GLBIMR organises Corporate Talk on "Common Sense Management & Phone-Life Balance
Abhay Anand | March 29, 2018 | 03:51 PM IST | 1 min read
NEW DELHI, MARCH 29: GLBIMR organized Corporate Talk Series on ‘Common Sense Management & Phone-Life Balance’ by Harit Kumar, Manager – DevOps, Motorola Mobility Suite, Motorola Inc., CA, USA, for the students of PGDM Batch 2017-19, under the visionary guidance of Dr. Urvashi Makkar, Director General, GLBIMR.
Dr. Makkar, shared the recent times have emerged as an era where our focus have moved from work-life to phone-life balance owing to the exorbitant amount of time an individual, especially the Millennial and the Generation-Z have been spending on mobile phones. The session aimed at a positive reorientation of the students to be able to use their Smart Phones as a support instead of it being a constant irritant.
Harit Kumar shared the latest developments regarding using phones as a medium of connection without being disconnected with the surroundings. He spoke about common sense management as a tool of intuitive leadership at workplace. Sharing his life experiences, the students were introduced by him to the dynamic nature of common sense management as a tool to be practised and no theoretically studied. Continuing the legacy of Corporate Talk Series, the revolutionary concepts discussed by industry leaders were an enabler for GLBIMR-ians to emerge as game-changers.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Featured News
]- CISCE schools can continue to teach foreign languages as 3rd option: Board secretary
- ‘Fix schools, create jobs’: West Bengal voters cut through election noise with education, employment demands
- BBAU Lucknow student’s death sparks protests against hostel food, curfew; proctor denies link
- Fees to social media-use: What NCAHP’s first ethics code for allied, healthcare professionals says
- NMC junks 150-seat MBBS cap, population rule; sets 10 km limit for medical college-hospital distance
- Suicides, opaque placements, caste: IIT Bombay, Kanpur’s student journals dare to ask the tough questions
- ‘Not just academic, but personal’: NSUT Delhi takes AI beyond BTech, across non-engineering courses
- AI judge, cyber law courses, scholarships: GNLU is revamping LLB degrees to make students courtroom-ready
- CBSE third language policy throws French, Spanish, German teachers across schools into crisis
- With CSE surge, these specialised BTech courses are vanishing from engineering colleges