Kellie Davis joined the Royal Australian Air Force in 2008 as an Air Combat Officer (ACO) and spent most of her career as mission crew at 2SQN on the E7-A Wedgetail. After 10 years of military service, she was ready for a new challenge.
Many professionals fall into the trap of progressing down a career path that starts to dictate its own trajectory – where they become a passive participant rather than an active shaper of their own professional destiny. This is exactly how Jane Lewin felt as a young lawyer – until she claimed back ownership of her path by taking a more mindful approach to focus on what she wanted to achieve.
While working as an Army Officer in the Australian Army and taking a career break, Grant Joy decided to start a Master of Business Administration (MBA). For Grant, studying an MBA was originally the step that would enable him to make a permanent leap outside of Defence. But completing his UQ MBA program ended up being the catalyst to so much more.
Maggie shares how studying a UQ Master of Business Administration (MBA) transformed her career and what it’s like to study an MBA while working full time.
At The University of Queensland, you have the flexibility to choose how long you want to study the MBA program, depending on other priorities and your professional goals. In comparison, it can take 2 years of full-time study to complete your Master of Business Administration (MBA) at many business schools around the world.
Forget the unspoken competition for who can collect the most business cards. The key to successful networking is building authentic relationships and inspiring passion within your fellow networkers.