Discover leadership secrets and more

What is leadership? Gianpiero Petriglieri, associate professor of organisational behaviour at INSEAD, will conduct a masterclass in leadership at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium, exploring how and where people become mindful, effective and responsible leaders.

In a conversational meditation on leadership, Petriglieri will ask delegates to contemplate what they think leadership is, how to recognise it and whether it matters.

“How did we end up where we are, with distrust and disillusionment with leadership?” he asks from his Fontainebleau office. “One thing I will ask people is, ‘Do you know why people trust you?’ People’s trust is the main thing you need as a leader.”

Petriglieri will open the conference with a session that explores two related questions – a broad social query and another more personal one.

The first question concerns the nature of leadership, what it is, and how one gains it and loses it. Determining who gets to lead and who doesn’t is never easy to do when people keep moving around.

The second query will dig deeper. Despite copious investment in leadership development, Petriglieri says, organisations claim to suffer from a shortage of leaders. And those who do lead often struggle to connect with potential followers, facing resistance and mistrust.

Sponsored Content

The session shall reach beyond superficial models and tales to address the key questions: What makes a leader in our times? What does it mean to lead well? What does it take for an individual?

Petriglieri’s interests bridge the domains of leadership, identity and learning. He is particularly concerned with the development of leadership in the age of “nomadic professionalism”, in which authenticity and mobility have replaced loyalty and advancement as hallmarks of virtue and success.

In this context, he contends, a narrow focus on the acquisition of new knowledge and skills is inadequate to develop competent and trustworthy leaders. His research casts a light on the psychological, social and cultural functions of leadership development.

His innovative teaching methods provide an example of how to perform those functions purposefully for the benefit of individuals, organisations and society at large. In addition to his academic background, he has the unique perspective of being a medical doctor and has practised as a psychoanalyst.

INSEAD has been rated the number one MBA school worldwide by the Financial Times for the second year in a row. Petriglieri directs the school’s management acceleration programme – which is its flagship executive offering for emerging leaders – and the INSEAD initiative for learning innovation and teaching excellence.

The Fiduciary Investors Symposium at INSEAD, Fontainebleau, will delve into these issues of leadership, organisational design and governance, alongside investment themes. Incorporating the school’s esteemed academic faculty, the program will explore business excellence alongside investment topics of risk management, environmental, social and governance integration, and illiquid investments.

Other faculty who will speak at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium include:

  • Macroeconomics – Ilian Mihov, Professor of Economics, dean of INSEAD, the Rausing Chaired Professor of Economic and Business Transformation
  • Digital disruption – Peter Zemsky, Professor of Strategy, deputy dean of INSEAD, the Eli Lilly Chaired Professor of Strategy and Innovation
  • Societal progress and the evolution of capitalism – Subramanian Rangan, professor of strategy and management, Shell Fellow in Business and the Environment, Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Court Endowed Chair in Societal Progress
  • Governance – Ludo Van der Heyden, academic director of the INSEAD Corporate Governance Initiative, professor of technology and operations management

 

The Fiduciary Investors Symposium will be held at INSEAD, Fontainebleau, France from April 2-4. To access the program and to register click here.

 

Leave a Comment

Impact investing’s case for scale

Impact investing’s case for scale

Impact investing has come a long way in the past two decades, going from a niche strategy to a $1.5 trillion industry, but there are still challenges for it to reach institutional scale due to the lack of products and insufficient evidence of outperformance in some parts of the market.

Sort content by

AI the ‘most consequential’ trend for infra investors despite scepticism

AI is “the most consequential megatrend” for infrastructure investors with opportunities not only around data centres, but also energy and fibre networks by extension. But despite the bullishness, some asset owners are wondering when – or if – AI will deliver a miraculous productivity gain and benefit the underlying infrastructure.

European capital markets reform could unlock trillions in investment

Co-president of Apollo's asset management arm, John Zito, said reforms to European capital markets could unlock trillions of dollars worth of investment opportunities as investors seek alternatives to the US market, and Germany and France are key to leading the region's growth narrative.

SWIB: It’s ‘harder for companies to live in public markets’

Public markets aren’t functioning as well as they used to, and more and more asset owners are loading up on private assets in a bid to maintain their returns. But private market managers need to realise that their investors want a true partnership, or risk “a washing out”.

Why MFS president is concerned about ‘long-term washing’

Carol Geremia, president of the Boston-headquartered MFS Investment Management, said “long-term washing" has become one of her biggest worries, with everyone claiming to be a long-term investor while failing to align their investment practices with that goal.  

The world in flux and Trump’s role in a new equilibrium

The second Trump administration has so far brought a lot of things: market shocks, volatile trade policies, and turbulent foreign relationships. But beyond the chaos, renowned geopolitics expert Stephen Kotkin says Trump has an unwitting role to help the world rebalance and reach a “new equilibrium” in the global order.

APG doubles down on Asia as next growth hub

APG Asset Management is bullish on Asia’s growth prospects, with local CEO Thijs Aaten saying he would like to eventually see half of the Dutch pension fund’s real assets invested in the region. 

Previous