Sunday, 08-Sept-2024, through Tuesday, 10-Sept-2024
My MBA has officially begun.
I boarded a bus at Trinity, after walking the lovely 30minutes to campus, and found myself surrounded by the people who would be my peers for the next 12 months. It was exciting, intimidating, and overall a completely awe inspiring situation – I couldn’t quite tell you the specifics, but the air was different than the first days of a new job. It was electric, a bit more collaborative, and significantly more excited. These were all people who had chosen to be here – people who were new to the program, and often to the country, all of whom were energetic and ready to dive into the program.
I’ll admit – a little bit overwhelming. But in a good way? In a good way.
The bus pulled out, and we headed toward Athlone.
The Trinity MBA program is split in two – Full-time MBA folks, like myself, and “executive” MBAs who’re doing the program part-time. We were all mixed up together for this orientation, starting off in a small town about an hour and a half away. We’d be sitting in on seminars, doing some team building activities, having meals together… All the things you’d expect from a high-flying program like this.
It was absolutely lovely.
I’ll be honest, though, I was a bit anxious when we started out. I had a rough understanding of the schedule, but for details… well, that was a bit more tenuous. I knew when I’d be attending the various seminars, but… where they were? Where I was staying? Where we’d be eating? No details to be had.
But you know what? Something I’ve been getting better at is sitting back and trusting that, at least here, things will work out. In this case, it worked out perfectly.
I found myself in a lovely hotel room, with a fairly solid understanding of what’d be going down. I knew the conference rooms, the schedule, and the vague idea of where meals would be. Packing, and then unpacking, were second nature for me at this point… so with time to spare, I actually had a bit of free time to relax. I was getting the hang of this adventure – less worry, more patience, and a lot more serenity.
The orientation went on for a full day, along with two more half-days, so it’s not really viable to write everything out… so instead, a quick summary is:
We kicked off with an “Indoor team building event”, which was… drumroll please… building a bridge out of paper, tape, straws, balloons, and string! It went well… then it came time to drive a little remote control car over the bridge, and it unfortunately went a bit sideways. Literally, as the car got stuck on the bridge. But still – fun, enjoyable, teambuilding.
I went to Ireland’s Oldest Pub! Sean’s Bar is the oldest in Ireland, and was within perfect walking distance of the hotel… thankfully a few classmates kicked off the adventure, and I was able to swing by a bit afterward to join in on the fun.
A few seminars on career development kicked off the “learning” portion of the orientation – they weren’t technical, but a mix of info about the program and insights into how we could get the most out of said program.
The outdoor teambuilding activity was my jam. We engineered contraptions to carry water, pile up pyramids, and even did a neat puzzle game with laying boards across “chasms”. The craziest was a “direct people only using whistles, bells, and claps”… which was absolutely as ridiculous as it sounds. I had a blast, got to know a few classmates, and built quite a few solid bonding moments.
There was a BBQ dinner! It… uhh… didn’t have any BBQ. Sad faces were had by all. But we went back to Sean’s Pub for a pint, and it was all better
Absolutely an amazing intro to the group, to the program, and to the serene “it’ll work out” nature of Ireland. I was happy, optimistic, and energetic for the next steps of orientation that’d happen later in the week, on campus and in person…
I mean, I’ve enjoyed most cities when I first move to them – but with Dublin, the adoration keeps growing over time. I’m feeling good, I’m meshing with the culture, and I absolutely appreciate just how incredibly friendly everyone seems to be here. If a shopkeeper doesn’t have something I’ve asked for, half the time they’ll point out a nearby shop that does… and then often they’ll actually walk me over to introduce me.
Seriously, it’s ridiculous and amazing. I feel like I’m coming out of a coma, or being un-brainwashed, with how communal and helpful people are here.
Anyways, here’s a few quick and fun pictures from my recent adventures:
I found tacos! They’re not quite as good as Oregonian tacos, but… you know what? I’m not complaining.
I found art! It’s pretty.
I made my Grandma’s spaghetti and meatballs! Finding wheat germ was tough, but I’m so glad I did. My house is now a home.
Wow… How long has it been since I’ve done an international trip? How much longer since I’ve gone international solo?
Let’s see. The last international trip was to Scotland, right before the Pandemic hit. When I had that really bad flu… right before the Pandemic. With COVID. That presents sort of like a flu. That I’ve somehow avoided getting, as if I’d already gotten it and gained an immunity… Okay we’re not going down that road the last time I went abroad was January 2020. Three years and change.
The last time I went on a solo international trip? Well, that’d be New Zealand, back in 2012. 11 years.
It’s high time I explored.
I got accepted to Trinity College’s MBA program back in November, and accepted the offer that same month… though I delayed admission until 2024, to give me some time to finish up in Oregon and save up a bit more money. While talking to the admissions officer though, I learned about a Business forum put on by Trinity in March – a perfect opportunity for me to stretch my international adventure legs and see if Dublin would make a good home for a year or three!
I planned, I packed, and I set off on my first solo international trip in over 10 years…
(Please note that these are my raw notes from the trip. I’m proofreading them for obvious mistakes… but they’re still short-hand. Because life is busy, and blogs don’t need to be perfectly edited.)
Wednesday, 08-Mar-2023
The day of the business forum!
I’d confirmed my spot with Eoghan earlier on Tuesday, and so found myself checking in and grabbing a cup of coffee at 9am in the lobby of the Trinity business school. I’d actually set an alarm the previous evening, but thankfully
See notes, but it worked well. Networked with quite a few people, and made a ton of linkedin connections. Learned quite a bit about Trinity, and Dublin as a whole, and even had an unexpected discussion bear fruit in the form of a possible startup idea.
<See Ben’s notes, added below, since they’re kind of extensive and unique to his interests and mindset at the time>
After the forum, I debated trying to track down some of the students and alumni at a nearby pub… but it’s my vacation, and an important part of that vacation is being honest with myself about energy levels and what I want to do. After a full day of socialization and “being on”, I wanted to head home.
So I did, by way of a nearby sushi place for dinner, I quickly found myself relaxing and heading to bed.
Ben’s Notes:
First Keynote: Ricky Rose, CEO of Mountain Productions (a stage-building / equipment sales company)
Built his company by focusing on “adjacent opportunities” – Instead of diversifying and growing their core team, they’d create new teams to chase down new opportunities, allowing the core team to focus on optimizing and excelling at their main goals
Thought – Can we do this with our group? Maybe let individual engineers “spin off” their own team by hiring short-term contractors and letting people take a part time “project manager” role until it’s completed?
His company makes extensive use of bionics… asked about tips on getting better usage from the operators, but he didn’t have any clever insights – Mountain Productions got the best results from brute force. “Use the exoskeleton, or don’t work for us”
Works with German Bionics, recommended that we reach out to discuss expanding from just Ekso
Panel – “Forging good careers”
No major takeaways, more focused on the undergrads in the audience, giving a general conversation about leveraging your career and internships
Worth presenting to our interns, however:
Make sure to keep transparent conversations with interns about their goals, and help them connect with people who can help
We already do this, but worth keeping focus on
Importance of leveraging small events, such as meetings with alternative groups and interactions during timing studies
We already do this too, but worth keeping focus on
Masterclass – “Leading age-diverse teams”
Codify the interview process – Have objective measures that are clearly defined, in order to eliminate subconscious biases
Recommendation – Consider creating a standard process for interviews, including the following:
Pre-interview meeting with the interviewers, to discuss the goals and needs of the position
Create tangible metrics to judge candidates on, and print out that “scorecard” for each interviewer
Include a section for intangibles, maybe titled “would I want to work with this person?”
Review scores immediately afterward, and let people explain their reasoning
Discussed the idea of “servant-leadership”… an interesting concept, but may not be applicable
Recommended training complex skills, such as sudoku or chess, as a way to mitigate the impact of aging on people’s psyche
Noted a study showing that age doesn’t correlate to tech skills – younger professionals don’t show better computer skills than older workers.
Quoted a book by Peter Drucker, “Managing Oneself”
Mentioned including “Psychometric analysis” as part of annual goal setting
Focus on what individual workers want
Statistically, older workers want meaning to their work and opportunities to mentor & pass on their knowledge, instead of higher pay
Masterclass – “Behavior Modification & the self-fulfilling prophecy”
Focused on things like Google Analytics and Facebook Statistics
Analytic prediction websites are hitting the limit of their prediction algorithms… so it’s more effective for them to try and manipulate user behavior to match predictions, versus refining predictive models further.
That’s terrifying
Implementing “nudging”, “herding”, and “conditioning” among userbase
Including random rewards is statistically more effective than defined rewards
Thought – Can we implement this in a non-evil way in the office? I can’t think of anything offhand… but worth considering
Reinforcement learning was mentioned… worth reading into
Panel – EDI in Scaling Businesses
EDI = “Ethics, Diversity and Inclusivity”
Implementing EDI in business statistically gives an average of 19% increased growth vs. not implementing it
Their sample set appeared a skewed toward small startups in European countries. Which is fine… but less applicable in Oregon
“Be decent people… but have a plan to do so”
Ties in with the recommendation above, regarding interviews
Recommendation – Do some form of annual subconscious bias training
Perhaps nest this in with the pre-interview meetings? Walk people through some subconscious biases that people may have, and give them a few tools to detect them and negate them?
This could be wrapped up into the “objective interview metrics” option
Thought – we have a fairly diverse production floor… can we leverage that somehow? Maybe get some folks from the floor to act as part-time IE Techs, or QATs?
Second Keynote: Iseult Ward, CEO of FoodCloud (A food re-distribution startup focusing on global food insecurity)
Raises money by helping companies limit food waste, and thus trash costs
Uses that money to redistribute that food waste to at-risk populations
“Focus on finance and operations teams. If you don’t get their buy-in, you won’t get sustained continuous solutions”
Yeah, I’ll appreciate that shout-out!
Thought – Can we get some conversations started with our finance team? What pain points do they see? Can the IE team help mitigate them?
Find a problem, save money by solving the problem, and then find a way to monetize that solution.
Panel – Leading Inclusion from the inside out
“Diversity is a fact, inclusivity is a feeling”
Recommendation – Codify an exit-interview policy. By regularly finding out why people are leaving, we could stop an issue before it become endemic
This could tie in nicely to Surinder’s 2023 roadmap “increase employee retention” target
“Overhaul means overwhelm” – Don’t implement all changes at once. Do it slowly, to let people get used to the changes. Staggered rollouts.
Thought – How can we include this into floor re-layouts? We already include the leads… maybe ask them to solicit advice?
“Lead by example” – Make sure CEOs take paternity leave and vacation, to empower employees to do the same.
Thought – How can the IE team lead the floor by example? Clearly and confidently documenting work, owning mistakes, and using new changes we’re pushing to the floor.
Example: Maybe we re-arrange the IE seating chart when we re-arrange the floor? “Put your money where your mouth is”, so to speak?
Recommendation – Do “How does Raytheon feel” interviews with our interns at the beginning, and then at the end, of their internships.
Do this with people they haven’t interacted with, who they feel comfortable with, maybe as a split-level?
Middle management is the most important group in this situation – They’re the “boots on the ground” that interact with the most people overall
I swear, this isn’t just stroking egos. It was really in the panel discussion.
Panel – Building an inclusive and Agile organization through freelancing
Hire freelancers or contractors to prototype a new project, instead of risking full-time employees
Pro-actively recruit for diversity – Ask diverse employees for recommendations
This panel was, frankly, less interesting… it seemed more focused on part-time workers in the EU.
Final Keynote: Cathriona Hallahan, Managing Director of Microsoft, Ireland
Know how to evolve with the times. Keep abreast of technology, and implement it as its useful
We’re doing this well with Smart Torque Tools and automation… what else can we do?
Thought – could we maybe confer with the design team to learn more about new technology they’re looking at?
Culture drives success, not the other way around
Our team is quite capable and successful… what else can we do to drive a positive culture? More to the point, what culture do we WANT to foster?
Thought – More learning opportunities, and more chances to learn what others are working on / problems they’re solving? Maybe even connect with other “benchmark” sites?
Use data and empirical evidence at every opportunity. Present them clearly, and use them as leverage for the change they inform
Thought – Are there any metrics that IEs can be held to, as goalposts / promotion informers? Maybe year-over-year throughput? No… part shortages… Use the Turnback tracker to show change / enhancements?
Leverage what you know. Go slow, but go intensely. Stay calm, and don’t rush things.
After-event conversations / networking
Look into “President’s dinner for sustainable aviation”… maybe Collins can sponsor something?
Recommendation – I’d like to re-consider the “SEA awards” that I proposed to Dave Horch a year or two ago, that didn’t get much traction.
Summary: A system where IE/MEE/PQEs can nominate their peers for awards. Hold quarterly “award ceremonies” to spotlight excellent engineering by our peers
I forwarded an email to you both about this, so we can hopefully discuss on Monday
“Praise in a vacuum” – Don’t disparage others (or ourselves). Don’t say “you’re so much better than x!”, just say “You’re excellent!”
This is mostly for myself, but still a very good recommendation
Recommendations for Interns:
Showcase pay bands, if possible
Advertise the relocation stipend in the position description
Have a single point of contact during onboarding
We do this really well already
Give the interns a sense of responsibility and purpose – incorporate them into a team-wide vision
We need a team-wide vision first…
Be transparent and honest with interns, don’t resort to hyperbole.
Look into “German Bionics”, Mountain Productions is a reseller
Thought – They’re powered, and focused on easing carrying / walking. I’ll check this out, but I don’t really think they’re viable for the production floor… but maybe for the stock-room?