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September 2009 Archives

September 2, 2009

Iceland's Example of Unsustainability

Michael Lewis's excellent article begins to explain how Iceland's instant financiers ruined the country's economy with a reckless regard for financial sustainability. It's a finance lesson for us all--and a sustainability lesson as well.

Wall Street on the Tundra

Iceland's de facto bankruptcy--its currency (the krona) is kaput, its debt is 850 percent of G.D.P., its people are hoarding food and cash and blowing up their new Range Rovers for the insurance--resulted from a stunning collective madness. What led a tiny fishing nation, population 300,000, to decide, around 2003, to re-invent itself as a global financial power? In Reykjavík, where men are men, and the women seem to have completely given up on them, the author follows the peculiarly Icelandic logic behind the meltdown.

http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2009/04/iceland200904?currentPage=1

September 11, 2009

Welcoming the New, Improving the Old

One of our program's advisors, Sara Beckman, last week published an excellent article in the New York Times about the relationship between Six Sigma and Innovation processes.

Welcoming the New, Improving the Old
By SARA BECKMAN
Published: September 5, 2009

FOR decades, companies from Cisco Systems to Staples to Bank of America have worked to embed the basic techniques of Six Sigma, the business approach that relies on measurement and analysis to make operations as efficient as possible.

More recently, in the last 5 to 10 years, they have been told they must master a new set of skills known as "design thinking." Aiming to help companies innovate, design thinking starts with an intense focus on understanding real problems customers face in their day-to-day lives -- often using techniques derived from ethnographers -- and then entertains a range of possible solutions. More...

September 29, 2009

Commemorating the first DMBA year

Three of the DMBA pioneer students spent their summer compiling a record of their first years' experience. You can preview it and even order copies through MagCloud, a print-on-demand service that one of the Sustainability groups researched last year and found to be more planet-friendly than traditional "push" publishing models. The student annual is actually a featured publication on MagCloud right now! The online cost is $15 plus shipping: magcloud.com/browse/Issue/34497

They also put together a second publication called "26 Thoughts," which is a compilation of their blog posts for TriplePundit.com The articles are online (http://www.triplepundit.com/category/cca-livee/) but we thought it would also be nice to have them packaged and printed in an anthology. The cost for the document is $10 plus shipping: magcloud.com/browse/Issue/34282

Hopefully, these publications will serve as nice artifacts of what was accomplished by the first cohort last year. And maybe there will be a second issue next year for all that we will accomplish in 2009-2010!

September 30, 2009

BusinessWeek's Annual D-Schools list 2009

BusinessWeek has published their annual list of Design and Business schools (they skipped last year) and the DMBA program is listed this year.

images.businessweek.com/ss/09/09/0930_worlds_best_design_schools/3.htm

CCA launches Leading by Design Fellows Program

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

California College of the Arts Launches New
Leading by Design Fellows Program

Executive Development Program Equips Business Leaders to Thrive in Challenging Times

San Francisco, Calif., October 1, 2009--California College of the Arts (CCA) in San Francisco announces the May 2010 launch of the Leading by Design Fellows Program, the first executive program of its kind in the United States. It will blend the traditionally separate domains of business, design, and sustainability into a single, integrated approach, by which professionals can proactively shape the future of their companies, even in a world of limited resources.

CCA has a 100-year tradition of pioneering programs that bridge the arts and society, and the Leading by Design Fellows Program builds on that legacy. "Unprecedented changes in the world demand a critical shift in business thinking," says CCA Provost Mark Breitenberg. "A dramatically different paradigm is emerging. Success and growth are now measured by increases in values, meaning, and sustainability, not simply profitability. Our goal is to create a dynamic center of ideas and senior leadership by synthesizing design-led innovation, business strategy, and sustainable practices. We want to help companies not simply ride out difficult times, but seize this moment as an opportunity to thrive. In the 21st century, institutions must help people and societies reimagine, reinvent, and redesign the way we live to create a more sustainable world."
Nathan Shedroff, noted experience strategist and chair of CCA's groundbreaking MBA in Design Strategy, says, "This program will provide an immersive, inspiring, and challenging experience. Our Fellows will be able to think farther and faster, with more meaningful and powerful results."

To offer maximum flexibility to working professionals, the program is structured as a series of six on-campus "residency" weekends, once per month, of instruction and interaction, with online study, webinars, and discussion in between. This schedule allows participants from all over the United States to maintain their careers while keeping in close contact with each other, faculty, and program staff. Upon completion of the program, participants receive a certificate designating them Leading by Design Fellows.

The faculty instructors are business and design experts, forward-thinking academics from major universities, and leaders in the field of sustainable management. Confirmed guest faculty include Tim Brown, CEO of IDEO; Sara Beckman, PhD, Haas School of Business, UC Berkeley; Kaaren Hansen, director of experience design at Intuit; Sam Lucente, VP of design at Hewlett Packard; Dan Pink, author of A Whole New Mind; and Adam Werbach, CEO of SaatchiS and author of Strategy for Sustainability.

The curriculum integrates lectures, presentations, readings, and provocative dialogues with hands-on studio work. Participants explore customer and market needs, challenge assumptions, devise effective solutions, and communicate opportunities across a wide range of stakeholders. Program goals include: reframing definitions of competition and growth for shifting global realities; anticipating internal and external needs; deeply understanding customers at the level of values and meaning; devising strategies, products, services, processes, and structures that operate with, and within the limits of, nature; fostering greater integration, cooperation, and collaboration across organizational functions; and sifting through competing priorities to define core goals.

Applications will be accepted starting November 1. Potential participants are expected to come from a range of fields: business, design, nonprofit organizations, and government. They must be senior leaders or managers with at least 10 years of professional experience in positions of increasing responsibility.

The program has dedicated studio space on CCA's San Francisco campus, and it has close ties to companies, consultancies, and organizations throughout the region. The Bay Area is a world center of innovation, entrepreneurship, sustainability, and nonprofit organizations.

For more information about the Leading by Design Fellows Program, visit www.cca.edu/fellowsprogram or email mailto:fellowsprogram@cca.edu.

About California College of the Arts
Founded in 1907, California College of the Arts (CCA) is noted for the interdisciplinarity and breadth of its programs. It offers studies in 20 undergraduate and seven graduate majors in the areas of fine arts, architecture, design, and writing. The college offers bachelor of architecture, bachelor of arts, bachelor of fine arts, master of architecture, master of arts, master of fine arts, and master of business administration degrees. With campuses in San Francisco and Oakland, CCA currently enrolls 1,740 full-time students. Noted alumni include the painters Nathan Oliveira and Raymond Saunders; the ceramicists Robert Arneson, Viola Frey, and Peter Voulkos; the filmmaker Wayne Wang; the conceptual artists David Ireland and Dennis Oppenheim; and the designers Lucille Tenazas and Michael Vanderbyl. For more information about CCA, visit www.cca.edu


PRESS CONTACTS:
Brenda Tucker 415.703.9548 btucker@cca.edu
Sarah Owens 415.703.9549 sowens@cca.edu

PUBLIC CONTACTS:
www.cca.edu/fellowsprogram
fellowsprogram@cca.edu