The Aga Khan meets with Harvard President Drew Faust in her Massachusetts Hall office at Harvard University. The Aga Khan is pictured looking at a photo book during his visit. Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer
Aga Khan has partnered with Cambridge based university, Havard in a deal that seeks to transform the management of top organizations in Africa by equipping senior executives with skills to help them adapt to the fast changing world.
The two universities have designed a pioneering suite of courses aimed at sharpening the leadership and communication skills of senior managers to deal with current complexities and accelerating change in the 21st Century.
The program dubbed “Transforming Leadership for 21st Century Africa”, will be hosted in Nairobi by the Aga Khan University Graduate School of Media and Communications (GSMC) for senior leaders in business, government, civil society and media.
The Founding Dean of GSMC Michael Meyer says the course will help senior executives exercise leadership amid uncertainty with skill, purpose and effectiveness.
“We live in an era of accelerating change and unprecedented complexity. Organizational strategies today will be obsolete — if not self-defeating — tomorrow. Success requires agile leadership and intelligent communication. That is why we are proud to offer an extraordinary opportunity to sharpen two of the most vital skills demanded by these challenging times,” says Meyer.
The courses include The Voice of Leadership: Inspiration, Influence and Impact, to be delivered by GSMC to empower leaders to speak and act with clarity, vision and authenticity. It is premised on the fact that in the 21st Century the success of any initiative or enterprise depends as never before on high-quality, maximum-impact communications.
The second course in the program, Adaptive Leadership for Africa: Chaos, Complexity and Courage, will be delivered by the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University (HKS), Executive Education. The single-most popular course at the Kennedy School, it aims to help executives exercise leadership amid uncertainty with skill, purpose and effectiveness.
Meyer says the program will be useful to motivated leaders who are already committed to their own and Africa’s future.
“The courses are designed to offer senior leaders a unique learning experience that will change the way they think about leadership and communication in their professional and personal lives,” he explains.
The first week-long course begins in November, followed by a second week-long module in February — two weeks in all. In between, participants work with AKU and HKS mentors on their own “adaptive challenge.” This may be a corporate issue to be tackled by a small team of so-called “agents of change,” or it may be an individual career challenge. Executives wishing to enroll can apply by logging on to http://akumedia.aku.edu/programmes.
Upon graduation, the leaders will become part of a global network of leaders from a professionally and geographically diverse class and faculty. The deadline for applications is October 6th, 2017.