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Like many good ideas, Darden Professor Jay Bourgeois’ new course, “Strategic Intuition and Eastern Philosophy,” seems obvious in retrospect.
If MBAs are going to thrive in a global economy, they need to be aware not only of linear analytics and Western economics, but also aspects of Eastern philosophy, like letting go of desire and control — perhaps unexpected lessons at a business school. “Strategic intuition” emphasizes an open mind and detachment as well as flexibility, which together provide you that moment of insight into how to proceed, when everything falls into place. The concept was advanced by William R. Duggan in a book of the same title, which entreats you to build an inventory of experiences and stories on the “shelves of the mind” — if the shelves of your mind are replete with information and examples (Darden’s case method contributes to this), you are more likely to make important connections and experience those moments of insight.
A follow-up to his regular strategy seminar, Bourgeois created this course because years of teaching, researching and consulting on corporate strategy left him convinced that solutions tend to come not from linear analysis — although this analysis is certainly useful at the beginning — but from a flash of insight.
Inventiveness and other nonmeasurable intangibles, he claims, consistently prove to be more valuable than specific products. Capabilities are more important than tangible assets.
To develop these capabilities, students read military, political and religious texts from India, Japan, and China that exposed them to Hindu, Shinto, Confucian and Buddhist philosophies.
This diversity of Eastern points of view meant that even students who grew up with some of these texts and ideas learned new things — or were motivated to critically analyze them for the first time.
Students with prior experience in yoga, mindfulness and meditation often had little to no idea about the ideas underpinning these practices.
Says Serge Eygensen (MBA ’17), who took the course, “The Bhagavad Gita, the Tao Te Ching, The Art of War — these texts were written thousands of years ago, long before corporate America, Wall Street or tech startups were even a glimmer on civilization’s horizon. Yet, when read through the lens of business strategy, these ancient texts, to my surprise, offered a variety of practical and tactical advice on how to succeed in competitive business environments and create growth for your company.”
Other students also recommend The Book of Five Rings, a samurai manual that advocates for empathy, albeit from the vantage point of defeating an enemy. For a more modern synthesis, try Duggan’s Strategic Intuition.
Having highlighted the importance of both theory and practice to evoking strategic intuition, the class replicated this model: Students put the principles from their reading to the test with experiential learning activities. For instance, they learned how to play Go — an Eastern game comparable to chess in which the best strategy focuses on flexibility, willingness to change and long-term vision, rather than “winning.” A class on aikido demonstrated not only centeredness but also how soft actions can yield a hard result. They met a successful M.D. in Charlottesville who chose to focus her practice on acupuncture. A session on mindfulness led by Professor Lili Powell integrated many of the lessons.
Throughout the course, Bourgeois emphasized the practices of mindfulness and cultivating a “beginner’s mind.”
Bourgeois’ advice for developing strategic intuition:
Bourgeois is an expert in business strategy, its implementation, mergers and acquisitions, and post-merger integration. He has consulted more than 100 public and private corporations, nonprofits and governments across the globe.
The author of a book on post-merger integration and two books on strategy, Corporate Marriage Counseling: Strategies for Integrating Acquisitions, Strategic Management: From Concept to Implementation and Strategic Management: A Managerial Perspective, Bourgeois has also written more than 140 cases and articles in Harvard Business Review and other management journals and is among the top 0.5 percent of most cited authors in the field of management. Before coming to Darden, he taught at Stanford Business School.
B.S., MBA, Tulane University; Ph.D., University of Washington
Eastern Philosophies, Western Strategies: Strategic Intuition
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