
B.TECH Selected As Field Global Capstone Project Partner For Harvard Business School
B.TECH, the leading, most distinguished and rapidly expanding omnichannel Retailer of consumer electronics and home appliances, has recently had the opportunity to host a team of MBA students from Harvard Business School in Cairo for one week as part of a required course called the FIELD Global Capstone. B.TECH was one of 156 FIELD Global Capstone Project Partners spanning 14 cities across 14 countries. Together, these Partners combined to host more than 900 Harvard Business School students in all — and it was one of only 11 companies in Egypt.
The project runs on a spam of 8 months starting with the project idea development, preparations and online communications to have an understating of the market and business, then the on-ground exploration and execution.
Long before the students arrived in Cairo, B.TECH had already set a strong foundation for the project through extensive preparation and early engagement. The team worked closely with HBS faculty to shape the project idea and assign a dedicated sponsor to guide the collaboration.
This was followed by regular virtual interactions with the team to align on objectives, share market insights, and ensure clarity on the business context. These initial stages played a critical role in paving the way for a productive on-ground immersion and a meaningful exchange of ideas.
Mahmoud Khattab, Chairman and CEO of B.TECH stated "This collaboration and us being the global partner for Harvard Business School's FIELD Program is a testament to B.TECH's commitment to innovation and excellence.
Partnering with some of the brightest minds in global business education presents an unparalleled opportunity to gain transformative insights and cutting-edge solutions. Together, we aim to stretch the limits, reimagine customer experiences, and set new benchmarks for delivering exceptional value in the retail and consumer electronic sector."
The FIELD Global Capstone is a course designed to strengthen and develop students' ability to manage and operate effectively in a variety of business contexts. B.TECH executives had been working with the team remotely in the months leading up to their arrival. While here, the students pitched their ideas to the leadership team, conducted field research with B.TECH's stores around Cairo, introducing B.TECH's mylo, the new financial platform and presented their final recommendations to management. The purpose of this immersive experience is to provide students with the opportunity to 'learn by doing' through the challenge of introducing a new product, service or customer experience for their Partner company .
This requires students to also focus on building contextual intelligence and team effectiveness skills while delivering value in an unfamiliar context .
B.TECH provided industry insights and customer segment data to support the students' research and testing process.
The collaboration will culminate in a week-long immersive visit to Cairo, where the student team will conduct on-ground research, visiting B.TECH's new concept store 'B.TECH MAX' to live the full on experience.
Harvard is quick to acknowledge that this important learning experience would not be possible without the Project Partners.
'We are extremely grateful to B.TECH and all the FIELD Global Capstone Project Partner organizations for all they do on behalf of our students,' said Professor Joe Fuller, Faculty Chair for the FIELD Global Capstone. 'The students benefit immeasurably from this experience and we hope the partner organizations do as well.

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'I had Johnny Walker Black. I had two doubles and tripped over a chair ... Security came up and said "we're taking you home,"' he said. 'I said, "But I haven't seen my daughter yet" … and they said, "Don't matter man."' He added: 'I'm sad how it ended of course, I should have never taken that first drink or any drink for that matter. I wish I had seen her of course. 'She will probably hear how I was and how I had a few drinks, so I guess she would be angry with me. I think she is, I'm not sure, we haven't spoken just yet. 'I feel bad because I let her down because she spend all that money putting me in rehab, [and] then find me drunk somewhere. It is not good. What can I say but I'm sorry. It's me who f**ed up.' Asked what possessed him to drink at the event, Ronald claimed he was depressed that his two older children from a previous relationship – Rihanna's half brother and sister Jamie and Samantha - weren't invited. Ronald said he feels terrible for breaking his promise to stop drinking to his daughter. But when asked if he was an alcoholic, he insisted: 'Me, n,. drunk and disorderly. I don't see myself as an alcoholic, I don't realize when I get that drunk. 'Call me a drunk or alcoholic in denial, whatever you want to call me but I have realized I could drink or not drink. 'I only start[ed] drinking, once I come back here in December.' Rihanna sued her dad in 2019 for allegedly trying to cash in on her fame by using their family name to brand his entertainment business Things became more tense between them in January 2019 after it was revealed that Rihanna had sued her dad for allegedly trying to cash in on her fame by using their family name to brand his entertainment business, Fenty Entertainment. In legal papers first obtained by The Blast, the singer, alleged Ronald, along with a business partner, Moses Perkins, he has been soliciting business by falsely acting as her agent. Despite having no authority to act on his daughter's behalf, Ronald was said to have booked her on a $15 million tour in Latin America and two concerts, at the Staples Center in Los Angeles and the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas for $400,000. Rihanna asked for damages from her father, and an injunction on his business, set up in 2017. A year later, however, it was reported that Rihanna had helped her father after he contracted coronavirus, sending him a ventilator and checking in on him on a daily basis. She withdrew her lawsuit in September 2021, and it's believed that the two came to a settlement. They seemed to have reconciled before his sock death at age 70, as he revealed the singer sent him photos of her baby bump before debuting it to the world TMZ reported on Saturday that Ronald died in Los Angeles following an illness. Starcomm Network, a radio station in Rihanna's native Barbados, has also reported Ronald's death. 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