of the knowledge and skills
conferred by an MBA are not just confined to business enterprises.
Certainly,
the belief is growing in the minds of the Chief Executives of
giant international companies that an MBA is rapidly becoming
a minimum qualification for managers or executives within their
companies. But MBAs can contribute equally well to the success
of small businesses scrambling for niche markets in an increasingly
globalised market place. MBAs are becoming more and more sought
after in public sector organisations under intense pressure from
governments for improved performance at reduced cost. Thus ongoing
public sector reforms that embody commercialisation, corporatisation,
outsourcing and/or privatisation necessitate the skills possessed
by MBA graduates if they are to be implemented effectively.
Moreover,
the professional practices of accountants, lawyers, doctors and
other health care providers (such as physiotherapists) are facing
growing pressures to consolidate, to increase in size, to utilise
more sophisticated marketing, information technology, customer
service and financial strategies as means to achieve business
success. Increasingly, professionals in these fields are deciding
to study an MBA as a means to reinforce their business skills,
and hence the profitability of their practices.
Finally, whatever
the content of one's undergraduate degree, an MBA increases the
range of potential career choices available to include managerial
or executive roles within a diverse range of industries.
What are the
skills and knowledge encapsulated within an MBA that can contribute
to organisational success? In brief, the secret of the success
of a good MBA (and more of this later) is three-fold:
How
and why does a good MBA confer these skills and knowledge?
An MBA develops
appropriate skills and knowledge in two ways: by means of what
students have the opportunity to learn, and by how they learn
it. Typically, a good MBA will include the opportunity to study
around sixteen subjects, which provide a broad portfolio of business-related
skills and knowledge. These subjects include fundamentals such
as accounting, economics, the study of organisations, quantitative
methods, and the elements of international management, and then
scope for more intensive study in fields such as finance, people
management, information technology, marketing, international management
and general management. Specific topics within these fields could
range from entrepreneurship to quality management, or from derivative
securities to operations management. But the way in which students
learn within an MBA is even more important than the topics they
study.
Students within
an MBA program often have quite extensive experience of the business
world, hence they represent a key resource in the learning process.
The quality and experience of students themselves, of the faculty
members, and of the learning resources and facilities available
to both are crucial to the quality of the learning environment.
In these circumstances, faculty members in a good MBA program
assume more of the role of facilitators than of 'teachers'. The
learning process becomes one in which students acquire enlightenment
knowledge, skills and growing self-confidence as a result of being
exposed to diverse learning opportunities such as individual research,
group projects, guest lecturers from business and government,
class discussion of real-life cases, and from delivering individual
and group presentations to audiences of their peers.
From this
ferment of rich educational development, the better students emerge
with an ambition 'to change the world' and more importantly, the
skills and self-confidence to do so! Whilst all MBA graduates
must gain experience and earn their advancement 'on the job',
the MBA provides a powerful conceptual framework within which
they are able to derive the greatest advantage from that experience.
Why
study an MBA in Australia?
There are
two fundamental reasons for studying an MBA in Australia:
To appreciate
the significance of the first point, it is necessary to explore
briefly the meaning of the term 'good MBA'. At one extreme, it
is possible in some countries to acquire an 'MBA' certificate
through the mail by spending a few hundred dollars. Such 'MBAs'
are obviously not worth the paper they are written on, and any
employer duped into hiring such a person would soon learn their
mistake and act accordingly. At the other end of the spectrum
are MBAs acquired on the basis of diligent study and participation
over a period of at least 16 months, within a rich learning environment
at an internationally-recognised management school within a prestigious
university. The difference between these two experiences lies
in the changes that they effect within the student.
A good MBA
will develop the individual significantly, including their capacity
to work as an effective team member, to lead others, and to be
effective in interpersonal relationships through enhanced self-confidence,
communication, presentation and negotiation skills. In addition,
his or her capacity to diagnose the changes required to achieve
business success and the power to implement these changes will
be increased dramatically. By contrast, a poor MBA will effect
none of these changes within the individual, and thus individual
performance will be poor.
Australian
MBA Programs
Particularly
within its capital cities, Australia possesses a large number
of MBA programs which meet the above criteria for providing a
good MBA. Very early in its history, Australia inherited the British
academic tradition of rigorous inquiry and adherence to high academic
standards. Australia's oldest universities in particular are internationally-renowned
for their very high standards of research and teaching.
Currently,
a total of 55 Australian universities offer MBA programs. The
prevailing model at the better institutions is the 'Harvard style'
MBA, which provides around 16 diverse business related subjects,
delivered over a period of 16 months to 2 years of full-time study.
The shorter (16 month) program is delivered by institutions who
have adopted the trimester system as a means to reduce the opportunity
cost of an MBA to its students. Students may also study part-time,
and most choose to do so.
The better
MBA programs are truly international in terms of curriculum and
orientation. This international focus is enhanced by the large
number of international students that study in Australia. At Graduate
Schools of Management, for example, students from about 30 countries
within Europe, North America, Asia and Africa participate in the
MBA program, and graduates now occupy executive positions in organisations
throughout the world. Superior MBA programs are delivered by the
older universities located in each of the State capital cities.
In general, these are particularly well resourced in terms of
quality of faculty, calibre of students and also in terms of library,
computer and other facilities.
Consortium
of Australian Management and Business Schools
Of particular
note is the Consortium of Australian Management and Business Schools
(CAMBS), which includes a number of these institutions. Members
of CAMBS include The University of Adelaide, Deakin University,
The University of Queensland, The University of Tasmania and The
University of Western Australia. These institutions have agreed
to cross-credit subjects studied in the MBA programs of other
Consortium members.
This arrangement
facilitates ease of movement of students between the various Australian
States. The availability of distance education from Deakin University
further increases the flexibility that Consortium members can
offer.
International
students therefore have the opportunity to study an MBA wholly
in Australia, or to study for a semester or trimester towards
their degree at an institution of their choice. This may be facilitated
by exchange arrangements between their home university and an
Australian university, as Student Study Plans can be tailored
to the specific educational needs of the students concerned. Other
award management programs are also on offer including PhD, Doctor
of Business Administration, Graduate Diploma in Management and
Graduate Certificate in Management.
Other
advantages of studying in Australia include:
Australia
provides a meeting ground between East and West. Perth, for example,
is in the same time zone as Singapore, Hong Kong and Taipei. Developments
in Asia are subject to close academic and business scrutiny within
Australia, and specific MBA courses are tailored to elicit deep
student understanding of the Asia/Pacific Region.
Industrial
restructuring and public sector reform have been actively pursued
by successive Australian governments since the mid-1970s. As a
consequence, the Australian economy is currently experiencing
both robust economic growth and low inflation, and is presently
one of the strongest performing economies in the world. Hence
the analysis of industrial re-structuring, public sector reform
and the management of change is right at the 'cutting edge' within
Australian management schools. Notwithstanding Australia's sound
economic prospects, because of low world prices for commodities,
Australia's exchange rate is currently low (the Australian dollar
is equivalent to 62 US cents). The cost of an MBA program is consequently
relatively low in world terms - for example, international students
pay AU$2000 per subject for each of the 16 units at the University
of Western Australia, a total of AU$32 000.
Australia
is renowned for its many attractive beaches and associated tourist
outlets, which tend to be popular with visitors from the Northern
Hemisphere. The environment is clean and the climate is mild and
pleasant in both winter and summer, allowing international students
to sample the ample recreational, cultural and sporting facilities,
activities which allow students to relax in the few precious moments
that they can spare away from their intensive MBA studies!
In summary,
if you would like to see more of the world, to study intensively
in a clean, pleasant, novel, interesting environment, to complete
a high-quality, internationally-recognised business-oriented Masters
degree, and to improve significantly on your career prospects,
studying towards an MBA is the thing to do - and Australia is
the place to do it.
Author:
Bruce McCallum
Studies Co-ordinator, The Graduate School of Management
The University of Western Australia
Perth, Western Australia