Accounting's true value for many MBA graduates isn't immediate. Professor Ed DeHaan frames it as the foundational "language of business" that becomes indispensable 5-10 years post-graduation. This fluency is critical for navigating senior management and boardroom discussions, where strategy is articulated through financial statements.
To become a more effective leader with a holistic business view, deliberately seek experience across various interconnected functions like operations, marketing, and sales. This strategy prevents the narrow perspective that often limits specialized leaders, even if it requires taking lateral or junior roles to learn.
While AI-native, new graduates often lack the business experience and strategic context to effectively manage AI tools. Companies will instead prioritize senior leaders with high AI literacy who can achieve massive productivity gains, creating a challenging job market for recent graduates and a leaner organizational structure.
Ken Griffin advises that graduation marks the beginning, not the end, of education. He argues the most important skill is learning how to learn, as professionals will need to develop entirely new toolkits multiple times over a 40-50 year career to remain relevant amidst technological change and increased longevity.
Jeff Aronson credits his success to a mental shift early in his finance career. While taking night classes, he realized he was studying to genuinely understand the material, not just to earn an 'A'. This transition from extrinsic validation (grades) to intrinsic curiosity is a key differentiator for developing deep mastery in any field.
To be truly successful, a product leader cannot just focus on features and users. They must operate as the head of their product's business, with a deep understanding of P&Ls, revenue drivers, and capital allocation. Without this business acumen, they risk fundamentally undercutting their product's potential impact and success.
A one-time meeting with finance is "surface level" advice. To truly build financial acumen, PMs must integrate hard financial targets and business levers directly into their squad's goals. This creates an enduring, operational fluency that informs daily product decisions.
The traditional product management skillset is no longer sufficient for executive leadership. Aspiring CPOs must develop deep expertise in either the commercial aspects of the business (GTM, revenue) or the technical underpinnings of the product to provide differentiated value at the C-suite level.
Unlike a line manager who can train direct reports in a specific function, a CEO hires experts for roles they themselves cannot perform (e.g., CFO). A CEO's time spent trying to 'develop' an underperforming executive is a misallocation of their unique responsibilities, which are setting direction and making top-level decisions.
At the VP or C-level, a leader's primary role shifts from managing their function to driving overall business success. Their focus becomes more external—customers, market, revenue—and their success is measured by their end-to-end impact on the company, not just their team's performance.
The GSB's enduring value lies in its resistance to offering 'one size fits all war stories.' Instead, it focuses on teaching analytical instrumentation and fundamental social science. This approach equips leaders to solve novel future problems, like harnessing AI, rather than just applying solutions from the past.