UPCOMING EVENTS

PDW

The Strategy Capstone Course: Emerging Technologies and Pedagogical Innovation

STR Event

Copenhagen, Bella Center, Hall B- B1-m1

Jul 26, 2025, 9:00 AM

FinTech Academy, Singapore

The Strategy Capstone is a unique course at business schools around the world. It is expected to reinforce students’ prior learning in core business disciplines, to introduce theories and tools of strategic management, and to provide experiential learning opportunities that prepare students for their future careers. As emerging technologies and pedagogical innovations reshape business education, the Capstone must evolve to meet these challenges while maintaining its integrative role. The Strategy Capstone PDW brings together an international panel of scholar-teachers to address foundational challenges and emerging developments in Capstone education. The panelists represent diverse perspectives that range from senior chaired professors to emerging scholars. The interactive discussion and audience Q&A will cover such topics as: innovative teaching methods and final deliverables; the increasing importance of artificial intelligence in strategic management, both as a teaching tool and as a subject of study; integration of sustainability frameworks and objectives (e.g., UNPRME); and opportunities to enhance cross-functional integration among various business disciplines and student experiences. Building on the success of the first Strategy Capstone PDW in Boston 2023, the three co-moderators bring a combined 40+ years of experience teaching capstone and inter-disciplinary classes. The session aims to strengthen our community of Strategy Capstone educators while advancing traditional best practices and creative approaches to enhance student learning outcomes.

Symposium

Bridges and Barriers: How Politics Impacts Innovation Towards Sustainability

SIM and ONE division - AOM 2025 Copenhagen

Copenhagen, Bella Center, Hall A - A1-m8

Jul 28, 2025, 1:45 PM

FinTech Academy, Singapore

In his groundbreaking study, Adam Smith highlighted how self-interest and competition are key drivers of economic development and enhance the well-being of society (Smith, 1776). Over a century after Smith, Pigou presented the concept of externalities (Pigou, 1920) describing them as the unaccounted costs or benefits affecting uninvolved parties, thus underscoring a potential tension between economic growth and societal welfare. On the other hand, innovation is introduced as a crucial driver for economic prosperity and growth at the macro level (Schumpeter, 1934). Yet, this primary engine of growth also plays a role in intensifying major issues like climate change and social inequalities, which emerge as unintended consequences of economic progress. At the organizational level, balancing sustainability with innovation can also create conflicts.

This symposium discusses how innovation can help tackle these critical sustainability challenges

Discussion

AMR Paper Development Workshop

Hosted by City University of Hong Kong

City University of Hong Kong, 83 Tat Chee Avenue Kowloon Tong, Hong Kong

Jun 24, 2025, 12:00 AM

FinTech Academy, Singapore

This idea development workshop (IDW) is primarily geared toward early career researchers … interested in publishing in AMR – the highest-ranked journal publishing conceptual and theoretical manuscripts. This workshop is designed to help participants develop great ideas that are the foundation for well-crafted manuscripts suitable for submission to AMR

PAST EVENTS

Symposium

Regenerative Travel Symposium

Regenerative Travel and the Future of Positive Impact in Asia

Parkroyal Collection Marina Bay, Singapore

Jun 29, 2025

Panelists

On Sunday July 3d, 2025, I had the pleasure of attending the inaugural Future of Regenerative Travel Symposium in Asia, hosted at Parkroyal Collection in Singapore. The event brought together a community of hoteliers, travel brands, designers, online travel agents, certifiers, regenerative thinkers, hotel CSOs, and founders committed to reshaping the tourism industry into a force for good.

The symposium wasn’t about sustainability as usual, it was about regeneration. This profound shift was reflected in every panel, workshop, and conversation. Instead of focusing on reducing harm, the community here is focused on restoring ecosystems, strengthening local communities, and embedding circularity and care into business models. The atmosphere was one of hope, experimentation, and not just intention.

Hotels like the Datai Langkawi in Malaysia, Shinta Mani Mustang in Nepal prove that real luxury is eco-conscious. Sumba Hospitality Foundation shows that a non-profit hotel in which all staff are students going through a donor-funded hotel school show that local empowerment can lead to loyal customers.

From biodiversity protection to community-led marine restoration, from decolonizing travel narratives to embedding Indigenous knowledge systems, the event showed that regenerative travel isn’t just possible. It’s already happening across Asia. The challenge is now one of coordination, amplification, and accountability.

What This Means for Organizations Creating Positive Impact

For those of us building businesses like Handprint, the symposium offered both inspiration and direction. Regeneration is not a fringe idea, it’s becoming a strategic opportunity that drives differentiation and loyalty. As the regenerative travel movement grows, it offers a blueprint for how businesses across industries can align profit with ecological and social flourishing.

The key takeaway? Impact must be lived and experienced, not just reported.

In travel, this means integrating local impact into the guest experience. This is where opportunities lie. While the hotels are doing an excellent job at analog experiences, the digital experience before and after guests come and go can significantly be improved.

In fintech, it means embedding impact in every transaction. In ride-hailing, companies can regenerate the planet with every kilometer. In consumer goods, it means aligning supply chains with planetary boundaries and community wellbeing. What unites all these is the commitment to embed impact into core operations, not bolt it on as a CSR afterthought.

At Handprint, we often talk about the transition from footprint reduction to handprint creation. This event reaffirmed that businesses must go beyond doing “less bad” and instead become active participants in healing the world. It’s not enough to count your carbon. The regeneration movement is much more ambitious. Those taking part want to grow corals, plant mangroves, and support local communities and so with with integrity, transparency, and continuity.

And in order to achieve that, you need to figure out how to make regeneration good for your business.

To everyone I met at the symposium, thank you for the inspiration. Let’s keep building this future together.

Handprint in the World of Sustainable Business

Panel Discussion for the HER Entrepreneur Forum in Singapore

Panel

Digitalisation and Sustainable Entrepreneurship: New Frontiers in Business

Opening of SMU Overseas Centre Ho Chi Minh City

Park Hyatt Saigon

Apr 25, 2024

As technology use intensifies and climate change rears its presence, digitalization and sustainable entrepreneurship have emerged as two key drivers shaping the future of business. This panel discussion will shed light on how digitalization is revolutionizing business operations, customer engagement, and market expansion and discuss strategies for integrating sustainability into business models, supply chains, investment planning and corporate culture.

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©Simon JD Schillebeeckx, 2025

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©Simon JD Schillebeeckx, 2025

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©Simon JD Schillebeeckx, 2025