Curriculum

A side view of one side of the Long Room Library Trinity College Dublin

Delivered over two years on a part-time basis, candidates attend classes held on Monday and Tuesday evenings from 6-9pm and four Saturdays from 9-5pm per term. Students must also allot time outside the classroom for group work, readings, individual research and assignments. We work with candidates to develop time management skills and best practice for group work.

We have three mandatory block weeks that our Executive MBA’s must attend over the two year period. This includes an induction week at the beginning of year 1, the International Residency week in Brussels and our ‘Design Thinking’ delivery days on campus. We provide these dates in advance so you can work this into your personal schedule. There are additional block weeks in Belgium and South Africa if you choose to take these electives.

*On rare occasions a class may need to be held outside of the above shown times.

Year 1 Modules & Timeline

Michaelmas Term

September - December
2-3 taught core modules. Teaching includes a mix of lecturers, guest speakers, live action learning, projects and workshop.

Hilary Term

January - March
2-3 taught core modules.

Trinity Term

April - August
1 taught core module. Choose from a range of electives including an optional residency week in South Africa. The Strategic Company Project launches.

*Curriculum subject to change. Modules may include changes.

 

Michaelmas Term

The Trinity MBA kicks off with a unique induction week. An entirely immersive and offline experience, you will begin your Leadership and Professional Development journey and forge bonds with your fellow classmates. This is a compulsory aspect of the programme.

This course is much more than simple theory - it is a game changer. The module strives to turn MBA students into the next generation of sustainable business leaders. The mission of this module is to develop a practical understanding of real-world business challenges, expose students to business trends, and position students to navigate and plan for their careers. 

Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

1) Develop a personal strategic career plan to meet your future career potential. 
2) Choose a career path that aligns with your strength, motives, aspirations, and values. 
3) Develop personal and professional identity, knowledge and skills for todays changing business environment.

The module is designed to develop strategic leadership capabilities through the exploration of models and frameworks that take a holistic perspective on the organisation. Having completed this module, you should be able to:

  • Differentiate between corporate, business and functional strategies
  • Appreciate the complexities involved in the strategy process
  • Evaluate the different strategic challenges facing profit-seeking organisations and not-for-profit organisations.
  • Develop competitive and corporate strategies for a given organization
  • Critically apply various strategic management concepts and techniques
  • Understand strategic change processes from a complex systems perspective

This module provides a working knowledge of the fundamentals of financial and management accounting. Having completed this module, you should be able to:

  • Communicate effectively in financial language
  • Understand the key components of balance sheets, income statements and cash flow statements
  • Identify the financial implications of day-to-day and strategic management activities and decisions
  • Construct financial statements and make projections in support of business plans
  • Identify the deficiencies in accounting statements and understand the impact of accounting standards on them
  • Undertake financial analysis of financial statements and identify key trends in performance and financial position of commercial undertakings
  • Understand the impact of operating and financial leverage on the performance and financial position of business enterprises
  • Identify the optimum financial structure for different enterprises
  • Apply costing & pricing techniques to optimize value for the business

Hilary Term

This course is much more than simple theory - it is a game changer. The module strives to turn MBA students into the next generation of sustainable business leaders. The mission of this module is to develop a practical understanding of real-world business challenges, expose students to business trends, and position students to navigate and plan for their careers. 

Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

1) Develop a personal strategic career plan to meet your future career potential. 
2) Choose a career path that aligns with your strength, motives, aspirations, and values. 
3) Develop personal and professional identity, knowledge and skills for todays changing business environment.

This module seeks to provide an understanding of the fundamentals of entrepreneurship and enable participants to evaluate and create a commercially viable business plan independently. The module also provides an introduction to strategic analysis models and frameworks & is designed to feed into the Strategic Management module in Hilary term as well as connect with the Entrepreneurial Finance module, Scaling Project, Social Entrepreneurship Project and Strategic Company Project.

Having completed this module, you should be able to:

  • Critically engage with the premise of the entrepreneurial lifecycle where entrepreneurship is not just limited to new venture creation but throughout any organisation's life in terms of innovation, creative and disruptive strategy.
  • Understand the fundamentals of entrepreneurship frameworks and the analytical tools & models used in strategic business planning.
  • Critically engage and evaluate Lean Start-Up principles and new venture canvassing techniques.
  • Source information from a variety of primary and secondary sources, analyze and interpret the data and be prepared to correlate them into a coherent business plan.
  • Explore and articulate key elements of entrepreneurial business modelling such as finance, monetisation of a business concept, competitive mapping, customer research and the development of differentiation and competitive advantage.  
  • Engage in the process of developing a pitch presentation for a new venture and develop the skills required for effective communication of a proposal.  
  • Defend assumptions and recommendations related to a new venture and/or business plan proposal.  

This module sets out a broad contextual & historical perspective on the field of management and organisation, and specifically through a detailed examination of organisation design and its contribution to the overall capability of the business. Having completed this module, you should be able to:

  • Appreciate the historical and theoretical basis of organisation design and development and their context in terms of value and contribution to organisational life.
  • Demonstrate a systematic understanding of organizational structures, functions and performance in both theory and practice
  • Characterise different organisation types with their respective contexts, structures and management styles, and explain their characteristics, strengths and weaknesses.
  • Apply models analytically and diagnostically, to identify and apply available design options regarding organisational structures and relationships.
  • Processes and systems need to be in place to maintain such structures and relationships and evaluate of same.

This module focuses on the behaviour of individuals and groups in organisations. We will examine key theories and concepts from the field of organisational behaviour and in so doing introduce you to frameworks and tools for understanding and analysing issues relevant to individual and group behaviour and organisational performance. Having completed this module, you should be able to:

  • Outline the key theoretical areas of the field of organisational behaviour
  • Discuss the importance of organisational behaviour practices to broader organisational performance and effectiveness
  • Critically assess the key skills and tools of analysis and their relative benefits
  • Critically evaluate key organisational practices and suggest evidence-based alternatives to improve organisational effectiveness
  • Reflect on their own practice as a leader and manager in an organisational setting with reference to opportunities for improvement

The finance function is a critical aspect of any organisation.  The success or failure of a firm may be influenced significantly by how it manages its’ finances. Having completed this module, you should be able to:

  • Explore the concept of financial management and its importance to organizations
  • Appraise capital investments through the use of appropriate methods and techniques
  • Understand the relation between risk and return and the importance of managing this relation in corporate decision-making
  • Use financial mathematics, statistics, excel routines and pricing techniques to value bonds, stocks and other risky assets
  • Understand the basic elements of investment, financing, capital structure and dividend decision processes
  • Explain how businesses create value.

Trinity Term

The purpose of the MBA Strategic Company Project (‘the Company Project’) is to provide a vehicle for MBA teams to apply their business and leadership skills through addressing a strategic challenge faced by the host (partner) organisation; generally a large, complex  company or organisation operating in a dynamic environment. Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Undertake detailed scanning of the external environment including macro-industry, competitor, market and customer analyses
  • Undertake a thorough analysis of the host organisation’s internal environment
  • Critically assess a business-related issue with the host organisation, and apply a solution to the problem that takes into account the strategic intent, capabilities, resources, mission, values and culture of the organisation, inter alia.
  • Critically evaluate the strategic situation facing the host company, and propose an array of suitable remedies or counter-measures, suggesting the preferred course of action.

 

This course is much more than simple theory - it is a game changer. The module strives to turn MBA students into the next generation of sustainable business leaders. The mission of this module is to develop a practical understanding of real-world business challenges, expose students to business trends, and position students to navigate and plan for their careers. 

Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

1) Develop a personal strategic career plan to meet their future career potential. 
2) Choose a career path that aligns with your strength, motives, aspirations, and values. 
3) Develop personal and professional identity, common knowledge and skills for todays changing business environment.

View Leadership and Professional Development Module Video

Electives

This course will provide a framework to successfully implement analytics and Big Data in an organization.
Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Develop an analytical strategy for an organisation
  • Manage a big data team and project
  • Identify analytical techniques and technology for specific business cases
  • Adjust the processes and culture in their company in such a way that it facilitates data driven decision making
  • Communicate with data scientists and data engineers

Humanity faces a set of economic, social, and environmental Grand Challenges. Grand Challenges are complex social problems that typically involve multiple stakeholders and less conventional approaches to solve. The purpose of this module is to provide students with an opportunity to consider the Grand Challenges of our time and consider the role and strategies that organisations can deploy to tackle such issues. Additionally, students will reflect on the importance of leadership during times of acute crisis due to external shocks.

Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Articulate and identify the leadership competencies needed to manage crises and navigate wicked problems;
  • Prepare for the unpredictable and identify opportunities in crises;
  • Develop a plan to manage a crisis when one occurs;
  • Gain insight from their own and others’ experiences of organisational crises;
  • Reflect on what can be learnt from leading during a time of ambiguity and uncertainty.
  • Consider the implications of grand challenges on organisational strategy.

This subject is concerned with understanding the principles of marketing strategy and with acknowledging the changing nature of marketing in the digital era. 

Having completed this module successfully, the student should be able to:

  1. Evaluate the importance of industry and technology trends in strategy development.
  2. Understand emerging technologies organisations are using to generate revenue, achieve efficiencies, and launch new products.
  3. Analyse the blockchain, crypto and Web3 phenomena.
  4. Evaluate an organisation’s innovation strategy.
  5. Through a detailed business plan, recommend an emerging technology (e.g., blockchain, RPA, etc.) and how it can be integrated to obtain a competitive advantage.

This module has the objective of reviewing the financial, control and investment opportunities faced by rapidly growing companies in entrepreneurial settings. The objective of the study is to consider and select financing vehicles which are appropriate to securing the organisations’ money requirements and to understand and analyse the issues in the institutional framework in which those decisions take place.
Having completed this module, you should be able to:

  • Analyse various sources of financing, including short and long-term debt, subordinated capital and venture capital/equity.
  • Have a comprehensive understanding of public versus private financing, on and off-balance sheet capital and tax-orientated financing.
  • Compare the selection and trade‐offs of financing vehicles with company progress and market conditions.
  • Analyse different institutional regimes and the reasons for particular anomalies in the financing of small and growing enterprises.

This module develops the manager’s critical awareness of the issues and challenges associated with the development and implementation of strategy and processes from an international perspective. As a graduate, you will be better equipped to apply concepts and skills across multiple overseas operations in your project work.
Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Appreciate the evolving competitive context of International Business (IB).
  • Recognize the factors that distinguish IB from domestic business transactions
  • Understand the interrelatedness of issues that impinge on management decision-making in the international environment
  • Grasp that learning opportunities for companies and their managers can be gained from involvement in the conduct of international operations
  • Apply concepts and skills relevant to the formulation and implementation of strategy across multiple overseas operations including;
  1. Identifying and acting on new opportunities
  2. Linking and leveraging those pockets of entrepreneurial initiative
  3. Articulating and inspiring others to follow

International and Corporate Finance including Macroeconomics, Asset Classes & Markets, Valuation, Derivatives & Risk Management, Funding Mechanisms, Funding Evolution and Introduction to Mergers & Acquisitions.

Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Students will gain an understanding of macroeconomics and global capital markets, be able to differentiate between asset classes and understand their history, characteristics, relationships and correlations.
  • Students will gain a practical insight into risk management and derivatives and be able to demonstrate how to apply hedging techniques in corporate and international trades and transactions.
  • Students will understand the mechanisms and evolution of the corporate funding environment and the implications this has for modern corporate capital budgeting decisions and investment methodologies.
  • Students will be exposed to timely security data and corporate transactions and be able to appropriately apply the fundamentals and theoretical to yield a deeper appreciation of the process, transaction and funding nuances and the ultimate results.
  • Students will be able to thoroughly analyse investment opportunities, methodologies and psychology and communicate their conclusions in a professional manner.

This module provides participants with frameworks, concepts, tools and practical advice on how to develop an aligned human resource strategy and practices that will support and enable the delivery of business strategy. Having completed this module, you should be able to:

  • Build a culture which will dominate your organisation’s Marketplace
  • Diagnose cultural functionality and dysfunctionality
  • Define the behavioural requirements for successful implementation of strategy
  • Architect a best practice staffing process
  • Design a best practice performance management process
  • Architect a best practice total reward system
  • Structure an effective and competent HR function
  • Use competency frameworks as an integrative HR management tool
  • Select and develop talent, manage performance and engage others

Module Description

The concept of sustainability is growing in strategic relevance and importance for the modern corporation. In a high-consumption, ‘fast-fashion’ society, it is more crucial than ever to discuss what it means to be sustainable.

In the corporate world, it has become common practice to equate sustainability to managing the so-called triple bottom line: profits, people and planet. There is an increasing acceptance that individuals and organizations need to approach sustainability from a well thought through strategic perspective, and that they should diligently execute this strategy, as doing this invariably leads to enhanced efficiencies, the ability to create additional and enduring value, and bolsters their impact and longevity

Apart from the moral duty that Individuals, companies and countries have to ensure that they do not impinge upon the ability of future generations to have access to the resources they need to need to maintain and improve their lives.

This module aspires to afford students the opportunity to develop a critical awareness of the issues and challenges related to the sustainability of current individual, organizational and governmental practices.  Students are challenged to interrogate anevaluate current approaches, and explore creative ways of promoting flourishing individuals and organizations that are cognizant of their responsibility to future generations.

The module will be delivered in one week at the Graduate Business School of the University of Cape Town.  It will inter alia be centred on contextualizing sustainability with an emerging world context, moving beyond the triple bottom line, sustainability as organizational practice in action, the impact of climate change, Environmental stewardship meeting business innovation, and integrating sustainability into organizational practice.

Learning and Teaching Approach

The learning approach in this module is a combination of lectures, site visits and time for cultural appreciation. The days are structured in a way that lectures are attended in the mornings and site visits, company visits and cultural excursions take place in the afternoon.

Learning Outcomes

Having completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Be increasingly aware of the core principles that underpin sustainable, flourishing organizations;
  • Be better informed and more appreciative of the triple bottom line approach;
  • Better understand and appreciate the challenges and critical decisions employees, business leaders and managers face in developing and maintaining a sustainability agenda that inspires individuals and organizations to flourish.
  • Be better prepared to evaluate sustainability from an individual and organizational perspectives, with special reference to an environment that promotes individual and organizations to flourish.
  • Gain insight into a Flourishing model of individual and organizational sustainability.
  • Better appreciate the interconnected responsibility of developed and developing countries in promoting sustainability, as contextualized by the first to fourth world South African environment.

Satisfactory completion of this course will contribute to the development of the following key skills:

  • Be able to carry out a contextual/environmental analysis as part of a fuller sustainability analysis
  • Be able to evaluate the importance and relevance of the sustainability issues that emerge from the contextual/environmental analysis
  • Be able to weigh up the ethical, communal and societal aspects of sustainability issues
  • Be able to formulate strategies and policies that are consistent with good corporate governance and good corporate citizenship

Year 2 Modules & Timeline

Michaelmas Term

September - December
2-3 taught core modules. Teaching includes a mix of lecturers, guest speakers, live action learning, projects and workshop. The Strategic Company Project resumes.

Hilary Term

January - March
2-3 taught core modules. Optional residency week in Belgium. The Social Enterprise Project launches.

Trinity Term

April - August
1 taught core modules. Choose from a range of electives. The Scaling Company Project launches.

*Curriculum subject to change. Modules may include changes.

 

Michaelmas Term

This course is much more than simple theory - it is a game changer. The module strives to turn MBA students into the next generation of sustainable business leaders. The mission of this module is to develop a practical understanding of real-world business challenges, expose students to business trends, and position students to navigate and plan for their careers. 

Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

1) Develop a personal strategic career plan to meet their future career potential. 
2) Choose a career path that aligns with your strength, motives, aspirations, and values. 
3) Develop personal and professional identity, common knowledge and skills for todays changing business environment.

Inside the Trinity MBA's Leadership and Professional Development Module

The purpose of the MBA Strategic Company Project (‘the Company Project’) is to provide a vehicle for MBA teams to apply their business and leadership skills through addressing a strategic challenge faced by the host (partner) organisation; generally, a large, complex company or organisation operating in a dynamic environment. Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Undertake detailed scanning of the external environment including macro-industry, competitor, market and customer analyses
  • Undertake a thorough analysis of the host organisation’s internal environment
  • Critically assess a business-related issue with the host organisation, and apply a solution to the problem that takes into account the strategic intent, capabilities, resources, mission, values and culture of the organisation, inter alia.
  • Critically evaluate the strategic situation facing the host company, and propose an array of suitable remedies or counter-measures, suggesting the preferred course of action.

This subject is concerned with understanding the principles of marketing strategy and with acknowledging the changing nature of marketing in the digital era. Having completed this module, you should be able to:

  • Acknowledge and address the complexities involved in planning and implementing an organization’s marketing strategy
  • Understand the core marketing strategies of competing through managing customer relationships, managing customer service, branding and managing innovation.
  • To be competent in the use of various digital marketing techniques and tactics as well as a full appreciation of the key issues within digital marketing strategy development and implementation.
  • To identify, and know how to address, the key decisions facing marketing managers and marketing decision-makers.
  • To practice the discipline of analysing marketing problems or opportunities, identifying and evaluating alternative solutions and implementing marketing plans.

The success of business enterprises is measured by their financial performance and their financial strength. Financial statements provide the key to understanding that success. This module is built around the analysis of the financial reports of international businesses across a range of industries.
On successful completion of this module the student should be able to:

  • Evaluate a company’s financial performance using common-size income statements.
  • Illustrate and interpret the components of the assets, liabilities and equity sections of the balance sheet, and discuss the uses of the balance sheet in financial analysis.
  • Demonstrate how the cash flow statement is linked to the income statement and the balance sheet.
  • Compare and contrast cash flows from operating, investing and financing activities.
  • Explain how day-to-day operational decisions are reflected in the financial statements of a firm.
  • Compute the cost of equity and debt capital from data in financial statements and perform simple valuations of equity.

Hilary Term

This course is much more than simple theory - it is a game changer. The module strives to turn MBA students into the next generation of sustainable business leaders. The mission of this module is to develop a practical understanding of real-world business challenges, expose students to business trends, and position students to navigate and plan for their careers. 

Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

1) Develop a personal strategic career plan to meet their future career potential. 
2) Choose a career path that aligns with your strength, motives, aspirations, and values. 
3) Develop personal and professional identity, common knowledge and skills for todays changing business environment.

The purpose of the MBA Strategic Company Project (‘the Company Project’) is to provide a vehicle for MBA teams to apply their business and leadership skills through addressing a strategic challenge faced by the host (partner) organisation; generally, a large, complex company or organisation operating in a dynamic environment. Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Undertake detailed scanning of the external environment including macro-industry, competitor, market and customer analyses
  • Undertake a thorough analysis of the host organisation’s internal environment
  • Critically assess a business-related issue with the host organisation, and apply a solution to the problem that takes into account the strategic intent, capabilities, resources, mission, values and culture of the organisation, inter alia.
  • Critically evaluate the strategic situation facing the host company, and propose an array of suitable remedies or counter-measures, suggesting the preferred course of action.

The purpose of the MBA Social Enterprise Project (SEP) is to provide an opportunity for MBA teams to apply their business skills and knowledge to a challenge faced by a Social Enterprise (SE). A SE is any organisation with a social mission and can take various forms: non‐profit organisation (NPO), nongovernmental organisation (NGO), profit-making company, hybrid, company limited by guarantee, cooperative, and/or foundation, and might have a charity (CHY) number. MBA teams will meet with the SE partner, learn about a specific organisational challenge that the SE is facing, agree on the parameters of the project, work independently on the solution, and produce a report and presentation to the organisation to address that challenge. As part of the SEP, students learn about some of the unique challenges facing social purpose organisations. The SEP is designed to be mutually beneficial, as the SE benefits from the report and presentation produced by the teams.

Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Critically evaluate the concept of social entrepreneurship in the field;
  • Investigate a business-related issue with a social entrepreneur, and apply a solution to the problem that takes into account the social mission of the enterprise;
  • Understand some of the key characteristics of social entrepreneurial organisations and the unique operational challenges they face.

This module takes a detailed look at the decisions managers to need to make about operational activities. Having completed this module, you should be able to:
• To define and describe the field of operations strategy
• To Identify and understand the working of manufacturing and service firms from an operations perspective
• To conduct relevant analyses of operational and managerial situations and scenarios
• To apply key concepts in the field of operations strategy such as process, capacity, quality, development, improvement, focus
• To communicate conclusions and recommendations in a professional manner
• To work effectively as an individual in a team focused on reviewing the performance of an operation

This module seeks to provide an understanding of the fundamentals of entrepreneurship and enable participants to independently evaluate and create a commercially viable business plan. The module also provides an introduction to strategic analysis models and frameworks & is designed to feed into the Strategic Management module in Hilary term as well as connect with the Entrepreneurial Finance module, Scaling Project, Social Entrepreneurship Project and Strategic Company Project.

Having completed this module, you should be able to:

  • Critically engage with the premise of the entrepreneurial lifecycle where entrepreneurship is not just limited to new venture creation but rather throughout the life of any organisation in terms of innovation, creative and disruptive strategy.
  • Understand the fundamentals of entrepreneurship frameworks and the analytical tools & models used in strategic business planning.
  • Critically engage and evaluate Lean Start-Up principles and new venture canvassing techniques.
  • Source information from a variety of primary and secondary sources, analyze and interpret the data and be prepared to correlate them into a coherent business plan.
  • Explore and articulate key elements of entrepreneurial business modelling such as finance, monetisation of a business concept, competitive mapping, customer research and the development of differentiation and competitive advantage.  
  • Engage in the process of developing a pitch presentation for a new venture and develop the skills required for effective communication of a proposal.  
  • Defend assumptions and recommendations related to a new venture and/or business plan proposal.  

This course aims to explore the continuous political and social pressures that businesses operate under together with the social impact of business and the role it plays in society. It looks at the social pressures and threatening forces that continuously face business managers as well as the opportunities that exist for business. 
Having successfully completed this module, the student should be:

  • Sensitized to the diverse set of issues involved in the business–society relationship and debate
  • Able to understand the role of ethics and corporate social responsibility in modern business
  • Equipped to question and critically evaluate the impact of business activities and behaviour on society
  • Able to discuss the market and non-market and shared value issues involved in building a firm’s strategy
  • Able to create and implement strategies and policies that are consistent with good corporate governance and good corporate citizenship

Module Description

The course is based on best practice negotiation training developed at the Program On Negotiation (PON) at Harvard University.  It aspires to instil the capability, competence and confidence to embark upon principled, value-maximizing negotiation.

Bearing in mind the futility of mere rote learning at a post-graduate level, students are not required to resort to convergent thinking by merely regurgitating the course content. Consequently, they exposed to numerous in-class case studies and simulations, which require them to creatively apply the knowledge, insights and skills imparted to them during the course.

Learning and Teaching Approach

The course is based upon best practice negotiation training developed at the Program On Negotiation (PON) at Harvard University. 

The course is presented in an inter-active manner, which includes lectures and experiential learning by virtue of case studies, debriefings, video presentations and simulations.

Learning Outcomes

After successfully completing the negotiation course, students should be considerably better equipped to:

  • Employ the core determinants that underpin principled, value-maximizing negotiation;
  • Appreciate the limitations of distributive, competitive bargaining and the value-enhancing, relationship-building qualities of integrative, principled negotiation;
  • Understand how to distinguish between the positions adopted at the outset of a negotiation and the interests that underlie these positions as the precursor to creating the environment within which lasting agreements can be concluded;
  • Understand the limitations that premature thought closure poses in respect of the joint opportunity finding that parties need to embark upon to envision and realise the best options for achieving a mutual beneficial outcome that will not only meet, but in many cases exceed their initial expectations;
  • Become increasingly aware of the importance of verbal and non-verbal communication in establishing a negotiation climate conducive to long term, value-creating relationships;
  • Use negotiation as an opportunity for working together to develop as many creative and innovative solutions as possible in response to the ‘problem’ or ‘conflict’ that brought them to the negotiation table, thereby separating the  ‘problem’ or ‘conflict’ form the persons involved in the negotiation;
  • Understand the tactics, ploys and gambits negotiators often employ and be better equipped to constructively counter these tactics, ploys and gambits;
  • Be better informed and skilled at applying the universal principles of persuasion that Robert Cialdini has abstracted from the results of more than fifty years of dedicated research;
  • Appreciate the importance and value of structured pre-negotiation, engagement and post-negotiation planning;
  • Understand the constructive deployment of power and how to effectively counter negative power deployment; and
  • Instil the willingness and confidence to apply principled, value-enhancing negotiation in formal and informal business interactions inside and outside their organisations.

Trinity Term

This course is much more than simple theory - it is a game changer. The module strives to turn MBA students into the next generation of sustainable business leaders. The mission of this module is to develop a practical understanding of real-world business challenges, expose students to business trends, and position students to navigate and plan for their careers. 

Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

1) Develop a personal strategic career plan to meet their future career potential. 
2) Choose a career path that aligns with your strength, motives, aspirations, and values. 
3) Develop personal and professional identity, common knowledge and skills for todays changing business environment.

Inside the Trinity MBA's Leadership and Professional Development Module Video

The purpose of the MBA Strategic Company Project (‘the Company Project’) is to provide a vehicle for MBA teams to apply their business and leadership skills through addressing a strategic challenge faced by the host (partner) organisation; generally, a large, complex company or organisation operating in a dynamic environment. Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Undertake detailed scanning of the external environment including macro-industry, competitor, market and customer analyses
  • Undertake a thorough analysis of the host organisation’s internal environment
  • Critically assess a business-related issue with the host organisation, and apply a solution to the problem that takes into account the strategic intent, capabilities, resources, mission, values and culture of the organisation, inter alia.
  • Critically evaluate the strategic situation facing the host company, and propose an array of suitable remedies or counter-measures, suggesting the preferred course of action.

Working alongside a small or medium sized enterprise (SME) that is actively scaling, this applied project will require you to identify a scaling or growth related task, agree upon the specific parameters of the project with the firm, work as a team on a solution and produce a report and presentation to help the firm address this challenge. This project is coordinated alongside Bay Advisory, an Irish-based management consultancy group focused on advising scaling companies.

  • Understand some of the key characteristics of scaling firms and the unique operational challenges they face.
  • Critically evaluate challenges of scaling and growth, the mechanisms used to isolate them and the techniques employed to manage them.
  • Strategically operationalize a scaling-related problem and generate effective mechanisms to implement a solution.
  • Design and deliver a concise and solution-based response for a corporate audience with relevant and tangible strategic recommendations.
  • Collaborate in cross-cultural teams, utilizing communication, organizational and leadership skills.

Professors: Bryan Maybury & Jack Golden

Module Description

The concept of sustainability is growing in strategic relevance and importance for the modern corporation. In a high-consumption, ‘fast-fashion’ society, it is more crucial than ever to discuss what it means to be sustainable.

In the corporate world, it has become common practice to equate sustainability to managing the so-called triple bottom line: profits, people and planet. There is an increasing acceptance that individuals and organizations need to approach sustainability from a well thought through strategic perspective, and that they should diligently execute this strategy, as doing this invariably leads to enhanced efficiencies, the ability to create additional and enduring value, and bolsters their impact and longevity

Apart from the moral duty that Individuals, companies and countries have to ensure that they do not impinge upon the ability of future generations to have access to the resources they need to need to maintain and improve their lives.

This module aspires to afford students the opportunity to develop a critical awareness of the issues and challenges related to the sustainability of current individual, organizational and governmental practices.  Students are challenged to interrogate anevaluate current approaches, and explore creative ways of promoting flourishing individuals and organizations that are cognizant of their responsibility to future generations.

The module will be delivered in one week at the Graduate Business School of the University of Cape Town.  It will inter alia be centred on contextualizing sustainability with an emerging world context, moving beyond the triple bottom line, sustainability as organizational practice in action, the impact of climate change, Environmental stewardship meeting business innovation, and integrating sustainability into organizational practice.

Learning and Teaching Approach

The learning approach in this module is a combination of lectures, site visits and time for cultural appreciation. The days are structured in a way that lectures are attended in the mornings and site visits, company visits and cultural excursions take place in the afternoon.

Learning Outcomes

Having completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Be increasingly aware of the core principles that underpin sustainable, flourishing organizations;
  • Be better informed and more appreciative of the triple bottom line approach;
  • Better understand and appreciate the challenges and critical decisions employees, business leaders and managers face in developing and maintaining a sustainability agenda that inspires individuals and organizations to flourish.
  • Be better prepared to evaluate sustainability from an individual and organizational perspectives, with special reference to an environment that promotes individual and organizations to flourish.
  • Gain insight into a Flourishing model of individual and organizational sustainability.
  • Better appreciate the interconnected responsibility of developed and developing countries in promoting sustainability, as contextualized by the first to fourth world South African environment.

Satisfactory completion of this course will contribute to the development of the following key skills:

  • Be able to carry out a contextual/environmental analysis as part of a fuller sustainability analysis
  • Be able to evaluate the importance and relevance of the sustainability issues that emerge from the contextual/environmental analysis
  • Be able to weigh up the ethical, communal and societal aspects of sustainability issues
  • Be able to formulate strategies and policies that are consistent with good corporate governance and good corporate citizenship

 

 

Electives

This course will provide a framework to successfully implement analytics and Big Data in an organization. Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Develop an analytical strategy for an organisation
  • Manage a big data team and project
  • Identify analytical techniques and technology for specific business cases
  • Adjust the processes and culture in their company in such a way that it facilitates data-driven decision making
  • Communicate with data scientists and data engineers

Humanity faces a set of economic, social, and environmental Grand Challenges. Grand Challenges are complex social problems that typically involve multiple stakeholders and less conventional approaches to solve. The purpose of this module is to provide students with an opportunity to consider the Grand Challenges of our time and consider the role and strategies that organisations can deploy to tackle such issues. Additionally, students will reflect on the importance of leadership during times of acute crisis due to external shocks.

Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Articulate and identify the leadership competencies needed to manage crises and navigate wicked problems;
  • Prepare for the unpredictable and identify opportunities in crises;
  • Develop a plan to manage a crisis when one occurs;
  • Gain insight from their own and others’ experiences of organisational crises;
  • Reflect on what can be learnt from leading during a time of ambiguity and uncertainty.
  • Consider the implications of grand challenges on organisational strategy.

This subject is concerned with understanding the principles of marketing strategy and with acknowledging the changing nature of marketing in the digital era. 

Having completed this module successfully, the student should be able to:

  1. Evaluate the importance of industry and technology trends in strategy development
  2. Understand emerging technologies organisations are using to generate revenue, achieve efficiencies, and launch new products
  3. Analyse the blockchain, crypto and Web3 phenomena
  4. Evaluate an organisation’s innovation strategy
  5. Through a detailed business plan, recommend an emerging technology (e.g., blockchain, RPA, etc.) and how it can be integrated to obtain a competitive advantage

This module has the objective of reviewing the financial, control and investment opportunities faced by rapidly growing companies in entrepreneurial settings. The objective of the study is to consider and select financing vehicles which are appropriate to securing the organisations’ money requirements and to understand and analyse the issues in the institutional framework in which those decisions take place.
Having completed this module, you should be able to:

  • Analyse various sources of financing, including short and long-term debt, subordinated capital and venture capital/equity.
  • Have a comprehensive understanding of public versus private financing, on and off-balance sheet capital and tax-orientated financing.
  • Compare the selection and trade‐offs of financing vehicles with company progress and market conditions.
  • Analyse different institutional regimes and the reasons for particular anomalies in the financing of small and growing enterprises.

This module develops the manager’s critical awareness of the issues and challenges associated with the development and implementation of strategy and processes from an international perspective. As a graduate, you will be better equipped to apply concepts and skills across multiple overseas operations in your project work.
Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Appreciate the evolving competitive context of International Business (IB).
  • Recognize the factors that distinguish IB from domestic business transactions
  • Understand the interrelatedness of issues that impinge on management decision-making in the international environment
  • Grasp that learning opportunities for companies and their managers can be gained from involvement in the conduct of international operations
  • Apply concepts and skills relevant to the formulation and implementation of strategy across multiple overseas operations including;
  1. Identifying and acting on new opportunities
  2. Linking and leveraging those pockets of entrepreneurial initiative
  3. Articulating and inspiring others to follow

International and Corporate Finance including Macroeconomics, Asset Classes & Markets, Valuation, Derivatives & Risk Management, Funding Mechanisms, Funding Evolution and Introduction to Mergers & Acquisitions.

Having successfully completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Students will gain an understanding of macroeconomics and global capital markets, be able to differentiate between asset classes and understand their history, characteristics, relationships and correlations.
  • Students will gain a practical insight into risk management and derivatives and be able to demonstrate how to apply hedging techniques in corporate and international trades and transactions.
  • Students will understand the mechanisms and evolution of the corporate funding environment and the implications this has for modern corporate capital budgeting decisions and investment methodologies.
  • Students will be exposed to timely security data and corporate transactions and be able to appropriately apply the fundamentals and theoretical to yield a deeper appreciation of the process, transaction and funding nuances and the ultimate results.
  • Students will be able to thoroughly analyse investment opportunities, methodologies and psychology and communicate their conclusions in a professional manner.

This module provides participants with frameworks, concepts, tools and practical advice on how to develop an aligned human resource strategy and practices that will support and enable the delivery of business strategy. Having completed this module, you should be able to:

  • Build a culture which will dominate your organisation’s marketplace
  • Diagnose cultural functionality and dysfunctionality
  • Define the behavioural requirements for successful implementation of strategy
  • Architect a best practice staffing process
  • Design a best practice performance management process
  • Architect a best practice total reward system
  • Structure an effective and competent HR function
  • Use competency frameworks as an integrative HR management tool
  • Select and develop talent, manage performance and engage others

Module Description

The concept of sustainability is growing in strategic relevance and importance for modern corporations. In a high-consumption, ‘fast-fashion’ society, it is more crucial than ever to discuss what it means to be sustainable.

In the corporate world, it has become common practice to equate sustainability to managing the so-called triple bottom line: profits, people and the planet. There is an increasing acceptance that individuals and organizations need to approach sustainability from a well-thought-through strategic perspective, and that they should diligently execute this strategy, as doing this invariably leads to enhanced efficiencies, the ability to create additional and enduring value, and bolsters their impact and longevity

Apart from the moral duty that Individuals, companies and countries have to ensure that they do not impinge upon the ability of future generations to have access to the resources they need to need to maintain and improve their lives.

This module aspires to afford students the opportunity to develop a critical awareness of the issues and challenges related to the sustainability of current individual, organizational and governmental practices.  Students are challenged to interrogate anevaluate current approaches and explore creative ways of promoting flourishing individuals and organizations that are cognizant of their responsibility to future generations.

The module will be delivered in one week at the Graduate Business School of the University of Cape Town.  It will inter alia be centred on contextualizing sustainability with an emerging world context, moving beyond the triple bottom line, sustainability as organizational practice in action, the impact of climate change, Environmental stewardship meeting business innovation, and integrating sustainability into organizational practice.

Learning and Teaching Approach

The learning approach in this module is a combination of lectures, site visits and time for cultural appreciation. The days are structured in a way that lectures are attended in the mornings and site visits, company visits and cultural excursions take place in the afternoon.

Learning Outcomes

Having completed this module, the student should be able to:

  • Be increasingly aware of the core principles that underpin sustainable, flourishing organizations;
  • Be better informed and more appreciative of the triple bottom line approach;
  • Better understand and appreciate the challenges and critical decisions employees, business leaders and managers face in developing and maintaining a sustainability agenda that inspires individuals and organizations to flourish.
  • Be better prepared to evaluate sustainability from an individual and organizational perspective, with special reference to an environment that promotes individuals and organizations to flourish.
  • Gain insight into a Flourishing model of individual and organizational sustainability.
  • Better appreciate the interconnected responsibility of developed and developing countries in promoting sustainability, as contextualized by the first to fourth world South African environment.

Satisfactory completion of this course will contribute to the development of the following key skills:

  • Be able to carry out a contextual/environmental analysis as part of a fuller sustainability analysis
  • Be able to evaluate the importance and relevance of the sustainability issues that emerge from the contextual/environmental analysis
  • Be able to weigh up the ethical, communal and societal aspects of sustainability issues
  • Be able to formulate strategies and policies that are consistent with good corporate governance and good corporate citizenship

MBA Student Spotlight - Application Advice - Ben Donahue

Full-Time MBA student Ben Donahue sat down with us to give his tips and advice about applying for the Trinity MBA.

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