27 October 2015

Creating a Purposeful Bucket List

Making a bucket list is simple enough: write down the things that you’ve always wanted to do but never got around to doing. But the important thing is to put down everything that comes to your mind, without analyzing the practicality of it. 

Having an ongoing bucket list is a great way to make sure you live a life, as they say, with "no regrets". It gives you the motivation to go and do those the seemingly impossible and overcome doubts about yourself. But most importantly, a bucket list challenges you; it gives you goals to work towards throughout your life.

Bucket lists have become a popular concept and the widespread theme is travelling – going on extreme adventures, visiting exotic locations or going on wild cooking tours.  These adventures are all on people’s bucket lists for an excellent reason — to see the world and enjoy life. But there are a select few who choose to travel with a greater purpose.

An AIESEC experience is definitely something that challenges you and it would add value to your bucket list, as it has for many of us. It covers the criteria of adventure, self-awareness and personal development, whilst allowing you to make an impact on a community. It develops the leadership skills every business graduate should have.


Daniel Chong, a student at the University of Sydney, embarked to Taiwan to volunteer for an education project at a junior high school last summer. He believed the challenge would be for him to stick to his lesson plans and deliver the class content properly. However, it turned out the real challenge was getting through to the students.

“There was a lot of silence in my classes when I posed my students with questions, even if it was a simple “Good morning class, how are we feeling today?”. He realised that he had to change the way he taught to make the classroom more activity-oriented to engage with the students.

In Daniel’s words, his experience empowered him; “It made me lose my doubts and I realised that I want to continue to lose them as I go on”.

And that is what AIESEC experiences allow each and every participant to achieve. It presents you with the opportunity to challenge yourself and see what you can accomplish; AIESEC believes in leadership through exchange. By experiencing both workplace culture and everyday life in a different country, AIESEC’s Global Citizen program is designed to focus on self-development and contributing positively to society.



To find out more about our programs, visit: tiny.cc/summerexchange.

Join us now to challenge yourself and get your bucket list started!

AIESEC is the world’s largest international youth run organisation with partners in 126 countries. The organisation aims to deliver leadership experiences through exchange in order to achieve their vision of 'peace and fulfilment of humankind's potential'.

Teni Pham
Member of AIESEC Sydney and current student at the University of Sydney

15 October 2015

The Importance of Embedding Industry Experience into Assessments

I’m a 4th year student at the University of Sydney, studying Commerce/Arts. At the beginning of this year, as I was finishing my last couple of Marketing units, I felt sense of fear come over me. The fear that I had been studying a subject area for two years and I didn't have enough practical experience. What would I talk about in job interviews? And what skills do I actually need to be a good marketer?

The opportunity to gain additional practical experience presented itself in the form of MKTG3120-‘Building and Managing Brands’. From the get-go, Jeaney Yip, the course coordinator and lecturer, was brilliant and her passion for understanding how brands work really did make for an engaging and interesting course. The best part of this course was the option to complete a ‘live brief’ style case competition and submit the report as part of the course assessment.

Our group decided to do the Vo5 (Unilever) case, which essentially involved writing a marketing plan in response to the case study given to us by Unilever. Vo5 is a very successful hair care and styling brand from the UK. However, in the Australian market it was struggling to increase its presence. We were given a very limited budget to come up with a campaign that would help increase brand awareness in Australia. This was a fantastic insight into the type of briefs you might be given in a real marketing role.


One of the most interesting parts of the project was the opportunity to actually pitch our ideas to the Vo5 brand manager at Unilever. The feedback we received from her was very constructive and gave us real insight into what people in the industry look for in pitches like this. The brand manager was really positive and said many of the groups presented ideas that she will actually consider implementing for the brand.

Our group won the competition and our prize was an “immersion day” at Unilever.  We went to their swanky offices in the city and had a full day with various talks and a really nice lunch to meet recent grad-program employees, brand mangers and HR managers. We learnt so much about the company and what brand managers of various levels actually do on a day-to-day basis.


The entire project really sparked my interest in the company so I decided to apply for their summer internship program. The amount of research we had done was invaluable preparation for the entire application process and I was able to use my experience of the immersion day throughout the interviews. It was all because of this fantastic opportunity in MKTG3120 that I ended up getting a position on the Unilever internship this summer. I’m really excited to learn more about the FMCG industry and Unilever, particularly throughout the program.

This experience really shows how important it is to embed industry exposure in subjects, in order to give students valuable industry experience in the process of completing their degree.

Oliver Penn
Current Student of the University of Sydney Business School