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Hong Kong East Asia GATE 2005 Suhash Bhavsar Fumi Sato.

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Presentation on theme: "Hong Kong East Asia GATE 2005 Suhash Bhavsar Fumi Sato."— Presentation transcript:

1 Hong Kong East Asia GATE 2005 Suhash Bhavsar Fumi Sato

2 Agenda  Overview of Hong Kong Itinerary Sights Hotel Transportation  Visit #1: JP Morgan  Visit #2: HKUST

3 Itinerary - Hong Kong  Saturday, May 14 Kickoff – Saturday night – out on the town  Sunday, May 15 Tentative Alumni Reception & Free time  Monday, May 16 Nat’l holiday ending with 2 hour Junk cruise  Tuesday, May 17 Tuesday: JPMorgan and HKUST  Wednesday, May 18 Wed: 9:00 am flight to Tokyo

4 Airport Airport of the year top 10 1 Hong Kong Int'l Airport6 Dubai Int'l Airport 2 Singapore Changi Airport7 Copenhagen Airport 3 Amsterdam Schiphol8 Sydney Airport 4 Seoul Incheon Airport9 Kansai Int'l Airport 5 Kuala Lumpur KLIA10 Munich Airport  One of the world ’ s best and most modern airports  'Airport of the Year 2004'

5 Hong Kong Hotel

6 Accommodation – Hong Kong  Intercontinental Grand Stanford Hong Kong A five-star hotel in HongKong Offers breathtaking views of Hong Kong's Victoria Harbour Conveniently located in the shopping, business and entertainment district of Tsim Sha Tsui East, in Kowloon http://www.hongkong.inte rcontinental.com/

7 Intercontinental Grand Stanford

8 Focal points  Chinese city with multi- Asian and Western elements  Pure Chinese culture  Vibrant financial center  One country, two systems  Little has changed since the handover Area: 1,098 sq km Population: 6.7 million Country: China Language: Chinese/ English Time Zone: GMT/UTC +8 (Hong Kong Standard Time) Temperature: Avg. High 83.0F, Avg. Low 75.0F

9 Getting Around  Public transportation is very good Options include railway, taxis, buses, ferries, and trams Exact change required on mass trans. Taxis have a flat fee of $15 for 2km, additional costs beyond that.

10 Getting Around from Hotel FFerry to Hong Kong Island will offer great views of Victoria Harbor RRail stations are very close by PPlenty to do within walking distance as well Great Shopping Do you laundry

11 Sights/ Landmarks Popular attractions  Victoria Harbor  Victoria Peak  Ocean Park  Star Ferry  Hong Kong Zoological and Botanical Gardens  Stanley  Peak Tram  Big Buddha (The)  Shek O  Lan Kwai Fong

12 Eating  A variety of cuisines can be found  Do not buy food from “hawkers” on the street  10% service charge usually added to bill  Dim Sum is a must!!!

13 Shopping  Shanghai Tang (Chinese Clothes) http://www.shanghaitang.com/shanghaitang/index.jsp  Handy crafts  Chinese tea

14 Language Tips  beer pijiu  red/white wine hong/bai putao jiu  whiskey weishiji  vodka futejia  water shui  This tastes horrible. Take it back now! Je ge hen nan che. Na jo!  More at: http://wikitravel.org/en/Chinese_phrasebook

15 Etiquette  Appropriate public conducts  The Chinese will nod or bow slightly as an initial greeting. Handshakes are also popular; wait, however, for your Chinese counterpart to initiate the gesture.  The traditional Chinese greeting is a bow. When bowing to a superior, you should bow more deeply and allow him or her to rise first.  Recognize and greet the most senior or elderly person in a group first, and politely inquire about his or her health.  Do not pat people on the shoulder or initiate any physical contact; it is not appreciated.  The Chinese may communicate in closer proximity than is common in the United States.  Public displays of affection between the sexes are frowned upon.

16 JP Morgan - Profile  Founded in 1799  Total assets: $1.1 trillion  Total revenue: $43 million  More than 50 countries  HQ: New York

17 JP Morgan – Principle businesses

18 JP Morgan (continued)  JP Morgan in Asia

19 Hong Kong University of Science & Technology  30 minutes from central Hong Kong  Hillside and waterfront complex overlooking Port Shelter

20 Hong Kong University of Science & Technology  School started by two people Dr the Hon Sze-Yuen Chung, Sir Edward Youde, Governor of Hong Kong at the time  Concept created in 1986 & school opened in 1991

21  Business School also started in 1991 along with rest of University  Current Dean: K C CHAN PhD, 1985, University of Chicago, Finance  Rankings #25 in research in the world (University of Texas at Dallas, 2005) #44 MBA program in the world (Financial Times, 2005) #6 Executive MBA Program in the world (Financial Times, 2004) #1 Executive Education Programs in Asia Pacific (Financial Times, 2004)

22

23  Over 112 professors from 15 countries  Full time program 12 month intensive study or 16 month  Part time programs Hong Kong and Shenzhen locations  Executive MBA program with Kellogg

24  Typical Full-time MBA class profile Total enrollment 50 Male54%- Female46% Average age (range)27 (23 - 36) Average years of work (range)5 (1- 12) GMAT range (mid 80%)540 - 700 Percentage of non-HK participants(nationality)70%

25 Resources  www.discoverhongkong.com www.discoverhongkong.com  http://www.lonelyplanet.com/destin ations/north_east_asia/hong_kong/ http://www.lonelyplanet.com/destin ations/north_east_asia/hong_kong/  http://wikitravel.org/en/Chinese_ph rasebook http://wikitravel.org/en/Chinese_ph rasebook  http://www.executiveplanet.com/ http://www.executiveplanet.com/  http://yahoo.com


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